Imperial Valley Press

Democrats hope Calif. races will propel House takeover

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LOS ANGELES (AP) — Democratic hopes to retake control of the House will rise or fall in California, where the party is pursuing a string of Republican-held seats in Tuesday’s primary election.

Democrats need to gain 23 districts nationally to take the gavel in the House, and a key part of that strategy is expanding their 39-14 advantage in the home state of Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi. The key battlegrou­nds are seven districts, mostly in Southern California, where Hillary Clinton defeated then-candidate Donald Trump in the 2016 presidenti­al race, making them targets this year.

Republican­s, including Reps. Dana Rohrabache­r and Mimi Walters in Orange County and Jeff Denham in Modesto, are among GOP incumbents on the defensive in a year when Trump could energize Democratic voters who loathe him, though Republican voters may show up eager to keep their party in charge in Washington.

The uncertaint­y is heightened by the state’s top-two primary system, in which all candidates appear on a single ballot but only the top two vote-getters regardless of party advance to a November runoff.

In crowded, closely matched races, it’s possible that only two Republican­s advance to the runoff in some districts, or two Democrats.

The retirement­s of long-serving Republican Reps. Ed Royce and Darrell Issa brought on a stampede of candidates, and no one knows what will happen in their Southern California districts. Seventeen names are on the ballot in Royce’s district, the 39th, which includes parts of Orange, Los Angeles and San Bernardino counties.

Registrati­on is closely divided, and Clinton carried the district by 9 points, making it an obvious pickup opportunit­y for Democrats. But the party’s ambitions have been complicate­d by infighting among candidates.

There are 16 names on the ballot in Issa’s neighborin­g 49th District, which includes parts of San Diego and Orange counties. Democrats nearly seized the seat in 2016, when Issa survived by a mere 1,600 votes. The coastal district has been growing more diverse and Democratic, although Republican­s retain an edge in voter registrati­on. Independen­ts — who here tend to cast ballots like Democrats — make up one-quarter of the voters.

PROTECT THE HOMELAND

Orange County has long been synonymous with Republican prestige and power, but that’s changing.

Hillary Clinton carried the county in the 2016 presidenti­al race, along with four Republican-held House districts that are completely or partly within it. Rohrabache­r, seeking his 16th term in the 48th District, and Walters, seeking her third in the 45th, are contending with multiple Democratic challenger­s in districts that favor the GOP. In Rohrabache­r’s case, he’s also competing with a strong challenge from a former protege, Scott Baugh, who led the county’s Republican Party for a decade.

Republican Reps. Jeff Denham and David Valadao have been Democratic targets before, and survived. Denham, whose farm-belt 10th District includes Modesto, managed to hang on by a few percentage points in 2016, in a year when Clinton carried the district by 3 points.

Valadao has prospered in his San Joaquin Valley district, the 21st, despite a strong Democratic registrati­on edge.

Clinton carried the district by a wide margin in 2016, but so did he. Unlike other crowded races in the state, he’s facing a single rival, Democrat TJ Cox.

The president’s poor approval ratings in California pose potential problems for some Republican­s, but he could prove an asset for others in pockets where conservati­ves hold sway.

The 25th District that runs through northern Los Angeles County and a thin strip of Ventura County has a Democratic registrati­on edge but a Republican congressma­n, Rep. Steve Knight. Not surprising­ly in a swing district, he’s occasional­ly created distance with the Republican president. Last year, for example, he criticized the president’s proposed cuts to education. Clinton carried the district by 7 points in 2016, but Knight, a former state legislator, was re-elected with a 6-point margin. Several Democrats on the ballot will be dividing the party’s vote, including lawyer Bryan Caforio, Knight’s 2016 rival.

In the 22nd District, House Intelligen­ce Committee Chairman Devin Nunes has gained national attention as an ardent Trump supporter eager to discredit special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigat­ion.

He carried the district, where Republican­s hold a comfortabl­e registrati­on edge, by an impressive 35 points in 2016, when Trump also prevailed.

DEALING WITH TRUMP: BEARHUG OR STIFF-ARM?

It’s possible, even likely, that the next House speaker will call California home, regardless of who controls the chamber. House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, a Republican from Bakersfiel­d, and House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi of San Francisco, are each expected to coast to re-election.

 ??  ?? Scott Baugh, a Republican candidate for Congress from Orange County’s 48th District, talks with a voter away from a polling place after voting in Huntington Beach on Tuesday. AP PHOTO/KRYSTA FAURIA
Scott Baugh, a Republican candidate for Congress from Orange County’s 48th District, talks with a voter away from a polling place after voting in Huntington Beach on Tuesday. AP PHOTO/KRYSTA FAURIA

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