The Ukiah Daily Journal

In California, crime is now public enemy No. 1

- Navarrette's email address is crimscribe@ icloud.com. His podcast, “Ruben in the Center,” is available through every podcast app.

SAN DIEGO >> Soft on crime Democrats have been slow to wake up to this reality, but a lot of California­ns are dreamin' of living in a safer state.

In this week's primary election in the Golden State, crime wasn't just on the ballot. It stole the show.

The liberal media missed the story. San Francisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin — a criminal justice reformer who thinks that not everyone who commits a crime belongs in jail — was recalled with ease. A news article in The Washington Post blamed “conservati­ve donors” and “moderate Democrats” for his ouster.

Never mind that San Francisco

is not exactly overflowin­g with either conservati­ves or moderates. In the overwhelmi­ngly Democratic city, Republican­s account for less than 10 percent of the electorate.

The San Francisco Chronicle, in an editorial, blamed low voter turnout for the Boudin recall. Turnout was abysmally low. As the editorial notes, voter turnout was just 26 percent in San Francisco and lower elsewhere in the state. This, the Chronicle editorial suggested, because voters “couldn't be bothered.”

It's disgracefu­l that politician­s continue to spread halftruths, break promises, underperfo­rm in office and turn a deaf ear to criticism. And then, after all that, their defenders in the media have the gall to blame the voters for not showing up.

How about the politician­s giving the voters something worth showing up for?

You want to talk about the integrity of our elections in the United States? OK, let's do that. Republican­s rattle their sabers over accusation­s of voter fraud, while Democrats worry about voter intimidati­on by goons standing outside polling stations. You know what really suppresses the vote? Untrustwor­thy and underperfo­rming politician­s in both parties. But the parties will never admit that.

California — which in the 1960s gave birth to a hippie countercul­ture that preached that people should do whatever felt right — now wants people to stop doing bad things. Voters want to arrest the spread of vandalism, violent crimes, property theft and general mayhem. The evidence suggests that voters are so fed up with career politician­s and so-called progressiv­e prosecutor­s that they will take a chance on candidates who have never before held public office.

In the most populous state in the country, we've gotten to the point where people's opinions of politics and politician­s are so dismal that candidates with zero political experience have the best chance of getting elected.

In Los Angeles, this phenomenon benefited mayoral candidate Rick Caruso, a billionair­e real estate developer and political novice who — stop me if this sounds familiar — wound up pitted against career politician­s and came out on top. Caruso got the most votes in Tuesday's election, but not enough to avoid a runoff with Rep. Karen Bass, Dlos Angeles. The two will face off again in November.

I've often described my home state as really being 12 states in one, sectioned off by geography. You have mountains, deserts, valleys and the coast. How people see the world depends in large part on where they see it from.

But in big-picture terms, it's helpful to think of California as two states — one made up of the cities, and the other composed of rural towns.

In the cities, a trifecta of plights — crime, homelessne­ss and the high cost of living — are leaving voters angry and frustrated. In the rural areas — like my native San Joaquin Valley in

Central California — people are more likely to get worked up over the water crisis and sky-high gas prices.

I live in Southern California, but I spent the days immediatel­y before and after the election traveling across the state. In the East Bay, near San Francisco, a lot of Democratic voters seem to be having second thoughts about supporting a criminal justice reform movement that now seems like surrenderi­ng to crime.

The evidence suggests that Democrats either don't take seriously the problem of spiking urban street crime, or they're too busy experiment­ing with progressiv­e law enforcemen­t policies that seem to be making the problem worse.

For instance, California's Propositio­n 47 designated shopliftin­g as a misdemeano­r provided the value of the property taken does not exceed $950.

And given that prosecutor­s often won't bring to trial misdemeano­r shopliftin­g cases, scofflaws could have a green light to steal up to $949 without consequenc­es.

Who could have guessed this would happen? I mean, besides anyone with an ounce of common sense.

Which probably explains why so many politician­s missed it.

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