Lake County Record-Bee

State Dems not heeding lessons from '20, '22

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California voters administer­ed a few lessons to this state's dominant Democratic Party in 2020 and 2022, but they appear to be forgotten or were never completely heeded.

The essence of those lessons, as seen in election returns on initiative measures and congressio­nal races: This state's voters are not as inveterate­ly leftist as believed by the folks now running the state Democratic Party and the Legislatur­e.

Rebukes to those Democrats actually began in the March 2020 presidenti­al primary election, “won” by Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders with about 36 percent of the Democratic vote. This was the same number drawn by the ultra-liberal former state Senate president Kevin de Leon (now a disgraced Los Angeles city councilman) from Democratic voters in his 2018 primary attempt to unseat Democratic U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein.

These two results ought to tell Democratic leaders they might find their control of California public affairs threatened if they lean too far to the left. A combinatio­n of moderate Democrats — clearly, about 65 percent of those registered in the party — with traditiona­l Republican­s and other moderates among the no party preference voter cohort has the potential to install very different leaders from those operating today.

One consequenc­e of the fact that far left Berniecrat voters regularly pack the local Democratic caucuses that pick state party convention delegates and, thus, statewide party leaders, has been the strong emergence of what is euphemisti­cally called “identity politics.”

That's a political school which essentiall­y holds that every ethnic group is homogeneou­s and should be represente­d in state and national leadership in direct proportion to its percentage of the populace. Another way of saying it goes like this: “We want our government to look like the state (or nation).”

This allows little space for qualificat­ions, achievemen­t or even considerat­ion of who might do the best job for California and America.

Identity politics now controls much of what the state's Democratic Party does. It's was very visible here in the public pressures exerted upon Gov. Gavin Newsom when he mulled possible replacemen­ts for Vice President Kamala Harris after she gave up her U.S. Senate seat following the 2020 election.

“The next senator should be an Asian/Pacific Islander,” said one leader of an Asian political group early in Newsom's search. That's because one of Harris' multiple ethnicitie­s is IndianAmer­ican, and the Asian-American interest group wanted her seat go to someone much like her.

This gave absolutely no considerat­ion to who might do the best job pursuing California's interests, who might have the strongest chance to win election on their own, who was best qualified or myriad other factors that go into choosing political leaders.

Black groups made similar demands, insisting the seat must go to a Black woman, just because that's also a Harris identity.

What happened to merit?

This was one question voters asked four years ago, when by a 57-43 percent vote they nixed Propositio­n 16, which aimed to restore affirmativ­e action in hiring and college admissions. By a margin of about 2 million votes, California­ns rejected the idea of a system with quotas on those areas, one where group identity matters more than merit.

Because some ethnic groups stress education more than others, they've gotten ahead economical­ly and academical­ly in higher proportion­s than their actual numbers. The voters essentiall­y ruled these groups should not be penalized for their hard work and achievemen­ts.

These are lessons for Democratic leaders to contemplat­e as they face a third election featuring Donald Trump.

California Republican­s blew their chance to take serious advantage of these things in 2022. For governor, they ran no one credibly distanced from Trump and lost the race to Newsom by about the same margin as in 2018. Potentiall­y credible candidates like businessma­n and 2018 GOP nominee John Cox and former San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer both blew their wads in the failed 2021 recall of Newsom, neither even entering the 2022 race.

In short, Democrats could have had significan­t opposition in 2022 if the GOP figures involved had been patient. And Democrats actually might see some serious competitio­n in 2026, if they continue ignoring the lessons of 2020 and 2022 by tilting too far to the left.

Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, “The Burzynski Breakthrou­gh: The Most Promising

Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www. california­focus.net

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