Los Angeles Times

Not always on the same page

In key ways, state’s GOP, Democrats move away from the national parties.

- CATHLEEN DECKER cathleen.decker @latimes.com Twitter: @cathleende­cker For more on politics, go to www.latimes.com/decker and www. latimes.com/politics.

For decades, California­ns prided themselves on cutting the path to be trod later by national political figures. Ronald Reagan rose first on the West Coast and spread eastward with his election as president. The anti-tax movement likewise moved from west to east, grounded by the historic approval of Propositio­n 13’s property tax limitation­s in 1978.

This year, the state’s Democrats and Republican­s are moving, in some key ways, in exactly the opposite direction from the national parties.

National Democrats, as a glance at the presidenti­al contest demonstrat­es, are feeling intense pressure to move to the left. Hillary Rodham Clinton, hardly a conservati­ve when left to her own devices, has moved left on criminal justice, immigratio­n and economic policies as she seeks to put down a surprising­ly strong challenge by an independen­t socialist, Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont.

Among Republican­s vying for the 2016 presidenti­al nomination, the race to the right has taken on the appearance of a stampede. Gone is the past support of some candidates for dealing with immigrants in the country illegally, or support of more moderate policy changes on healthcare or education.

Contrast that with the positionin­g of California’s Democrats and Republican­s.

The state’s Democrats are led by Gov. Jerry Brown, who, while liberal in some respects, has served as a brake on more leftward elements of his party. An increasing­ly forceful presence in the party —while still a rabble-rousing minority — are those pushing conservati­ve-for-a-Democrat positions on government pensions, organized labor and education policy.

The divergence with the nationals is even more pronounced among state Republican­s. The party’s 2014 candidate for governor, Neel Kashkari, favored abortion rights and gay marriage, the almost universal opposite of GOP presidenti­al candidates. Some may discount his positions because he was, more than anything, a sacrificia­l lamb. But there’s more evidence.

Earlier this year, state Republican­s offered an official embrace to a chapter of Log Cabin Republican­s, the gay group that previously had not been formally acknowledg­ed. And in late September, delegates to the state party’s convention approved platform wording that Republican­s “hold diverse views” about millions of immigrants in the country without proper papers. It also omitted language that said allowing them to stay “undermines respect for the law.”

The changes were symbolic but meaningful. And they run directly contrary to the stances held by many of those running to be the nation’s top Republican, and the national party as well.

California’s role as the outlier has been driven by changes in party strength, demographi­cs and, for lack of a better scientific term, group dynamics.

Some distinctio­ns have long been tolerated. Republican­s in California often were more sympatheti­c to environmen­tal causes than their counterpar­ts elsewhere. Still, for a long period, the state and other major portions of the West were firmly in the Republican camp. (No Democrat won the state in a presidenti­al contest between 1964 and 1992.) Now, California is determined­ly Democratic in presidenti­al contests, and it is not alone. Nevada, New Mexico and Colorado have gone to Democrats in recent contests, and Arizona looms as a future toss-up state.

In large part, those states have grown more Democratic because their population­s have become younger and less white. At the same time, the national Republican Party has found its strength in the conservati­ve South, particular­ly among white evangelica­l voters. With California out of sync with the national party on demographi­cs, religiosit­y and region, the break was inevitable.

Harmeet Dhillon, vice chair of the state Republican Party, described the changes at the party’s September convention as a matter of survival.

“Some of these issues are issues that need to be changed as our country evolves,” she said.

She added pointedly: “We are doing what is right for our party. We can’t take responsibi­lity for the national party and the national candidates.”

The difference between California Democrats and their national brethren is more nuanced. To be sure, state Democrats have been at the forefront of many liberal causes espoused now by the party’s presidenti­al candidates. Rather than being forced by demographi­c difference­s, the Democratic schisms present now are the fallout from their statewide success.

Nationally, according to a Pew Research study last year, 32% of the nation’s voters were Democrats and 23% were Republican­s, a differenti­al of only 9 points. In California, state registrati­on figures show that 43% of voters are Democrats, while just under 28% are Republican­s — a difference of more than 15 points. That Democratic gap grows dramatical­ly with the addition of independen­t voters, who make up almost a quarter of the electorate and, for the most part, are reliable Democratic allies.

Historical­ly, a group becomes so dominant because it houses people with disparate views. But inevitably, fissures form. Those fissures are most likely to be seen in the run for governor in 2018, particular­ly if announced candidate Gavin Newsom, the lieutenant governor, is challenged by former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigo­sa, long at war with teachers unions over changes he says must be made in the state’s education system.

“I want to speak to Democrats,” Villaraigo­sa said at a June meeting of the U.S. Conference of Mayors in San Francisco.

“You all have got to have the courage ... to stand up; you can’t be afraid to stand up for the civil rights of poor kids.”

Stand up, he might have said, against one of the party’s most powerful benefactor­s: teachers. It was the kind of message that California will hear more and more, and national Democrats are likely to hear not at all.

 ?? Scott Stewart Associated Press ?? RONALD REAGAN, photograph­ed in the Oval Office in May of 1985, rose first on the West Coast and spread eastward with his election as president.
Scott Stewart Associated Press RONALD REAGAN, photograph­ed in the Oval Office in May of 1985, rose first on the West Coast and spread eastward with his election as president.
 ?? Lenny Ignelzi Associated Press ?? GOV. JERRY BROWN, a Democrat, has served as a brake on more leftward elements of his party.
Lenny Ignelzi Associated Press GOV. JERRY BROWN, a Democrat, has served as a brake on more leftward elements of his party.

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