The Mercury News

#MeToo, gas tax roil the election

Opposition to Trump, a recall, misconduct allegation­s: ‘It’s not business as usual’

- By Don Thompson

SACRAMENTO » This is not your normal legislativ­e primary election.

It features one state senator who is running for the seat he resigned over sexual harassment allegation­s and another fighting a recall over one of his votes. Also up for grabs in the June 5 primary are two Assembly seats vacated by members felled by sexual misconduct complaints as the #MeToo movement roiled the Legislatur­e, and two incumbents are battling misconduct allegation­s against them.

Moreover, opposition to President Donald Trump seems to have brought out an unusual number of candidates with half the 40seat Senate and all 80 Assembly seats in play, said Darry Sragow, publisher of the California Target Book that tracks legislativ­e races.

“It’s not business as usual,” he said.

Democratic Sen. Josh Newman of Fullerton is the target of a Republican-led recall effort over his vote to increase the gasoline tax last year. Lawmakers raised gas taxes by 12 cents a gallon and diesel taxes from 16 cents per gallon while adding a new yearly fee on vehicles to generate about $5 billion a year for road repairs.

Republican­s think fighting the gas tax could be an energizing issue for voters in 2018, and the recall is the effort’s first test. The seat Newman won two years ago is in traditiona­lly Republican Orange County. Three Republican­s, including Newman’s 2016 opponent, former Assemblywo­man Ling Ling Chang, and three Democrats are in the recall election. Voters will choose whether to recall Newman and pick from his possible successors on the same ballot.

Democrats who control the legislativ­e process went to extraordin­ary lengths to protect Newman, passing a law that pushed the recall vote to same day as the June

primary, when he is more likely to survive because of an expected higher turnout by Democratic voters.

Unseating Newman would have stripped Senate Democrats of their twothirds supermajor­ity — had not Sen. Tony Mendoza resigned in February rather than face an extremely rare expulsion vote. He’s one of three lawmakers who resigned this session over sexual misconduct.

“The important work of folks bringing alleged sexual harassers to light has created a number of vacancies as well as a number of complicati­ons that have made things interestin­g,” said Democratic political consultant Maclen Zilber, who is not involved in either contest.

Now Mendoza, of Artesia, wants the seat back. He’s running again for his

Los Angeles-area seat despite a finding by outside investigat­ors that he likely engaged in unwanted “flirtatiou­s or sexually suggestive” behavior with six women. Mendoza, who identifies himself on the ballot as a public school teacher, has denied engaging in inappropri­ate behavior and said he retains widespread support.

The June 5 ballot for the seat will be complicate­d; voters will choose from one field of candidates to compete in an Aug. 7 special election to fill the vacancy this year and another set for the traditiona­l November general election. The candidate fields are slightly different, but Mendoza is running in both.

Mendoza’s opponents include former Democratic Assemblyma­n Rudy Bermudez, setting up a potential

battle over which candidate has the best positive name-recognitio­n. Republican leaders are backing former Senate aide and twotime Assembly candidate Rita Topalian.

The top two vote-getters advance, no matter their political party affiliatio­n.

Meanwhile, two Democratic front-runners face runoff elections against Republican opponents for Los Angeles County seats vacated when Assemblyme­n Matt Dababneh and Raul Bocanegra resigned after being hit with sexual misconduct allegation­s.

Special primary elections in April set up a race between Democrat Luz Rivas and Republican Ricardo Benitez to replace Bocanegra, and between

Democrat Jesse Gabriel and Republican Justin Clark to replace Dababneh. With each of the vacant seats, voters will pick legislator­s both to complete the departed lawmakers’ current terms and to fill the seats after the fall election.

Also suffering #MeToo fallout are two sitting lawmakers including Assemblywo­man Cristina Garcia, a Los Angeles Democrat who once was a prominent leader of the movement. She took a voluntary unpaid leave from the Assembly this year after she was accused of groping a former legislativ­e staff member in 2014, a charge she denies. An investigat­ion into the claims against her hasn’t concluded.

She’s being challenged by six fellow Democrats and

one Republican, though so many Democrats may split the opposition vote. Complicati­ng things for Garcia, the powerful State Building and Constructi­on Trades Council recently created a committee to spend money opposing her.

Republican Assemblyma­n Devon Mathis of Visalia faces two intraparty challenger­s in the Central Valley district after the Tulare County Republican Central Committee sought his resignatio­n over alleged inappropri­ate behavior including sexual misconduct. Sacramento police found no evidence to support a criminal charge and Mathis denies the accusation. His former chief of staff filed a lawsuit against Mathis and the Assembly repeating the claim in April.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? State Sen. Tony Mendoza, resigned after an investigat­ion into sexual misconduct allegation­s but is again running for the seat in the upcoming California primary election.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE State Sen. Tony Mendoza, resigned after an investigat­ion into sexual misconduct allegation­s but is again running for the seat in the upcoming California primary election.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States