Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Porter echoing Trump

- MARK Z. BARABAK Mark Z. Barabak is a columnist for the Los Angeles Times, focusing on politics in California and the West.

Donald Trump didn’t write Katie Porter’s requiem post on social media, but throw in a few misspellin­gs and capitalize­d letters and he very well could have.

“Because of you, we had the establishm­ent running scared,” she told supporters of her unsuccessf­ul U.S. Senate bid in a Wednesday night statement on X, formerly known as Twitter. This, Porter continued, despite being outspent on TV and facing an “onslaught of billionair­es spending millions to rig this election.”

That word — rig — suggesting there was something illicit, fishy or not entirely kosher about this week’s California primary wasn’t just groundless and self-serving.

Given today’s fraught environmen­t, it was reckless and wildly irresponsi­ble, like pouring kerosene on a fire or handing a child a loaded pistol.

There are enough doubts about our embattled elections system being sown by Trump and his MAGA movement without Porter, a law professor with a wide following on the political left, leveling her false accusation.

To be clear, Adam Schiff and Steve Garvey advanced to a November Senate runoff because they were the preferred choice of California Democrats and Republican­s, respective­ly.

There was no ballot-stuffing, no illicit payoffs, no decisive carton of uncounted ballots mysterious­ly turning up in the night at a fruit stand outside Yucaipa. (At least not that we, or Porter, know about.)

The contest for the top two slots and the opportunit­y to face off in November’s general election wasn’t even close. Porter finished a distant third.

“There was nothing rigged,” said Gale Kaufman, a veteran Democratic strategist who stayed neutral in the Senate race. “She ran and so did many other people who were on the ballot. She lost.

“When you lose, you have all kinds of reasons,” Kaufman said. “But maybe you should look in the mirror.”

Yes, Schiff boosted Garvey by featuring him in millions of dollars of TV ads, coaxing Republican­s to turn out and push the former Major League baseball star past Porter, who would have been a tougher general election opponent.

And yes, crypto-industry billionair­es spent a small fortune attacking Porter and accusing her of hypocrisy for taking corporate donations at the same time she attacked Schiff for taking corporate donations.

That tactic — special interests protecting their interests by attacking other special interests — may reek of off-the-charts cynicism. But that’s politics. It’s not election-rigging the way most people would understand the term.

Two explanator­y notes X users appended to Porter’s social media post offered helpful context. “‘Rigging’ implies illegal manipulati­on of electoral outcomes, a serious violation underminin­g democracy,’” said the first.

Being outspent “on advertisin­g … falls under protected free speech, provided it adheres to campaign finance laws,” read the second. “It’s not ‘rigging.’”

After a flood of condemnati­on on X and elsewhere, Porter posted a follow-up statement.

“‘Rigged’ means manipulate­d by dishonest means,” the Orange County congresswo­man wrote. “I said ‘rigged by billionair­es’ and our politics are — in fact — manipulate­d by big dark money.”

True enough. There is much to say, and criticize, about the unholy influence of money in our politics.

By then, however, Porter’s back-and-fill explanatio­n was too late. She was drowned out by a chorus of condemnati­on for her inflammato­ry use of the r-word.

Among those chiming in was California’s senior U.S. senator, Alex Padilla, a Democrat and the state’s former chief elections officer.

“It’s not rigged,” he told Politico. “As the former secretary of state of California, I can assure you of the integrity of the elections and the results.”

Porter fought hard to win her Orange County seat in 2018 and soon became a household name, wielding her whiteboard like a lance as she took on billionair­e CEOs and a gallery of corporate ne’er-do-wells.

Many Democrats were disappoint­ed when she surrendere­d the seat to run for Senate. The opening has jeopardize­d the party’s chances of keeping the district in its column, which is crucial if Democrats hope to win control of the House in November.

At age 50, with a robust fund-raising base and national following, Porter still has a potentiall­y bright political future. She’s been talked about as a candidate for statewide office as soon as 2026 for attorney general or maybe even governor.

First, though, Porter faces questions about her decision to abandon the House and her constituen­ts to run for Senate, as well as the graceless and misguided way she exited the contest.

“Instead of stepping off the stage and congratula­ting Adam Schiff, who won, she’s chosen to be incredibly unhelpful to her party as well as to the people she currently represents,” said Kaufman, the Democratic strategist.

Winning is easy. It’s losing that tests a person’s character and mettle.

Donald Trump has shown himself to be the worst kind of loser, one who would tear down the country and erode faith in its institutio­ns so he can fire up supporters and explain away his defeat.

Katie Porter shouldn’t emulate him.

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