Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Let the aging Sen. Dianne Feinstein serve out her term

- Tom Elias Columnist Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com.

Since her election to the United States Senate in 1992, no politician has done more for California and its people than 88-year-old Dianne Feinstein.

Without Feinstein, there would be no national parks in the redwood country of Northern California or the parts of the Mojave Desert thick with Joshua trees.

There would be far fewer federal gun controls. Much more untreated sewage would flow into the Pacific Ocean daily.

Several more California military bases would be shuttered, likely including the Lemoore Naval Air Station and the Seabee base at Point Mugu in Ventura County.

The protection­s of the federal Violence Against Women Act would not exist.

The list goes on and on, from clean air measures to the largest appropriat­ions for California ever gained by any senator.

It’s why Feinstein has not had a serious Republican challenger in decades.

But that’s not enough for the far left in California politics. Feinstein is too old to serve out her term, ending in late 2024, they say.

The former San Francisco mayor is insufficie­ntly alert to do her job.

These are similar to charges leveled against Feinstein by leftist former state Senate President Kevin de LeÓn when he ran against her in 2018 and lost badly.

De LeÓn, now a Los Angeles city councilman and seemingly about to lose again in a bid to become the mayor, miscalcula­ted then.

He figured his ageist arguments would resonate with the bulk of Democratic voters that year, but it didn’t happen.

De LeÓn’s complaints, and those of other “woke” politicos in the state, amount to this:

Feinstein does not line up often enough with the ferociousl­y progressiv­e “squad” of House members, which now leads her party’s left wing.

She is too friendly with Republican senators she has known for more than a generation and even compliment­s them once in a while.

They claim that De LeÓn’s 2018 charge has come true, that Feinstein suffers from cognitive decline due to her age. The San Francisco Chronicle reported this spring that several unnamed former Senate staffers say Feinstein can no longer fulfill her responsibi­lities without help from her staff.

Never mind that the same can be said of most other senators half her age or less.

The fact is that Feinstein has never cast a vote differentl­y than she intended. She has never backed a cause without conscious intent.

There is no proof — only hearsay — that her mental state is beneath common Senate standards. Whether she’s as profession­al and creative as she was at 60 is not at issue, merely whether she’s up to senatorial snuff, and only gossip suggests otherwise.

But that won’t satisfy the “woke” Democratic left in this state, which is impatient to take over Feinstein’s seat, especially since it was thwarted when Gov. Gavin Newsom appointed the somewhat technocrat­ic Alex Padilla to the state’s other Senate seat, vacated when Kamala Harris became vice president.

Padilla, California’s first Latino senator of the modern era, did not satisfy the far left because he’s not a Black woman and they figured the seat he took essentiall­y “belonged” to a Black female like Congresswo­man Barbara Lee or former legislator Shirley Weber, Newsom’s choice to replace Padilla as secretary of state.

They want Feinstein out now so Newsom can appoint someone of their choice to her seat, giving that person a leg up on prospectiv­e Senate candidates like Reps. Adam Schiff of Burbank (leader of one Donald Trump impeachmen­t) or Katie Porter of Irvine, both moderates more in the Feinstein mold.

The fact is that the campaign to replace Feinstein will start this fall, the moment the November election is over, regardless of whether she is still in office or not.

Too bad for De LeÓn that the last four years have pretty much eliminated him as a serious candidate.

If he can’t finish in the top two in his own city’s mayoral primary (and he will not), how can he be a strong statewide candidate for a more significan­t office?

The bottom line: The wise thing and the fair thing to do is let Feinstein serve out her term, and so what if she needs a boost from her staff once in a while?

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