The Mercury News

The president promises aggressive effort to fight Gov. Newsom recall

- By Mark Z. Barabak Mark Z. Barabak is a Los Angeles Times columnist. ©2021 Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

President Joe Biden has plenty of challenges. Pushing two gargantuan infrastruc­ture bills through a balky Congress. Dealing with a rampaging COVID-19 resurgence. Monitoring the increasing­ly dire military situation in Afghanista­n.

But that won’t prevent the president from taking an active role in opposing the effort to recall California Gov. Gavin Newsom.

On Thursday, the White House upped its engagement and sent a strong signal of its intention to fight on Newsom’s behalf, with Biden for the first time directly urging California voters to reject the attempt to throw his fellow Democrat out of office.

“He knows how to get the job done because he’s been doing it,” the president said in a statement, citing Newsom’s efforts to fight the pandemic and address the damage caused by climate change, among other actions. “To keep him on the job, registered California voters should vote no on the recall election by September 14 and keep California moving forward.”

The White House and Democratic National Committee are working on campaign appearance­s by Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris, get-out-thevote assistance and efforts on social media to thwart the recall attempt. The word from Washington is sure to gladden the Newsom campaign.

While polls have shown a majority of California­ns oppose the recall, surveys also suggest that voters favoring Newsom’s ouster are more politicall­y attuned to the Sept. 14 election than those against Newsom’s firing.

That enthusiasm gap poses a serious threat to the governor and has spurred efforts by Newsom and his allies to ensure that Democrats and other recall opponents view his attempted removal with greater urgency.

A number of national Democrats have weighed in, including Massachuse­tts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, a favorite among liberal and female voters, who appears in a TV spot denouncing the recall as a power grab by “Trump Republican­s.” Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., another hero of the left and the winner of California’s Democratic presidenti­al primary last year, has also voiced his opposition and sent campaign emails on Newsom’s behalf.

No personalit­y, however, can match the political heft of the president, or generate nearly as much attention; the active support of Biden has long been atop Newsom’s wish list.

White House officials have repeatedly expressed their opposition to the recall, including again on Wednesday, when press secretary Jen Psaki cited the Biden administra­tion’s work with the governor “on a range of key issues.”

Harris — a sometimes friend, sometimes foe of Newsom going back to their start decades ago in San Francisco’s politics — has also criticized the recall effort and stated her intention to campaign on the governor’s behalf.

The plans outlined Thursday go well beyond these previous remarks by putting Biden’s imprimatur on the anti-recall effort just as ballots begin arriving in mailboxes throughout the state.

Biden’s eager involvemen­t in opposing a recall effort is a contrast with the stances of previous presidents.

Republican George W. Bush stayed conspicuou­sly silent during the 2003 campaign that resulted in the ouster of California’s Democratic Gov. Gray Davis and his replacemen­t by Hollywood star Arnold Schwarzene­gger. Republican­s weren’t eager to cast the recall in a partisan light, given the GOP’s huge disadvanta­ge in the state, and Bush strategist­s believed the president had a better chance of winning California in 2004 if Davis, not the Republican Schwarzene­gger, was burdened with the state’s massive budget deficit and other problems.

In 2012, President Barack Obama kept his distance from Wisconsin and a failed attempt to recall the Republican governor, Scott Walker, to the dismay of many fellow Democrats in the state. Obama and his campaign team wanted to avoid alienating the independen­t voters he needed to carry Wisconsin in his reelection bid, which the president did by a comfortabl­e margin.

Biden and Harris don’t have the same concerns. Newsom is eager to turn the recall into a partisan, red-versus-blue referendum, given Democrats’ huge voter registrati­on edge. And California seems certain to vote Democratic in 2024, as it has in the last eight presidenti­al campaigns.

A more immediate worry is the 2022 midterm election, when a number of California congressio­nal seats will be up for grabs, and with them, potentiall­y, control of the House.

Having Newsom as governor, as opposed to a hostile Republican in Sacramento, would mean one less political headache in what already promises to be a difficult year for Biden and his administra­tion.

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