The Reporter (Vacaville)

Want to learn about the Gov. recall? Look to Wisconsin

The campaign to oust Newsom is a lot like the Democratic attempt to recall Scott Walker in 2012

- By Nico Savidge nsavidge@bayareanew­sgroup.com

With California likely headed for another election to recall its governor, one question is on the minds of voters and pundits: Will Gavin Newsom be the next Gray Davis?

But maybe they should be asking: Will Newsom be the next Scott Walker?

The Republican former governor of Wisconsin is pretty much the political opposite of Newsom, who positions himself as the leader of a progressiv­e “nation-state.” But the unsuccessf­ul attempt by Democrats and labor unions to recall Walker in 2012 now looks like a mirror image of the push to oust Newsom — and shares more in common with the present-day recall than the one that cost Democrat Davis his job as the Golden State’s governor in 2003.

A single issue has largely driven both the Newsom and Walker recall campaigns: In California it’s Newsom’s handling of the COVID pandemic, while in Wisconsin it was legislatio­n Walker championed that decimated the collective bargaining power of public-employee unions.

Both targeted first-term governors who were rising stars in their own parties, which meant they could each tap deep-pocketed donors to help them fend off the recall challenge.

And both reflected the power of polarizati­on. Walker’s moves outraged Democrats and unions, who branded his bargaining law an attack on working families. Republican­s are furious over what they call tyrannical pandemic restrictio­ns from Newsom.

Those voters in each state were able to force their governors into a fight for their political lives, though in Walker’s case, he survived the challenge with relative ease and it did little to disrupt his conservati­ve agenda.

“The opposition to Walker here was incredibly intense,” said Charles Franklin, the director of the Marquette University Law School Poll, a respected survey of Wisconsin voters.

But Walker had a bedrock of support among Republican­s, Franklin said, and most independen­ts sided with him in the special election — either because they approved of his policies or didn’t think a recall was warranted. Walker won the 2012 recall in the narrowly divided swing state of Wisconsin by 53% to 46%, a slightly bigger margin than in his first race for governor two years earlier.

That path to victory will likely be even easier for Newsom to follow in the California of 2021, where Democrats outnumber Republican­s nearly two-to-one.

Just 40% of California registered voters are in favor of recalling Newsom, according to a poll released last week from the nonpartisa­n firm Probolsky Research, while 46.7% are opposed. The anti-recall side has an even bigger advantage among likely voters, 52.5% of whom said they want to keep Newsom compared to 34.6% who would vote him out.

“A highly mobilized minority can in certain circumstan­ces generate those recall signatures and spark the recall,” Franklin said, but “that intensely mobilized minority may not in fact overwhelm the majority.”

Plenty of Wisconsin Democrats now believe their recall attempt of Walker backfired.

“Not only did he win the recall, not only did he then go on to win re-election,” said Paul Maslin, a Madison political consultant, “but it ended up giving him a pretense for becoming a national figure.”

The race became a defining moment in Walker’s political career, and helped propel him to enter the 2016 presidenti­al race as a leading contender for the Republican nomination.

“The recall was the gift that kept giving for Scott Walker,” Maslin said.

It was only with his run for president that Walker faltered — his campaign unraveled within a few months and he lost his bid for a third term as Wisconsin governor in 2018.

A veteran of California and Wisconsin politics, Maslin had an up-close view of both of this century’s recalls: he was Davis’ top pollster through the 2003 race, then moved to the Badger State, where years later he joined the campaign of one of the Democrats who sought to unseat Walker.

He and other California political experts see few similariti­es, other than geography, between the Davis recall and the one targeting Newsom.

For one, none of the Republican candidates who say they will challenge Newsom have the game-changing celebrity status of Arnold Schwarzene­gger. Businessma­n John Cox lost by nearly 3 million votes when he ran against Newsom in the 2018 governor’s race, and former San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer lacks name recognitio­n in much of the state.

“So far, there is no Arnold Schwarzene­gger waiting in the wings,” USC professor and political analyst Sherry Bebitch Jeffe said, “and the Republican­s don’t have much of a chance without someone like that.”

And most crucially, Newsom is far more popular than Davis was.

Davis had won re-election to his second term in 2002 with less than 50% of the vote. By the following year, a long list of problems — including an energy crisis that led to rolling blackouts, an unpopular car tax and a massive budget deficit — had sent Davis’ disapprova­l ratings soaring above 70%. Even most Democrats said they disapprove­d of him.

 ?? J EFF GRITCHEN — THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER ?? Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks during a press conference at a COVID-19 vaccinatio­n site at AltaMed in Santa Ana on Thursday, March 25, 2020.
J EFF GRITCHEN — THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks during a press conference at a COVID-19 vaccinatio­n site at AltaMed in Santa Ana on Thursday, March 25, 2020.

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