The Oklahoman

California: Gov. Gavin Newsom posts landslide victory in recall vote.

Possibilit­y of GOP win energized Democrats

- Michael R. Blood and Kathleen Ronayne

LOS ANGELES – An ominous fourword message issued by California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s campaign on the morning of Aug. 5 served as the shock Democrats needed to take seriously a recall election that could remove him from office: “This recall is close.”

Newsom’s warning in a fundraisin­g email came just days after a poll indicated the once-popular Democratic governor who was elected in a 2018 landslide was facing the unthinkabl­e prospect of losing his job in a state that hadn’t elected a Republican in a statewide race in 15 years.

The race is “close enough to start thinking about what it’d be like if we had a Republican governor in California. Sorry to put the thought in your head, but it’s true,” his campaign wrote.

The alarmist message was quickly incorporat­ed into Newsom’s remarks on the campaign trail – he was in serious trouble, he warned. The sequence of events combined to create a turning point in the race and helped energize California’s dominant Democratic voters, who until then appeared to be greeting the contest with a collective shrug.

Newsom on Tuesday easily turned back the attempt to retire him less than three years into his first term. Incomplete returns showed him headed toward a landslide win with about 65% of the vote.

A major lesson of Newsom’s decisive win is “you can wake up the base,” Newsom strategist Sean Clegg said this week. “The base may start out asleep … but you can wake up the base.”

Newsom’s victory also provides him with a dramatic comeback story that he is likely to employ as he seeks to broaden his popularity in advance of a 2022 reelection race, while seeking to return his name into discussion about future presidenti­al candidates.

For Democrats, the fear of losing the California governor’s seat opened up national fundraisin­g pipelines that gave Newsom a vast cash advantage over his rivals. That concern also provided a connection point with minority communitie­s about how their lives could change with a conservati­ve Republican governor in Sacramento.

In what Democrats said was a fortunate turn for Newsom, the election was reshuffled when conservati­ve talk show host Larry Elder entered the race in July. The lawyer and author who could have become the state’s first Black governor quickly emerged as Newsom’s chief foil. Elder came to the race with conservati­ve-libertaria­n principles that were out of step with many of the state’s left-leaning voters.

With Elder in the race, Newsom seized the opportunit­y to frame the election as a competitio­n between two radically different visions for California’s future. He warned repeatedly that progressiv­e values on the environmen­t, health care and women’s rights were on the ballot, while Elder would herald the return of an era of “Trumpism.” Elder galvanized the conservati­ve base, but gave Democrats a clear enemy.

“Larry Elder handed them so many gifts on a platter. He is literally the antithesis of most California voters,” said Dana Williamson, who was a top adviser to former Democratic California Gov. Jerry Brown, who preceded Newsom.

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 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I/AP ?? Incomplete returns showed California Gov. Gavin Newsom headed toward a landslide win with about 65% of the vote.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I/AP Incomplete returns showed California Gov. Gavin Newsom headed toward a landslide win with about 65% of the vote.

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