The Guardian (USA)

Gavin Newsom will remain California governor after handily defeating recall attempt

- Maanvi Singh in Oakland

California’s governor, Gavin Newsom has prevailed in a historic recall election that had him battling for his political life. In a referendum on the governor’s leadership through the pandemic, voters resounding­ly rejected the choice to replace him with a Trumpist Republican.

The Associated Press projected the results about 45 minutes after polls closed on Tuesday night. Newsom’s most popular challenger was Larry Elder, a rightwing radio host who drew comparison­s to the former president and who attempted to sow baseless doubts about the election process.

Newsom did not hold a watch party or election night celebratio­n. Instead, he struck a somber tone speaking to reporters on Tuesday night, saying: “Tonight I’m humbled, grateful, but resolved.”

Speaking in Sacramento, Newsom said that in voting no on the Republican-led recall, California­ns said “Yes to science, we said yes to vaccines.

“I’m humbled and grateful to the millions and millions of California­ns that exercise their fundamenta­l right to vote,” Newsom said, “and express themselves so overwhelmi­ngly by rejecting the division, by rejecting the cynicism.”

While margins are expected to shrink as more votes are tallied, results on Tuesday night showed California­ns appeared to oppose the recall effort in greater numbers than some experts initially expected. With about 60% of ballots counted, no on the question of whether to recall Newsom was ahead by a two to one margin.

Although the race was called by the AP on Tuesday night, the vote count is not yet final, and election officials have 30 days to count all the ballots.

Early on Wednesday, the governor tweeted: “Tonight, California voted NO on the recall and YES to … Science. Women’s rights. Immigrant rights. The minimum wage. The environmen­t. Our future. We rejected cynicism and bigotry and chose hope and progress.”

As a Democratic governor of a deepblue state, the governor found himself in the peculiar position of having to defend his position after the recall effort gained steam amid the worst of the pandemic, fueled by frustratio­ns over school and business closures.

Gubernator­ial recall petitions are very common in California, but only one other such recall has made it on to the ballot in state history.

Newsom initially dismissed the recall election as a costly distractio­n – indeed, it could cost the state some $300m or more. But Democrats kicked into high gear in the late summer as polls indicated that apathetic and angry voters could cost him his position at the helm of the most populous US state.

In the lead-up to the election, Newsom – who struggled to live down missteps and connect with young progressiv­e voters – reframed the recall as a referendum on Trumpism – homing in on Elder. Emphasizin­g that Elder had vowed to repeal mask and vaccine mandates “before I have my first cup of tea” if he were inaugurate­d as governor, Newsom characteri­zed the election as a “matter of life and death”.

The day before the 14 September deadline to vote, Joe Biden campaigned alongside Newsom, telling voters “the eyes of the nation are on California”.

“It’s somewhat remarkable that Newsom was able to take the Covid issue, which might have been a fatal weakness for him and was able to turn it into a considerab­le strength,” said Dan Schnur, a politics professor who has advised Republican candidates.

For many voters, a no vote did turn out to be less an endorsemen­t of

Newsom and more a rejection of Elder and other Republican­s.

Elder spent election night in Costa Mesa, California, and conceded defeat on Tuesday night.

Among early voters, Democrats outnumbere­d Republican­s by two to one – though the gap was expected to shrink on election day with a greater proportion of Republican­s expected to cast their ballots on the day. Polls that had initially placed Elder within striking distance of Newsom began to widen ahead of election day. As his chances of victory slimmed, Elder began following in Trump’s footsteps by spreading conspiracy theories to falsely suggest that the election was rigged against him.

The results will have national reverberat­ions. For Democrats across the country, Newsom’s victory has averted a crisis of confidence. “Democrats running in other parts of the country next year would do well to study Newsom’s playbook very carefully,” Schnur said – noting that the governor’s ability to find a foil in Elder is in large part what helped him energize voters.

The race has given Elder, an already popular fixture in rightwing media, a more prominent national stage.

Newsom’s other Republican challenger­s included the former San Diego mayor Kevin Faulkner, the businessma­n John Cox – who also lost to Newsom in 2018 – and the reality TV star Caitlyn Jenner.

The governor, who was elected by historic margins nearly three years ago, worked throughout the recall campaign to live down pandemic-era missteps. Parents were frustrated when public schools remained closed in California for far longer than they did in other states. Under Newsom, the state’s unemployme­nt department struggled with major backlogs, and paid out an estimated $31bn in fraudulent claims. The governor also faced harsh criticisms over the state’s initially slow vaccine rollout and its ineffectua­l sign-up site. An ill-timed, lobbyist-laden dinner at the Michelin-starred French Laundry restaurant amid the state’s Covid-19 surge last November gave his opponents further ammunition against him.

Having survived the recall, Newsom will serve one more year before he is up for re-election. “If he had survived by a small margin, it is very likely another Democrat would have run against him from the left next year,” Schnur said. “But given a landslide like this one, it’s very hard to see that happening.”

The only other gubernator­ial recall that went to statewide vote was in 2003, when the Republican Arnold Schwarzene­gger ousted Democrat Gray Davis. But Newsom remained more popular than Davis did, despite his blunders.

Support for the recall was highest in parts of California’s agricultur­al Central Valley, and rural north. Those areas have always been more conservati­ve, and were centers of resistance against mask requiremen­ts and pandemic restrictio­ns over the past year.

 ?? Photograph: Jeff Chiu/AP ?? Volunteers put up signs in support of Gavin Newsom in San Francisco on 14 September.
Photograph: Jeff Chiu/AP Volunteers put up signs in support of Gavin Newsom in San Francisco on 14 September.
 ?? Photograph: Ringo HW Chiu/AP ?? A voter casts a ballot for the California recall election at a polling station in Los Angeles.
Photograph: Ringo HW Chiu/AP A voter casts a ballot for the California recall election at a polling station in Los Angeles.

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