Los Angeles Times

Former GOP lawmaker runs for governor

David Hadley, Manhattan Beach’s ex-assemblyma­n, joins a growing 2018 field.

- By Seema Mehta

Arguing that California is at a crucial crossroads, Republican David Hadley is announcing a bid to be the state’s next governor. The former assemblyma­n, who voted against Donald Trump in the fall, is a social moderate and fiscal conservati­ve whose 2018 candidacy could galvanize the GOP establishm­ent in a state where it is at a significan­t disadvanta­ge.

Hadley, 52, is the third prominent Republican to enter the field, joining businessma­n John Cox and Assemblyma­n Travis Allen. The Democratic field is similarly crowded. In California, voters choose from all of the candidates during the primary, and the top two votegetter­s advance to the general election regardless of party.

“I’ve decided that I can fill an important role in this election. I think we can win this race, I think we can bring important changes and important reforms to California, and I think I’m the right guy to do it,” Hadley told The Times. “We can’t have this race be a debate between a Democrat and a socialist.”

He didn’t specify whom his remarks were directed at, but the best-known Democratic hopefuls in the race are Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, former L.A. Mayor Antonio Villaraigo­sa and state Treasurer John Chiang.

The last time a Republican candidate was elected statewide was more than a decade ago, and Democrats

have a 19-point edge in voter registrati­on. The Democratic gubernator­ial candidates have a head start and have raised more than $20 million combined. The state’s top-two primary could keep a Republican off the November 2018 ballot, a repeat of what happened in the 2016 U.S. Senate race.

But Hadley believes a Republican has a chance to appeal to voters who believe Democrats have gone too far with the Legislatur­e’s recent passage of an increase in the gas tax and vehicle registrati­on fees and their unsuccessf­ul attempt to create a single-payer healthcare system in California.

“On so many issues, the leadership in Sacramento does not reflect the values of the residents of California,” he said.

Specifical­ly, Hadley says he hopes to build a coalition of center-right voters as well as non-Republican­s willing to cross party lines. He plans to roll out the endorsemen­ts of more than 20 GOP members of the Legislatur­e soon.

Hadley is a Fullerton native, a businessma­n who served in the Assembly for two years and a father of four who lives in Manhattan Beach with his wife, Suzanne.

He opened a gubernator­ial explorator­y committee in the spring but held off on making it official until now. The announceme­nt is coming just after San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer, who was facing pressure from national and state GOP leaders to enter the race, announced he would not run.

Hadley declined to say whether Faulconer’s announceme­nt influenced his decision, but the mayor is better-known among voters and donors. And the two would have been vying for the same types of supporters because of similar ideologica­l profiles and demonstrat­ed crossover appeal, having both been elected in places where Democrats outnumber Republican­s.

In 2014, Hadley won the South Bay Assembly seat by a 0.6% margin, ousting Democrat Al Muratsuchi in a low-turnout race. Two years later, Muratsuchi reclaimed the seat with an 8-point margin of victory, thanks to energized turnout in the Democratic-leaning district because of the presidenti­al election.

Hadley did not cast a long political shadow during his time in Sacramento, though he did successful­ly push through bills to increase transparen­cy of school employee misconduct and roll back civil-asset forfeiture laws.

Hadley occasional­ly broke with his party on issues such as renewable energy, a reflection of voters’ views in his swing district.

Republican donors have been reluctant to fund statewide candidates in California given the party’s losing track record. But that may change in 2018, because there are seven congressio­nal races in the state that are crucial to GOP efforts to retain control of the House of Representa­tives. Party leaders believe it is key to have a strong candidate at the top of the ticket to drive Republican turnout and protect those incumbents as well as their congressio­nal majority.

Some of the establishm­ent donors and power brokers who would have backed Faulconer are likely to give Hadley a look. He has existing ties to some, notably Charles Munger Jr. The Republican mega-donor’s independen­t expenditur­e committee spent more than $1.4 million trying to boost Hadley in his unsuccessf­ul Assembly reelection race.

Muratsuchi worked hard to tie Hadley to Trump, despite Hadley openly opposing Trump’s presidenti­al bid. (He voted for libertaria­n Gary Johnson.)

If Hadley advances to the general election in the gubernator­ial race, he runs the same risk, given the polarized climate in a state Trump lost by more than 4 million votes.

Hadley says he doesn’t intend to turn the race into a referendum on the president.

“This is not going to be a campaign about reacting to every tweet or real or made-up outrage out of Washington,” Hadley said, noting that Trump is not responsibl­e for the state’s high level of poverty, failing schools and high taxes. “This is going to be a campaign focused on the future of California.”

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i AP ?? “I THINK we can bring important changes and ... reforms to California,” says David Hadley, 52.
Rich Pedroncell­i AP “I THINK we can bring important changes and ... reforms to California,” says David Hadley, 52.
 ?? Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ?? MANHATTAN BEACH Republican David Hadley meets voters in Torrance after a forum for last November’s election. He’s working to build a coalition of center-right and non-GOP voters who will cross party lines.
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times MANHATTAN BEACH Republican David Hadley meets voters in Torrance after a forum for last November’s election. He’s working to build a coalition of center-right and non-GOP voters who will cross party lines.

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