The Mercury News

Governor strikes back as recall threat grows

- By George Skelton George Skelton is a Los Angeles Times columnist. © 2021 Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

It doesn’t get much better for a politician during a pandemic than to announce that fans can probably return to ballparks when the Major League Baseball season opens.

Especially if you’re a governor threatened with being recalled from office.

Helping to unlock baseball stadiums as season openers approach is guaranteed to be popular and bipartisan. Forget the polarizati­on plague. This gives baseball fans and their families in every demographi­c group — whether they live in East or West Los Angeles — something normal to look forward to.

A few worriers might fret about baseball crowds becoming supersprea­ders of COVID-19, just as the germ is retreating from steadily increasing vaccinatio­ns. But Gov. Gavin Newsom says that threat will be met by tightly limiting crowd sizes and requiring safety protection­s.

How many fans are allowed through the turnstiles will depend on the region’s color-coded pandemic tier. As of last week, the San Francisco Giants were the only California team in the red tier and allowed to seat 20% of the stadium’s capacity and sell food and drinks.

For now, the other teams — Dodgers, Angels, San Diego Padres and Oakland A’s — are in the purple, most restrictiv­e tier and can seat only 100. But there aren’t any games now anyway. And by opening day April 1, Los Angeles, Orange, San Diego and Alameda counties are expected to have advanced to the red tier. Dodger Stadium then could seat 11,200 fans.

Groups will be distanced. And masks must be worn. So, how do fans exercise their inalienabl­e right to munch popcorn and guzzle beer? Masks will need to come off.

“We’re working on the final details,” Newsom announced last week in Long Beach at a vaccinatio­n site. “We’ve been working closely with Major League Baseball and others.

“We have confidence that when you look forward to April, to opening day,” Newsom said, “and where we are likely to be if we all do our jobs, if we don’t let our guard down and spike the ball — wrong sport — then I have all the confidence in the world that fans will be back safely.”

Newsom knows his sports terminolog­y. He was a left-handed pitcher for Santa Clara University on a baseball scholarshi­p. He also played football and basketball in high school.

Two days after the governor’s announceme­nt, his administra­tion provided more details. Not only baseball stadiums but also amusement parks such as Disneyland will start reopening April 1.

It was good timing politicall­y because the Republican-backed recall campaign seems on the verge of qualifying for a statewide ballot. The deadline for turning in 1.5 million valid voter signatures is March 17, and recallers say they’re on track to surpass that.

The election probably wouldn’t be held until fall. But merely turning in all those signatures will give the recall drive a huge publicity boost while generating a heap of anti-Newsom rhetoric.

Dan Schnur, a political science lecturer at USC and UC Berkeley, and former spokesman for Republican Gov. Pete Wilson, says: “Informatio­n on the coronaviru­s is something that every voter cares about deeply. Now that he’s announcing vaccinatio­ns instead of shutdowns, showing up on TV screens around the state is a huge net benefit for him.”

Newsom figured he’d be accused of politickin­g no matter what he did. So he might as well hit the road, promote himself and attract local TV. Be seen as a leader — for example, by opening ballparks.

Thanks largely to Newsom, soon it will be: “Take me out to the ballgame, take me out with the crowd. Buy me some peanuts and Cracker Jack” — so I can take off my cumbersome mask.

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