East Bay Times

Newsom could face tough task replacing Feinstein

- By George Skelton George Skelton is a Los Angeles Times columnist. © 2023 Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

You'd think that filling a U.S. Senate seat would be easy, even fun. But if Gov. Gavin Newsom has to find a replacemen­t for Sen. Dianne Feinstein, it could be agonizing.

Plenty of qualified people would leap at the chance to join the world's so-called greatest deliberati­ve body, right?

Prestige, power, perks — a career highlight even if it were only a temporary job until someone else won the seat in the next election.

Wrong. Not in this particular case.

Feinstein, 89, hasn't indicated she'll vacate the seat before her term expires at the end of next year. But she's being pressured to step down by some in her own party.

California's longest serving senator has been recuperati­ng from painful shingles for two months and has missed roughly 60 votes. They include several needed to approve President Biden's stymied federal judgeship nomination­s.

The question of whether Feinstein would — and should — retire before her term expires has been a hot topic among politicos. Her replacemen­t until the next election would be chosen by the governor. But he isn't saying much publicly.

Newsom limited his options two years ago by promising to appoint a Black woman.

It now would be politicall­y untenable for Newsom to go back on his word, especially if he has national ambitions.

The most obvious choice for Newsom would be Rep. Barbara Lee, 76, of Oakland, who has 25 years of congressio­nal experience. She's a bit more liberal than Newsom and most California­ns, but that wouldn't be her main problem for the governor.

Lee is one of three major candidates in the 2024 Senate race. Her crowning with the title “senator” could be a significan­t campaign benefit. Newsom might consider it unfair to the two front-runners — Reps. Adam B. Schiff, 62, of Burbank and Katie Porter, 49, of Irvine — to give Lee a boost.

“What's wrong with that? He's committed or not committed” to gaining a Black female senator, says Aimee Allison, founder and president of She the People, an activist group that pushes for electing more women of color.

Allison supports Lee. If Newsom passed up Lee and chose another Black woman who then ran for the office, it would conversely hurt Lee's campaign. With two Black women competing, both their core bases would be divided. That risks angering Lee's supporters, including Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass.

So, Newsom might want to appoint a “caretaker” senator, a Black woman who would finish Feinstein's term but agree to not run for election.

It might be difficult to recruit an experience­d legislator of the quality California deserves who would be willing to give up her current seat to become a short-timer.

Former Rep. Bass, 69, would be a terrific senator, but no way would she step down as L.A. mayor.

L.A. County Supervisor Holly Mitchell, 58, a former influentia­l state legislator, has senatorial qualities. But Mitchell has said she's not interested, either as a full-timer or a temp. She's running for reelection next year.

San Francisco Mayor London Breed, 48, hasn't said much, but it wouldn't make sense for her to step down as leader of a beautiful — if challenged — city to become a temporary senator. She's also running for reelection.

Besides Lee, there are two other Black female House members from California, both Angelenos: 17term Rep. Maxine Waters, 84, an outspoken liberal, and newly elected Rep. Sydney Kamlager-Dove, 50. I can't see either giving up her seat.

There's a relatively painless solution to the seatsurren­der dilemma. The governor could appoint either California Secretary of State Shirley Weber, 74, or newly elected Controller Malia Cohen, 45, as a caretaker senator and temporaril­y place a bureaucrat in her basically ministeria­l job. Then after next year's election, he could return Weber or Cohen to her state post.

Or he could reach far afield for a non-politician caretaker — like Oprah Winfrey of Montecito.

That would be fun.

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