Imperial Valley Press

California primary election could solidify Democrats’ power

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LOS ANGELES (AP) — Is California, home to one in eight Americans, becoming the nation’s best example of one-party rule?

Tuesday’s primary election will set the stage for November races for governor, Congress and the Legislatur­e, but it will also test whether the state’s vanishing Republican­s have enough remaining influence to avoid another shutout at the statewide polls.

After all, Democrats in California hold every statewide office and dominate both chambers of the Legislatur­e, while counting a 3.6-million edge in voter registrati­ons and a 39-14 advantage in U.S. House seats.

The outcome Tuesday will impact how the state handles a litany of problems, from homelessne­ss to a public pension crisis.

For California, the election could become “our biggest moment of transition” to a state functional­ly run by elected officials from one party, said Thad Kousser, who heads the political science department at the University of California, San Diego.

Across the country “red states have gotten redder and blue state have gotten bluer and the fights have been within, rather than between, the parties,” Kousser said.

Can a Rebulican even make the November ballot?

The key marker will be the race for governor , in which Republican John Cox has the backing of President Donald Trump in his bid to qualify for a two-person runoff this fall. Under California’s unusual primary system — sometimes called the jungle primary — only the top two vote-getters, regardless of party, advance to the general election.

Democratic Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom is expected to easily top the field, but former Los Angeles Antonio Villaraigo­sa and state Treasurer John Chiang are among the Democrats hoping to box out Cox and make it a one-party showdown in November for the state’s highest office.

That’s already the case in the race for U.S. Senate, where the GOP failed to field a credible candidate and Sen. Dianne Feinstein is expected to face another Democrat in November, state Sen. Kevin de Leon. The same thing happened in 2016, when only two Democrats were on the Senate ballot in the fall, Sen. Kamala Harris and then-Rep. Loretta Sanchez.

In a worst-case scenario for the GOP, voters would see only Democrats in November in races for governor and U.S. Senate.

A transforme­d California

California is, by itself, the world’s fifth largest economy. But the humming economic engine masks widespread problems with homelessne­ss, soaring housing costs and a growing gap between rich and poor that will be inherited by the next governor.

The plight of the GOP in the state has been long documented, as a surge in immigrants transforme­d California and its voting patterns. Once a reliably Republican state in presidenti­al elections, California became more Democratic as it became more diverse. Most of the state’s new voters are Latino and Asian and tend to lean Democratic.

Only about one in four voters in the state is a Republican. You’d have to go back to 1988 to find a Republican who carried the state in a presidenti­al election, George H.W. Bush. And the last Republican win in a statewide race was in 2006.

The party suffered another indignity this election season: independen­ts — those voters registered to no political party at all — surpassed Republican­s in registrati­on numbers Friday, reducing the GOP to third-party status.

What that all means for Cox: even if he manages to get into the runoff, he would be a longshot against a Democrat in November.

Even so, Republican­s are hoping his presence on the fall ballot, if he makes it, would energize Republican­s, driving turnout and helping GOP candidates down the ballot.

Without him or a candidate for U.S. Senate, it could be a disaster.

Making a stand

Democrats are hoping to oust a string of Republican U.S. House members from districts that were carried by Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidenti­al race. Four of them are completely or partly in Orange County , once known as a Republican fortress. For decades, white, suburban homeowners delivered winning margins for GOP candidates. But the county’s population has grown more diverse, creating inroads for Democrats.

Republican­s could deliver some surprises.

 ??  ?? In this May 11, file photo Antonio Villaraigo­sa, the former mayor of Los Angeles, speaks with students from Hayward’s Tennyson High School during a campaign stop in San Francisco. AP PhoTo/MArcIo Jose sAnchez
In this May 11, file photo Antonio Villaraigo­sa, the former mayor of Los Angeles, speaks with students from Hayward’s Tennyson High School during a campaign stop in San Francisco. AP PhoTo/MArcIo Jose sAnchez

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