Las Vegas Review-Journal

California Democrats unfazed by poor crime, inflation trends

November should be another midterm rout

- By Michael R. Blood

LOS ANGELES — Democrats in many parts of the country are facing a potentiall­y grim political year, but in California no one is talking about the liberal stronghold changing direction.

California’s largely irrelevant Republican Party could field only little-known candidates for governor and U.S. Senate, and the

GOP appears to have only isolated chances for upsets even under what should be favorable conditions for the party.

Mail ballots are already going out for the June 7 primary election that will set the stage for November runoffs. The election is taking place within a cauldron of dicey political issues: the possible repeal of the Supreme Court’s 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that legalized abortion, widespread frustratio­n with a homelessne­ss crisis and with residents suffering pocketbook stress from galloping inflation and soaring home costs — the state’s median price hit a record $849,080 in March.

President Joe Biden’s popularity has sagged — even among some of his fellow Democrats — and the party in the White House typically loses congressio­nal seats in midterm elections. California Democrats showed up in historic numbers in 2020 to defeat then-president Donald Trump in landslide, but turnout next month is expected to tumble with little drama at the top of the ticket: Gov. Gavin Newsom and U.S. Sen. Alex Padilla, both Democrats, face only token opposition.

But none of that adds up to a threat to the state’s Democratic supremacy. Republican­s haven’t won a statewide election in California since 2006, and Democratic voters outnumber Republican­s by nearly 2-to-1 statewide. Democrats are expected to maintain their supermajor­ities in the Legislatur­e.

The GOP picked up four U.S. House seats in 2020 but Democrats still dominate the congressio­nal delegation, holding all but 10 of the 53 House seats, with one vacancy.

At a state Republican Party convention last month, House

GOP leader Kevin Mccarthy of Bakersfiel­d said he’d be holding the chamber’s gavel in January, not Speaker Nancy Pelosi of San Francisco. He predicted more House upsets in California would tip the balance of power in the chamber, but the GOP faces tough races to hold its ground.

Recent history isn’t encouragin­g for the GOP. Last year, Newsom appeared vulnerable but then easily defeated a recall effort driven by critics of his handling of the pandemic.

“We don’t have a real race for governor. We don’t have a real race for senator,” said Claremont Mckenna College political scientist Jack Pitney, who cited the lopsided recall election as evidence of faded GOP prospects, even as Democrats are on the defensive nationally.

“The problem here is the Republican bench is very thin,” Pitney added. “There really aren’t any Republican­s in California who have a statewide profile.”

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i The Associated Press ?? Election workers unload ballots at the Sacramento County Registrar of Voters office in 2018. Mail-in ballots begin going to voters by mid-may for the June 7 primary election.
Rich Pedroncell­i The Associated Press Election workers unload ballots at the Sacramento County Registrar of Voters office in 2018. Mail-in ballots begin going to voters by mid-may for the June 7 primary election.

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