Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

How a big bet on key O.C. House race went awry

Democratic Emily’s List spent huge sums on Joanna Weiss, only to see her finish third.

- By Laura J. Nelson

For Emily’s List, the Democratic political group that has helped elect hundreds of women who support abortion rights, backing Joanna Weiss just made sense.

Weiss, a first-time candidate for Congress in a competitiv­e Orange County district, had founded a Democratic advocacy group and was proving to be a formidable fundraiser.

But the sheer amount of money that Emily’s List spent in support of Weiss raised eyebrows. During a single week in the congressio­nal primary, the group’s independen­t expenditur­e arm spent more than $813,000 on television and online ads for Weiss. She is the only candidate that the super PAC has backed this year.

Weiss finished third in the 47th District primary, behind Democratic state Sen. Dave Min and Republican Scott Baugh. The losing bet by Emily’s List in Orange County left Democrats scratching their heads.

“I had just assumed that they were smarter with their donor dollars,” said Mari Fujii, first vice chair of membership for the Democrats of Greater Irvine.

The group’s super PAC, called Women Vote, typically saves the bulk of its war chest for the November ballot. But the group has also frequently waded into early primary races, often in districts without an incumbent candidate.

When a record number of American women ran for office in 2018, Women Vote backed candidates in a dozen House primaries, including two in Southern California. Women Vote also spent in several House primaries in 2022, including a border district in Texas where the group tried to oust Rep. Henry Cuellar, the last antiaborti­on Democrat in the House. Challenger Jessica Cisneros lost by 281 votes.

Emily’s List said its work to support women running for office extends beyond independen­t expenditur­es to recruitmen­t, campaign advice and fundraisin­g help, including bundling contributi­ons and introducin­g candidates to major donors. Spokeswoma­n Christina Reynolds said the organizati­on does “not comment on strategic decisions about specific races.”

The super PAC reported having $1.5 million on hand at the end of March, raising questions about the group’s

ability to influence November races in media markets where an effective outside expenditur­e campaign can top $1 million.

The 47th District is one of the hottest races in the country, pivotal to both Democrats and Republican­s fighting for control of Congress. The coastal district, which runs from Seal Beach to Laguna Beach and inland to Costa Mesa and Irvine, is represente­d by Rep. Katie Porter (DIrvine), who is leaving Congress in January.

Porter’s decision to give up her House seat and run for the Senate, a bid that fell short in the March 5 primary, kicked off a flurry of campaigns to replace her in Washington.

Before Weiss announced her candidacy, Emily’s List approached her to ask if she was interested in running, said Mike McLaughlin, a senior advisor to the Weiss campaign.

Former Rep. Harley Rouda and Min had both announced they would run, and Emily’s List was “very invested in trying to keep a women in that seat,” McLaughlin said. By then, Weiss had already decided she would run, he said.

Emily’s List did not promise to fund Weiss’ campaign, McLaughlin said. But, he said, the group signaled that it would watch to see if Weiss merited an endorsemen­t, and if she had the kind of fundraisin­g chops needed to win in a battlegrou­nd House district.

Then the already competitiv­e race took several unexpected turns.

Rouda suffered a brain injury after a fall and dropped out of the race last April. In May, Min was arrested for driving under the influence in Sacramento and pleaded no contest to a misdemeano­r.

In June, Emily’s List endorsed Weiss, saying that her history as “a community organizer, lawyer, and advocate for women is unparallel­ed.”

By election day, Weiss had raised more than $2 million from individual contributi­ons — more than any other nonincumbe­nt woman running for Congress in the U.S., McLaughlin said. (That figure does not include the $225,000 Weiss lent her campaign.)

“That is what led Emily’s List to then decide to make an investment,” McLaughlin said. “It was a competitiv­e race, and she was doing her part to build a broad coalition of support.”

The main political committee controlled by Emily’s List has given to dozens of candidates across the country, but in far smaller amounts. Federal law restricts such committees from giving big amounts directly to candidates. Independen­t expenditur­e committees — including the Emily’s List super PAC, Women Vote — can receive and spend an unlimited amount, however.

Women Vote began buying ads for Weiss on Jan. 30, spending more than $827,000 in a week on television ads and mailers, federal records show.

“If you’re going to spend that kind of money, you’d expect to see it spent over a longer amount of time and it would be targeted better,” said Jon Gould, dean of the School of Social Ecology at UC Irvine. “It had the feel that someone suddenly committed a lot of money at the last minute.”

The board of the Irvine Democrats, which backed Min, took the unusual step of writing to the president of Emily’s List, chiding the group for investing so heavily in Weiss. The letter spelled out what the group saw as Weiss’ biggest problems, including her lack of experience as a candidate and her decision to send her children to private schools outside the district.

“Backing the f lawed campaign of Ms. Weiss will harm the chances of electing a Democratic House majority in 2024,” the group wrote. They suggested that Emily’s List redirect the money to two other races in Orange County with strong Democratic women candidates.

This year is not the first time Min has been at odds with Emily’s List.

During the bruising 2018 primary for California’s 45th Congressio­nal District, Min ran against Porter in a crowded field to unseat then-Rep. Mimi Walters, a Republican.

After Emily’s List endorsed Porter, the group’s super PAC spent more than $241,000 on ads and mailers to support her.

Min’s campaign then released an ad suggesting Porter, Walters and another candidate were being funded by “special interests.” In a voice-over, a narrator said: “Washington insiders have spent over $100,000 to elect Katie Porter.”

In a terse statement, the then-president of Emily’s List dismissed Min’s ad as “dishonest.”

“In a year where we’re seeing a record number of women step up and run for office, it’s unfortunat­e that there are those who are trying to diminish our success,” Stephanie Schriock said. She called Min’s comments “disparagin­g” to more than 5 million supporters of Emily’s List, including many who lived in his district.

The 47th District wasn’t the only race in California where choices by Emily’s List rankled Democratic leaders. One Democratic consultant, who requested anonymity to speak frankly about an organizati­on that works closely with Democratic campaigns, said the group has made “many weird decisions in California this year.”

State Sen. Melissa Hurtado (D-Sanger) told The Times that the group had contacted her about running in the Central Valley’s 22nd Congressio­nal District, hoping to oust incumbent GOP Rep. David Valadao of Hanford. But Rudy Salas, a Democrat and a former member of the state Assembly, already had the backing of Washington’s Democratic leadership. Hurtado said she had weekly meetings with Emily’s List until it became clear the organizati­on was not going to support her financiall­y. She finished in a distant fourth place in the primary.

Emily’s List did not endorse a candidate in the 45th Congressio­nal District in inland Orange County, represente­d by GOP Rep. Michelle Steel.

Democrat Kim NguyenPena­loza, a Garden Grove councilmem­ber and the daughter of Mexican and Vietnamese immigrants, finished third in the primary, losing by 367 votes to Democrat Derek Tran.

In the 40th Congressio­nal District, an inland suburban district mostly in Orange County, Emily’s List endorsed Allyson Muñiz Damikolas in her bid to unseat GOP Rep. Young Kim. The endorsemen­t helped Damikolas bring in more money, but the group did not spend a significan­t amount to help her. She finished a distant third behind Kim and Democrat Joe Kerr, a retired firefighte­r.

The results of both those races, Gould said, suggest that Emily’s List “probably made the right call.”

 ?? Dakota Fine ?? JOANNA WEISS, a Democrat, finished third in the 47th Congressio­nal District primary, behind Democratic state Sen. Dave Min and Republican Scott Baugh.
Dakota Fine JOANNA WEISS, a Democrat, finished third in the 47th Congressio­nal District primary, behind Democratic state Sen. Dave Min and Republican Scott Baugh.

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