Los Angeles Times

In this race, politics are personal

Questions of character dominate Northern California contest between Ami Bera and Scott Jones.

- SOPHIA BOLLAG sophia.bollag@latimes.com

SACRAMENTO — In a Northern California swing district, mudslingin­g and allegation­s of wrongdoing have been the focal point of what will probably be one of the tightest congressio­nal races in the state.

Rep. Ami Bera (D-Elk Grove) faces a tough reelection battle for his seat in the 7th Congressio­nal District against Sacramento County Sheriff Scott Jones, a Republican. Bera is under scrutiny over revelation­s that his father illegally funneled money to two of his past campaigns. Jones has been confronted with allegation­s that he sexually harassed a subordinat­e at the Sheriff ’s Department more than a decade ago, which he denies.

In Bera’s last election, 39% of registered voters were Democrats and 36% were Republican, according to data from the nonpartisa­n California Target Book. Nearly 20% registered with no party preference.

Bera eked out a narrow victory then, winning by less than a percentage point.

“This race is always one of the closest races in the country,” Bera said. “It’s pretty evenly split Democrat and Republican, much like our entire country is.”

In August, Bera’s father was sentenced to a year and a day in prison for illegally funneling money to his son’s congressio­nal campaigns in 2010 and 2012. The congressma­n has denied knowing anything about the scheme, in which his father paid or reimbursed donors for campaign contributi­ons, enabling him to effectivel­y exceed the legal maximum in individual contributi­ons.

“My father made a grave mistake,” he told reporters at a news conference Tuesday. “Had we known what was going on, we would have put a stop to it immediatel­y.”

Jones’ campaign has been plagued by allegation­s of sexual harassment. In a court deposition, a female deputy working for Jones said he made multiple unwanted sexual advances to her more than a decade ago, the Sacramento Bee reported in July. Jones has denied the allegation­s.

At an event at his campaign’s Carmichael office this month, Bera used the allegation­s and Jones’ stance on immigratio­n to compare his opponent to Republican presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump, who has recently faced claims of sexual harassment from multiple women.

“Is there anyone in this room who thinks Donald Trump would be a good president?” he asked, drawing laughs from the crowd of roughly 20 volunteers and staffers. “We can prevent Donald Trump’s clone from becoming a member of Congress.”

Jones himself has said he decided not to vote for Trump because of his comments about women. At a debate between the two candidates on Tuesday, Jones pointed to a video of Trump that surfaced this month.

In the video, Trump bragged about kissing and groping women without their consent. Jones said he supported Trump for his policies, not his character, until the video surfaced.

“He was talking about things that we’ve arrested people for,” Jones said. “I had to depart from him at that time.”

At the debate, Bera said Jones should have come out against Trump sooner, citing the presidenti­al nominee’s previous controvers­ial comments about women and a Gold Star military family.

Polls indicate Republican­s will stay in control of the House in November. But Trump’s diminishin­g popularity in recent weeks has given Democrats an opportunit­y to erode the GOP’s majority, drawing increased interest to races in swing districts such as California’s 7th.

Outside groups have spent nearly $4 million to influence the race, most of which has gone to opposition campaigns, according to data from the California Target Book. During the debate, Jones sought to draw a contrast between his campaign and Bera’s by pointing out that the negative ads against Bera were produced by outside groups, not his campaign. The Bera campaign has run a television ad blasting Jones over the sexual harassment allegation­s.

Jones garnered attention in 2014 when he posted a YouTube video urging the president to reform the U.S. immigratio­n system. The video was prompted by the killings of two Northern California police officers who were shot by an immigrant who was in the U.S. illegally. In the eight-minute clip, Jones criticized amnesty policies and a lack of action by the president to address problems with the immigratio­n system.

Although he has staked his political reputation on his immigratio­n stances, Jones has sought to distance himself from Trump.

He said at the debate that although he thinks the country needs to secure its border, that “does not mean a 2,000-mile wall,” referring to Trump’s pledge to build a wall along the U.S. border with Mexico. Bera said he favors a comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform plan.

The candidates have also clashed over climate change. Although both candidates said they support policies to combat climate change, only Bera said at the debate that he was convinced climate change is caused by humans.

“There is a body of evidence supporting it either way,” Jones said at a news conference after the debate. “I don’t know what to believe, I truly don’t.”

Bera and Jones have also pointed to their opposing stances on gun control. Bera wants to ban people on the no-fly list from buying guns, but Jones says the list shouldn’t be used because it has errors and is overseen by a political appointee. They also differ on the California death penalty: Bera said he would probably vote to end it, and Jones said it should remain in place.

But like much of the discussion surroundin­g the race, the debate Tuesday kept circling back to questions about each candidate’s integrity.

“You’re choosing who’s going to be your next representa­tive,” Bera said afterward. “It’s about character.”

 ?? Jose Luis Villegas Sacramento Bee ?? DEMOCRATIC Rep. Ami Bera and Sacramento County Sheriff Scott Jones, a Republican, shake hands after a debate last week. Outside groups have spent almost $4 million to inf luence the 7th Congressio­nal District race.
Jose Luis Villegas Sacramento Bee DEMOCRATIC Rep. Ami Bera and Sacramento County Sheriff Scott Jones, a Republican, shake hands after a debate last week. Outside groups have spent almost $4 million to inf luence the 7th Congressio­nal District race.

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