Los Angeles Times

Brulte hopes to revive GOP

Former Inland Empire lawmaker will focus on the mechanics

- GEORGE SKELTON in sacramento george.skelton@latimes.com

“There’s no place to go but up,” asserted Jim Brulte, whose mission is to save the California Republican Party. “We’re on the way back.”

Brulte told me that in 2000 at the Republican National Convention in Philadelph­ia. He was the state Senate minority leader then. And was he ever wrong!

The California GOP did make a brief resurgence under Gov. Arnold Schwarzene­gger, who was never fully accepted or appreciate­d by party activists. But in recent years, it has been going down, down, down. In fact, it’s in free-fall.

In 2000, the GOP could count at least one statewide elected officehold­er. Today, no Republican holds statewide office.

Back then, Republican­s were in a minority in both houses. But today, they’re in a super minority; Democrats hold two-thirds majorities that allow them to pass anything without GOP support. With Jerry Brown as governor, Democrats enjoy one-party control of the Capitol for the first time in 130 years.

Moreover, 13 years ago, Republican­s had nearly 35% of the California voter registrati­on. Now they’re down to just over 29%.

And the party is dead broke, in hock by perhaps $800,000, Brulte says. The organizati­on is down to only a handful of full-time staffers. The chairman — unlike his well-paid Democratic counterpar­t — is an unsalaried volunteer.

Brulte is widely regarded as the wise Republican graybeard of California, although he’s only 56 and he’s beardless. He represente­d Rancho Cucamonga for 14 years in the Legislatur­e. Colleagues elected him Republican leader in both houses. His philosophy was conservati­ve, but his forte was pragmatic deal-making.

“He didn’t allow his own philosophy to get in the way of being a leader,” recalls Allan Zaremberg, president of the California Chamber of Commerce. “He recognized the need to be in the game. He made the [GOP] caucus relevant.”

These days, Republican legislator­s are virtually irrelevant.

Brulte is a lifelong political junkie who acquired the bug as a 10-year-old slapping on bumper stickers in Ronald Reagan’s first gubernator­ial race. He became an aide to U.S. Sen. S.I.

‘Left to their own devices, Democrats will take California to a place from where we may never recover.’

— JIM BRULTE,

former lawmaker, shown in 2003

Hayakawa and an advance man for Vice President George Bush.

After being booted out of the Legislatur­e by term limits — the people’s and the party’s loss — he became a government affairs consultant, affiliated with one of Sacramento’s most influentia­l outfits, California Strategies.

And following last November’s Republican debacle — the GOP lost a net seven legislativ­e seats — Brulte was recruited by business leaders and party pragmatist­s to undertake a rescue mission. He’s a shooin to be elected state chairman at the GOP convention in Sacramento the first weekend in March.

Why’d he agree to do this? “California is important,” he told me. “And a healthy California requires a two-party system.

“Left to their own devices, Democrats will take California to a place from where we may never recover. Detroit was once one of the richest cities in America. Look what one-party rule did to that city.... Democrats do what they instinctiv­ely do, which is to try to raise taxes. It’s in their DNA.”

Yes, a strong two-party system — one that facilitate­s a problem-solving consensus — is preferable. But a functionin­g one-party system with competing factions would be better than what we have had in recent years: a liberal majority and a reactionar­y “Party of No” creating gridlock.

At any rate, the 6-foot-4 Brulte does not envision mounting a soapbox. He sees himself behind the scenes, working on fundamenta­ls, “the most boring Republican Party chair in history.”

He wants to create a new fundraisin­g operation. “The party got a little lazy,” he says.

Donors also got disgusted.

Essentiall­y, business interests and traditiona­l donors decided to starve the party to force it to rehabilita­te into a healthier body. Persuading them to feed the party again, however, may be difficult.

“Contributo­rs don’t like to give money to pay for past sins,” says Marty Wilson, political strategist for the state chamber.

For example, he says: the sin of “going off half-cocked” to finance a referendum to repeal the redistrict­ing of state Senate seats by an independen­t citizens commission. The measure qualified for last November’s ballot, but the party dropped its repeal effort after wasting several hundred thousand dollars that should have gone to candidates.

Brulte also wants to rebuild other party infrastruc­ture such as get-outthe-vote, data analysis and candidate recruitmen­t machinery that has corroded.

“I don’t want to be the spokesman for the party,” he says. “I’ll do the nuts and bolts.”

No question, Brulte is the right mechanic for the job. But let’s face it, overhaulin­g the California GOP is going to require more than a tool kit of nuts and bolts.

It’s going to necessitat­e a whole new design — a modern look and sound.

The GOP needs a different message, especially for Latinos. They’ve been voting heavily Democratic — largely because of Republican demagoguer­y on illegal immigratio­n — and within months are projected to surpass whites as California’s largest ethnic group.

The party also needs magnetic messengers — less-scary candidates who run on economic developmen­t, education reform and fiscal conservati­sm while piping down on immigratio­n, abortion and gay marriage.

“We need a more narrow bandwidth,” says state Senate GOP Leader Bob Huff of Diamond Bar. “More focused on fiscal issues and job creation — less focused on social issues. We need to be more libertaria­n.”

Says veteran Republican consultant Ray McNally: “The party does have a pulse. It’s Jim Brulte.”

But it also needs a strong voice to lead Republican­s out of the sinkhole.

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ??
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press
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