Imperial Valley Press

Trump’s shadow looms in Calif. attorney general race

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SACRAMENTO. (AP) — Xavier Becerra was plucked from Congress to lead California’s opposition to all things Donald Trump. He’s done that as state attorney general, with a litany of lawsuits over policies involving immigratio­n, the environmen­t, birth control and health care.

His opponents in the June 5 primary say he’s so focused Becerra on the Republican president that he’s falling down on other key areas of the job.

“There’s a long list of things that this attorney general’s not doing because he is so fixated on Trump.” said state Insurance Commission­er Dave Jones, a Democrat like Becerra.

Becerra said he’s done much more than sue the Trump the administra­tion.

“We do far more work on important matters that have nothing to do with Donald Trump than those cases that get written up in the newspaper,” Becerra said, listing crackdowns on criminal gangs, fraudulent charities and businesses that charge exorbitant prices, fees or interest rates.

Outgoing Gov. Jerry Brown appointed Becerra as California’s first Latino attorney general just as Trump took office last year. The job came open when Kamala Harris was elected to the U.S. Senate.

Becerra is running his first statewide campaign after nearly a quarter-century in Congress.

He’s being challenged by Jones, who has twice won statewide elections for insurance commission­er, and Republican­s Steven Bailey and Eric Early. Bailey is a former Superior Court judge and Early is an attorney specializi­ng in business, entertainm­ent and real estate litigation.

The top two vote-getters advance to the November general election no matter their party affiliatio­n.

Both Republican­s are running to Becerra’s right on issues led by crime and immigratio­n, while Jones carved out space to Becerra’s left in stridently advocating for a single-payer health care system and an end to the death penalty. Jones says Becerra isn’t doing enough to fight the opioid overdose crisis, to take guns from those who are no longer allowed to have them, or to sue corporatio­ns that contribute to global warming.

Jones got his start providing free legal assistance to the poor. He was special assistant and counsel to U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno before winning seats first on the Sacramento City Council, then in the state Assembly. If elected attorney general, Jones said a major focus would be on criminal justice reforms including providing more rehabilita­tion, mental illness and drug addiction treatment programs.

Bailey is a recently retired El Dorado County Superior Court judge who started as a legislativ­e assistant and later deputy legislativ­e director for the state Department of Social Services.

Like Becerra, Early is a son of immigrants, born to a father from Austria and mother from Poland. He now manages a Los Angeles law firm. If elected, he pledged to consider creating permanent facilities for those with severe mental illnesses, housing that he said would reduce violence and homelessne­ss.

Early charged that Becerra “cares more about illegal immigrants who have come here and then broken the law since they got here, some of them violent criminals, than he cares about our tax-paying citizens.”

Becerra had twice as much money in his campaign account going into this election year, $3.2 million to Jones’ $1.56 million, with both GOP candidates trailing far behind.

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