The Mercury News Weekend

Harris isn’t a shoo- in to win California’s primary after all

- By George Skelton Los Angeles Times George Skelton is a Los Angeles Times columnist. © 2019, Chicago Tribune. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

OK, I admit it: A column I wrote three months ago was a real loser. That’s because I predicted California Sen. Kamala Harris would be a big winner in her own state’s presidenti­al primary.

But two statewide polls show her falling far behind in the Democratic field, running a distant fourth and trailing Massachuse­tts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, former Vice President Joe Biden and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders.

That’s in a California primary she should own. National polls and surveys in other states are showing similar weak numbers for California’s junior senator.

A new statewide poll of likely voters released Wednesday night by the Public Policy Institute of California shows a virtual threeway tie for the lead in the March 3 primary. Warren is at 23%, Biden at 22% and Sanders 21%. Harris trails way back with 8%, just ahead of South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg, 6%.

For Harris, that’s a significan­t drop from a PPIC poll in July that had her at 19%.

A different poll by the UC Berkeley Institute of Government­al Studies released last week showed Warren surging into the lead with 29%, followed by Biden, 20%, and Sanders, 19%. Again, Harris had only 8% and Buttigieg 6%. For Harris, it was a five- point drop from an IGS poll in June.

The California primary is still five months away. Before then, there’ll be a few televised debates and four high- profile early state contests — in Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada and South Carolina — that will influence voters here. The PPIC poll found that 53% of voters who currently support a candidate would be willing to back someone else.

“The California primary is very much up for grabs — up for grabs for Warren, Biden and Sanders,” says PPIC president and pollster Mark Baldassare.

Not Harris?

“Not now. Things could change.” “Look at her approval ratings,” Baldassare says. “It’s not as if she’s starting out in a very strong position.”

In the PPIC poll, 64% of Democrats approve of how Harris is handling her job as senator and 20% disapprove. That’s good. But among independen­ts, who can vote in California Democratic primaries, she has only 32% approval against 47% disapprova­l. Overall, counting Republican­s, her approvaldi­sapproval numbers are slightly negative at 43%- 46%.

Baldassare says of Harris: “Seems to me she’s been talking more about what she’s going to do as a candidate in Iowa than what she’s going to be doing as a senator for California.”

Ouch. That’s a hazard of running for president, especially if you start eyeing the White House even before you’re sworn in as a freshman senator, as Harris did.

I’ve been around long enough to know it’s foolish to predict the winner of a contested presidenti­al primary eight months in advance. I did insert some customary wiggle words, such as “probably” and “good guess.” But it was a bad guess. It was soon after the summer solstice and maybe I was staying in the sun too long.

I was dazzled by Harris’ breakthrou­gh performanc­e in the first presidenti­al debate. I erroneousl­y theorized that she’d probably scare off rival candidates from competing in her home state. California offers 21% of the convention delegates needed to win the Democratic presidenti­al nomination, but it requires barrels of money and lots of campaign stumping to run a competitiv­e race here.

There’ll be 14 state contests in all on that Super Tuesday. So the wise strategy would be to avoid California and focus on states where there’s a better chance of success.

Harris was the strong homestate favorite in California. Forget it. She’s a weak candidate. Harris’ message has been muddled and her agenda unclear.

That shouldn’t be a surprise given her unremarkab­le record as state attorney general. She was overly cautious.

A longtime opponent of the death penalty, Harris refused to take stands on two ballot measures that would have abolished capital punishment. They both failed. She also didn’t take positions on ballot measures to expedite the death penalty and reduce prison sentencing. They passed.

Her lame excuse is that it’s the attorney general’s ministeria­l duty to write the official title and summary for ballot measures. She didn’t want to appear biased. Baloney.

Harris has another opportunit­y to stand out and revive her campaign at the next debate on Oct. 15. And if the U. S. House impeaches President Trump, she could shine in the Senate trial circus.

Meanwhile, Harris should mark Dec. 26 on her calendar. That’s the last day to drop out of the race in time to remove her name from the California ballot and avoid a possibly embarrassi­ng loss.

But I’m not predicting anything.

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