The Mercury News

STATE VOTERS ENERGIZED, NERVOUS

- By Julia Prodis Sulek jsulek@bayareanew­sgroup.com

To understand the anxiety and excitement California Democrats faced on Super Tuesday, just talk to Diane Levinson, of San Jose.

“I’m afraid, nervous — nervous that we can blow it as Democrats and reelect (President) Trump, that we will hand it to him in our confusion,” said the 63-year-old ceramic artist.

Whether they were Democrats like Levinson, fitfully weighing who best could defeat Trump in November; Republican­s like Dawn Burt, eager to support the president’s economic and immigratio­n policies; or people drawn

by state and local measures for schools and housing, voters came out in force Tuesday.

Levinson’s ballot had sat on her dining room table untouched for three weeks. But on Tuesday morning, a day after moderates Amy Klobuchar and Pete Buttigieg dropped out, she picked it up and wavered. Should she pick former Vice President Joe Biden, who “had new life,” or Sen. Elizabeth Warren, who is “my favorite”? What about Sen. Bernie Sanders, who has energized young voters with his promised “revolution” but could have the most trouble facing Trump?

“I chose Bernie, but I could have flipped,” Levinson said. “I don’t know what’s right. I bubbled it in at the last minute.”

On the day that the California primary, with its rich trove of delegates, finally mattered in helping decide who would take on President Trump in November, many Democrats had to choose between voting with their heads or their hearts. And in the Bay Area, the epicenter of Trump resistance, that left many confused, tense and fed up like never before.

“I just feel like the country is in dire straits,” said Dianne Lomonaco, voting at Willow Creek Center in Concord. “I don’t think we’re a leader in the world anymore. I worry about where it’s all headed.”

Patti Massey, a legal services lawyer in San Jose, said she, too, is “stressed out.”

“I’ve been waiting to see how things have been unfolding so my vote could make a difference,” she said. She finally decided on Warren.

For many Sanders supporters, including those who were heartbroke­n after his loss to Hillary Clinton in the 2016 primary, Tuesday was a day of eagerness, enthusiasm and perhaps redemption. Many showed up for his rally Sunday in San Jose.

“I don’t think I would have voted for him if I didn’t think he had a chance at all.” said Sam Tapley, a 27-year-old Oakland resident who works in sales.

“He’s one of the only guys up there where I can tell he’s talking to me.”

Across the Bay Area, voters lined up for an hour or more, some requesting new ballots to replace the ones they had marked for other candidates in the days before they went to the polls. Some wore masks, in a sign of the growing worry about coronaviru­s, and some voting centers had placed hand sanitizer on the counter.

In the East Bay, George Craig, 70, a retired UC administra­tor from El Cerrito, said he voted for Biden because “we need normal.” At the Rengstorff Community Center in Mountain View, Brad Clements, a registered nonpartisa­n, also supported Biden, saying he was concerned Sanders would “ruin the country.” On Tuesday, Biden greeted voters at the Buttercup diner in Oakland.

“Sanders is just too piein-the-sky, not friendly to anybody, angry at everybody and another extreme (option) to Trump,” said Clements, 38, who used to be a Democrat but is now nonpartisa­n because the party was becoming “too extreme.”

For Adriana Quiroz, who with her husband, Guillermo, owns an arcade and piñata store in San Jose, extreme might be just what’s needed now.

“We need Trump out. That’s it for me,” said Quiroz, 36, voting for Sanders at the Rosicrucia­n Egyptian Museum. “We need to go extreme with Bernie too.”

Christophe­r Telomen, 28, a landscape designer in San Jose, also voted for Sanders, saying that a vote for a “moderate centrist” like Biden wouldn’t address the level of dissatisfa­ction Americans feel.

Republican­s, meanwhile, were intrigued by the fractious Democrats and the choice they will make.

One San Jose Republican, who considers Trump “disgusting,” said he would join Democrats in November if they chose a moderate like Biden. But “there’s no way I would vote for Bernie,” he said, declining to be identified for fear he would be ostracized by his Democratic friends and acquaintan­ces.

Burt, of San Jose, who is self-employed, said she voted for Donald Trump and thinks the Democratic primary so far has been “child’s play.” She said not one of the presidenti­al candidates running for the Democratic nomination has the “vision or plan to implement their programs.”

“I want jobs, I want a good economy, I want a strong market for a good economy and I want my continued tax breaks,” Burt, 53, said from the voting center at the Italian American Heritage Foundation Cultural Center in San Jose. “I don’t want more federal or state spending, and I want immigratio­n control.”

Voters were also drawn to the polls by Propositio­n 13, a school funding measure backed by Gov. Gavin Newsom. But some weren’t ready to support it.

“I feel like the government just doesn’t understand how to utilize the money we already give them,” said Richard Johnson, 67, of Concord, who voted against the propositio­n. “Their answer to everything is, ‘Let’s raise taxes.’ ”

Telomen, the San Jose landscape designer, said he’s “fully invested” in San Jose’s Measure E, which would tax sales of properties worth more than $2 million to fund affordable housing. “People who own property over $2 million can give a little,” he said.

Still, despite all the attention on California and the significan­ce of its first Super Tuesday primary, some voters were fatalistic.

“I feel kind of defeated, like it’s not going to really matter because Trump is going to win again anyway,” said Suzie Lew, 50, of West Oakland, who voted for Sanders.

Valerie Zeller, 72, of San Jose, who was a “Eisenhower Republican” before shaking John F. Kennedy’s hand at the San Jose Civic Center in 1960, is trying to look on the bright side.

“If Trump gets reelected,” she said, “it will only strengthen my resolve to live another four years to see someone else in office other than him.”

 ?? DAI SUGANO — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? “I’m afraid, nervous — nervous that we can blow it as Democrats and reelect (President) Trump,” Diane Levinson, of San Jose, said Tuesday at a voting center in San Jose.
DAI SUGANO — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER “I’m afraid, nervous — nervous that we can blow it as Democrats and reelect (President) Trump,” Diane Levinson, of San Jose, said Tuesday at a voting center in San Jose.
 ?? DAI SUGANO — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? “We need Trump out. That’s it for me,” said Adriana Quiroz, of Santa Clara, on Tuesday at the Rosicrucia­n Egyptian Museum voting center in San Jose.
DAI SUGANO — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER “We need Trump out. That’s it for me,” said Adriana Quiroz, of Santa Clara, on Tuesday at the Rosicrucia­n Egyptian Museum voting center in San Jose.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States