The Ukiah Daily Journal

Will California contests decide control of Congress?

- Dan Walters has been a journalist for more than 60 years, spending all but a few of those years working for California newspapers.

San Francisco and Bakersfiel­d are 251 miles apart as a condor would fly but culturally and politicall­y, they might as well be on different planets — and that also applies to their congressio­nal representa­tives.

Uber-progressiv­e San Francisco's Nancy Pelosi is the longservin­g Democratic leader — and current speaker — of the House while very conservati­ve Bakersfiel­d's Kevin Mccarthy leads the Republican minority and would displace Pelosi if the GOP recaptures control of Congress this year.

Republican­s need to gain just five seats in November to take over and uniformly, polling and other tests of political sentiment indicate that with President Joe Biden's unpopulari­ty, driven by high inflation and other issues, the GOP is well positioned to win control.

Democrats hope they can stave off defeat by tying former President Donald Trump to the Jan. 6, 2021, assault on the Capitol by his supporters and motivating their voters to oppose a pending Supreme Court decision eroding abortion rights.

It's possible, although unlikely, that whether Pelosi retains the speakershi­p or cedes it to Mccarthy will ultimately hinge on a few California duels, set up by changes in congressio­nal district boundaries and outcomes of last week's primary election.

On paper, as many as six or even seven California congressio­nal seats could change partisan hands in November, but four — two now held by Democrats and two by Republican­s — loom large on the political radar.

—Republican Mike Garcia, a former fighter pilot, defeated Christy Smith, a Democratic assemblywo­man, in a special election for a congressio­nal seat in Los Angeles' northern suburbs in 2020. He then eked out a 333-vote win over Smith for a full term later that year, despite a 7.5 percent Democratic voter registrati­on edge. Garcia hopes his third matchup with Smith this year will also be a charm, but the new 27th Congressio­nal District has a 12%-plus Democratic voter margin, making him decidedly more vulnerable.

—Katie Porter, a Democratic congresswo­man from Orange County who has acquired a high national political profile, won her Irvine-centered district despite its slight Republican voter registrati­on margin and her new district (CD 47) now has a slight Democratic

Overall, it appears that Democrats have a better chance of unseating Garcia and/or Valadao than Republican­s have of ousting Porter and Levin. Could a two-seat Democratic gain in California stave off a GOP takeover of the House?

edge, which should make reelection easier. However, Republican challenger Scott Baugh, a former assemblyma­n and current Orange County GOP chairman, is a formidable fundraiser whose hopes ride on Biden's unpopulari­ty.

—Hanford Republican David Valadao has been elected and re-elected by San Joaquin Valley voters despite a lopsided Democratic voter registrati­on advantage. His newly redrawn, three-county district (CD 22) favors Democrats by more than 17 percentage points but Valadao hopes that his independen­t image — he was one of 10 Republican House members who voted to impeach Trump — will save him again. Having overcome stiff primary challenges from two other GOP candidates, Valadao now faces Rudy Salas, a Democratic assemblyma­n from Kern County who counts on a high turnout of Latino voters to flip the seat.

—Democrat Mike Levin has won two terms in Congress from a coastal region — northern San Diego County and southern Orange County — that was long a Republican stronghold, but the very slight Democratic voter registrati­on edge of his redrawn district (CD 49) fuels Republican hopes of a win if national trends invade the turf. Former San Juan Capistrano Mayor Brian Maryott beat four other Republican hopefuls for the right to take on Levin.

Overall, it appears that Democrats have a better chance of unseating Garcia and/or Valadao than Republican­s have of ousting Porter and Levin. Could a two-seat Democratic gain in California stave off a GOP takeover of the House? Unlikely, but certainly in the realm of possibilit­y.

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