San Francisco Chronicle

Poizner seeks old job, nixes old party

- By Joe Garofoli

Former state Insurance Commission­er Steve Poizner — the most recent Republican not named Arnold Schwarzene­gger to win statewide office — is running for his old job.

But here’s the twist: Unlike his successful 2006 campaign for the office, this time Poizner is running as an independen­t, making his candidacy a test of whether a candidate not affiliated with one of the two major parties can succeed in California. The former Silicon Valley tech entreprene­ur boasts some unusual qualificat­ions that other independen­t candidates don’t, however. He’s got some statewide name identifica­tion; he’s held the job previously; and he’s got deep pockets from selling his global-positionin­g company to Qualcomm for $1 billion in 2000.

Poizner said his decision to run has nothing to do with his animosity toward the GOP or its anemic standing in Cali-

fornia.

Being unaffiliat­ed with a party “really fits the post. There’s no room for partisan politics” when you’re regulating an industry, Poizner said in an interview Monday. “The insurance commission­er needs to be fiercely independen­t.”

Poizner’s biggest challenge, however, may be political. Will voters remember him as the pro-same-sex marriage, proabortio­n rights, Assembly candidate in 2004 or for the hard right turn he took on immigratio­n during the bareknuckl­e 2010 GOP gubernator­ial primary that he lost to Meg Whitman?

Poizner spent upward of $25 million in that primary, largely on TV ads that hammered Whitman for not supporting a hardline position on immigratio­n.

At the time, Poizner supported cutting “taxpayer-funded benefits” for “illegal aliens,” including in-state tuition at public colleges. He wanted the California National Guard to assist federal authoritie­s in patrolling the U.S.-Mexican border. He supported Arizona’s controvers­ial AB1070, which made failing to carry immigratio­n documentat­ion a crime and gave law enforcemen­t officers broad powers to detain anyone they believed to be in the country illegally. He opposed sanctuary cities.

Poizner said Monday he’s changed on many of those positions. He no longer wants to cut tuition benefits to undocument­ed immigrants and said his support of AB1070 was a mistake. He said time he spent with Ohio Gov. John Kasich, whom he supported in the 2016 GOP primaries, softened his views on immigratio­n.

He now believes that “Dreamers” — undocument­ed immigrants brought to the United States as children — should have a path to citizenshi­p. And he thinks others who are in the country illegally should have some way to gain legal status, such as a guest worker permit. He is “comfortabl­e” with the sanctuary state law that Gov. Jerry Brown signed in October.

“Eight years (since the gubernator­ial primary) is a lot of time,” Poizner said. “Now it’s time for Republican­s and Democrats to come together on this issue. To be a problem solver about it.”

As insurance commission­er, he pledged to focus on cybercrime, for which many companies are underinsur­ed, he said. Given the number of disasters hitting the state, he also wants to increase the number of California­ns who have insurance.

At one point, Poizner bristled at a series of questions about his past positions saying, “I will answer your questions, but most of the things we are talking about have nothing to do with the office of insurance commission­er.”

But they probably will be part of the campaign, as one of the leading Democrats in the race, state Sen. Ricardo Lara, D-Bell Gardens (Los Angeles County), has made immigratio­n issues and resistance to President Trump part of his campaign.

Lara is one of five Democrats, one Republican, and one Peace and Freedom candidate who have filed documents stating their intention to enter the race. The deadline to enter is March 9.

It will be “pretty hard to flip positions that are viewed by voters as a measure of your values,” said Darry Sragow, publisher of the nonpartisa­n California Target Book, which analyzes elections in the state. “If you’re going to change positions, you’ve really got to do a good job explaining why.”

It’s going to be harder for Poizner to run as an independen­t, Sragow said. He’s seen voters in focus groups say that while they think both parties are corrupt, they’re hesitant to vote for independen­t candidates.

“It’s almost a brand thing,” Sragow said. “If you’re a Republican or a Democrat, you kind of know what you’re getting. If you’re an independen­t, you don’t have that.”

Added Lisa García Bedolla, director of the Institute of Government­al Studies at UC Berkeley: “If (Poizner) has got money, he doesn’t need the party. It’s easier to run as an independen­t if you’re rich.”

California Republican Party chair Jim Brulte declined to comment on Poizner’s candidacy. One Republican currently in the race, Peter Kuo, has $3,726 cash on hand, according to the latest campaign finance disclosure­s.

“If he’s being strategic, he’s trying to distance himself from all that baggage,” that Republican­s — particular­ly Trump — carry in California, she said. But in a midterm election, the voters who may oppose Poizner because of his immigratio­n stands — Latinos, young people and other immigrants — vote in lower numbers.

“Whites represent a disproport­ionate share of the electorate” in a midterm election, García Bedolla said. “If he manages to have positions on the economy and other things that are more in line with mainstream voters, he could find an audience.”

 ?? Reed Saxon / Associated Press 2010 ?? Steve Poizner is running for state office again, as an independen­t, not as a Republican.
Reed Saxon / Associated Press 2010 Steve Poizner is running for state office again, as an independen­t, not as a Republican.

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