Imperial Valley Press

Nation’s stormy politics could unsettle California recall

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LOS ANGELES (AP) — California may become the next testing ground for the nation’s roiled, unpredicta­ble politics as an effort to give voters a chance to fire Gov. Gavin Newsom moves closer to reality.

Not long ago, the notion that liberal favorite Newsom could be ousted by voters in the heavily Democratic state who elected him in a landslide two years ago would have appeared farcical. But the slippery politics of the pandemic and a tangle of confoundin­g decisions on vaccines and reopening businesses and schools have conspired to make the first- term Democrat look vulnerable.

Newsom’s popularity is tumbling and a proposed recall election appears on track to qualify for the ballot.

A recall in the nation’s most populous state would become a marquee contest with national implicatio­ns, watched closely as a barometer of the public mood heading toward the 2022 elections, when a closely divided Congress again will be in play.

California voters weary of restrictio­ns that have cut them off from jobs, classrooms and friends, combined with anxiety from the continuing threat of the coronaviru­s, could create a volatile mix at the ballot box. Newsom also has weathered a public drubbing for dining out with friends and lobbyists at a San Francisco Bay Area restaurant last fall, while telling residents to stay home.

More recently, an ever- expanding fraud scandal at the state unemployme­nt agency has his leadership during the pandemic under even closer scrutiny.

“When you have a very angry, frustrated electorate, they are being driven by emotion, not facts,” said pollster Ben Tulchin, who worked for former Democratic Gov. Gray Davis when he was ousted in a 2003 recall election and replaced by Republican Arnold Schwarzene­gger.

Former President Donald “Trump got elected because voters were angry,” Tulchin said. “Gavin (Newsom) needs to take this extremely seriously. There are enough people who are undecided, who are up for grabs. Voters are split on him.”

The election would occur at a time when the country is being shaken by political turmoil in the post-Trump era, and Newsom is losing ground with key voter groups. Independen­ts now make up about 1 in 4 registrati­ons in the state, a number roughly equal to Republican­s. Young people, in particular, lean progressiv­e but are less likely than their parents to adhere to traditiona­l party loyalties.

At a time when millennial­s and other young people are worried about education, job prospects and affordable housing “they want solutions” and grow frustrated with bureaucrac­ies that don’t work, said Elizabeth Matto, an associate research professor at Rutgers University’s Eagleton Institute of Politics.

While they lean to the political left, that doesn’t mean they reflexivel­y vote Democratic, she said, noting many young Bernie Sanders followers didn’t support presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton in 2016. They are looking for a candidate who “speaks to them and seeks to involve them in a campaign,” said Matto, who studies youth political participat­ion.

Beyond the turbulent electorate, a fellow Democrat could enter the contest and provide party voters with an alternativ­e. That’s what happened to Davis in 2003 when Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante joined the race and siphoned off support.

Republican­s haven’t won a statewide race in heavily Democratic California since 2006, but the party senses shifting ground. Candidates already are lining up, hoping to tap into angst over Newsom’s pandemic rules that have reordered everyday life for nearly 40 million people.

California has become “the land of broken promises,” former San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer said last week when he formally launched his campaign and urged the state to reopen schools immediatel­y.

Newsom’s 2018 rival, businessma­n John Cox, has said he’ll be a candidate if the recall qualifies, and former GOP Congressma­n Doug Ose also might get in.

Recall organizers have until March 15 to get the 1.5 million petition signatures needed to get on the ballot. They say they have 1.4 million in-hand, though the tally has yet to be fully verified by election officials.

“This past week more than 100,000 registered voters in California have signed Gavin Newsom’s pink slip,” recall organizer Orrin Heatlie, a retired county sheriff’s sergeant, said in a statement.

Organizers say they have sent mailings to 3.5 million households containing a petition and instructio­ns for signing it, along with a postage-paid return envelope. Meanwhile, volunteers and paid signature-gatherers are in the field rounding up signatures.

If it qualifies, an election likely would occur in late summer or fall.

Voters would be presented with two questions: Should Newsom be recalled and who should replace him? If voters say yes to the recall, then whoever among the listed candidates gets the most votes becomes the next governor.

On paper, the odds favor the lanky, voluble Newsom, who not long ago was being discussed as a potential future presidenti­al candidate. Democrats outnumber Republican­s by nearly 2-to-1, hold every statewide office and dominate the Legislatur­e and congressio­nal delegation.

Still, Faulconer argues voters are eager for a change after years of Democratic rule. Indeed, recent polling by the Public Policy Institute of California has found that among likely voters, Newsom is losing ground with independen­ts, Latinos — even his fellow Democrats. Less than half of likely voters say the state is headed in the right direction.

There were cautionary signs in the November election that the state might not be as rigidly Democratic as registrati­on numbers suggest.

Voters rejected an attempt to reinstate affirmativ­e action, as well as a proposed tax increase on commercial and industrial properties. Republican­s also recaptured four congressio­nal seats they lost in 2018.

Republican candidates will need to overcome turmoil within the party following the Trump presidency, as well as the lopsided voter registrati­on numbers.

Faulconer already has seen attacks from the party’s conservati­ve wing, who see him veering too far to the left on immigratio­n and climate change. The former mayor didn’t support Trump in 2016 but in 2020 changed course and backed him.

While Faulconer’s positions on social issues and the environmen­t square with many voters — he was elected twice in a Democratic-leaning city — “The bad news is that he is not Arnold Schwarzene­gger,” who entered the race with worldwide celebrity, said Bill Whalen, a research fellow at Stanford University’s Hoover Institutio­n who was a speechwrit­er for former GOP Gov. Pete Wilson.

Perhaps Newsom’s greatest ally is time. With the potential election months away, it’s possible a combinatio­n of sharply declining virus cases and widespread vaccinatio­ns will see California largely reopened.

But if pandemic problems don’t turn around, Newsom “could be in real trouble,” Whalen said.

 ?? Irfan Khan/Los Angeles Times via AP, Pool, ?? In this Jan. 15 file photo, Gov. Gavin Newsom addresses a press conference held at the launch of a mass COVID-19 vaccinatio­n site at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles.
Irfan Khan/Los Angeles Times via AP, Pool, In this Jan. 15 file photo, Gov. Gavin Newsom addresses a press conference held at the launch of a mass COVID-19 vaccinatio­n site at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles.

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