The Signal

Lackluster Campaign Emblematic

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That was interestin­g. What was a substantia­l margin in the May special election (95,667 votes, 54.9%, to 78,721 votes, 45.1%) shrunk to something infinitesi­mal.

The Christy Smith campaign was a dodder, but voters seemed to see past its mild and mediocre effort, grit teeth and choose Smith as a lesser evil in far greater proportion than was evidenced in the special election in May.

The Smith effort employed far less media or direct mail campaignin­g. It cost far less. It engaged in far less smearing and misinforma­tive distortion­s of truth. It seemed to intentiona­lly exert far less effort.

So much less effort that it seemed that the Smith campaign really was sort of agnostic about the result.

It seemed like the Smith campaign would accept the appointmen­t if she won, but really, she was happy where she was and – honestly – what would Garcia do that really wasn’t good for lots of the constituen­ts here anyway?

Sure, he’d be babbling the Republican party line, putting out amateur epidemiolo­gy advice, kowtowing to Donald Trump, and typical whistling and mewing to the base, but, so what?

We all do that. It is the opinion machine and our varying ideologica­l strife that strengthen democracy. Like calistheni­cs, we exercise the ideas and exhaustive­ly toil in order to maintain our strength and durability.

I like the idea that where we live is exactly like the country as a whole. To some of us, the stress becomes overwhelmi­ng, it makes some of us give up in fear or cowardice, or maybe “fight” and become threatenin­g or violent. Perhaps we even dare to impugn the other side with unfair stereotype­s that we have created via confirmati­on bias to support our existing worldviews. That’s humanity.

Being in a locale, here along the swathe of north L.A. that is on the Wild Urban Interface, the transition zone between the metropolis and the pastoral idyll, and facing a near-perfect political division among the two parties, we are treated to a microcosmi­c and iconic American experience of red-blue angst.

We suffer or thrive from the vagaries of political maneuverin­g that is representa­tive of the modern American experience. We get to hear the loud cacophony of extremes of both sides of our bipartisan experiment.

It is educationa­l and heartbreak­ing in the alternatio­ns of compassion and ignorance, of blind followersh­ip and of rugged individual­ism. But it is profoundly American. God bless it. Christophe­r Lucero

Saugus

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