Los Angeles Times

Democrats’ races for endorsemen­ts begin

Party’s official backing can help candidates stand out in crowded congressio­nal fields.

- By Javier Panzar Dave Min won 66% against three other candidates in the 45th District. He is challengin­g Rep. Mimi Walters. javier.panzar @latimes.com

The winnowing process began last weekend for the dozens of California Democrats vying to take control of Republican-held House seats in the midterm elections.

The rank-and-file delegates who make up the state’s Democratic Party met in small groups all over the state to cast early votes for their favorite candidates in House races.

These so-called “pre-endorsemen­t conference­s” are the first steps in the process to win the party’s endorsemen­t ahead of June’s primary.

The results give an early glimpse of where the competitiv­e House races stand — who is consolidat­ing strength among the party’s grass roots and which races remain wide-open contests.

In many of these crowded races, the imprimatur of the Democratic Party can give the endorsed candidates a meaningful way to stand out. The party’s endorsemen­t does not necessaril­y mean a candidate is a shooin to make it out of the primary — more on that later. Three possible outcomes

A candidate needs the vote of at least 70% of his or her district delegates for their endorsemen­t to be placed on the party’s consent calendar at the state party convention in San Diego this month — all but guaranteei­ng an endorsemen­t from the party.

If a candidate doesn’t reach the 70% threshold but gets at least 50% of the vote, the decision is made at another conference at the convention.

If no candidate receives at least 50% of the vote, the party will not make any endorsemen­t in that district. The early winners

Here are the four Democrats who got at least 70% of the vote at the pre-endorsemen­t meetings. That means their candidacie­s will appear on the convention consent calendar, unless there is a petition effort challengin­g them at the convention.

Emilio Huerta — challengin­g Rep. David Valadao in the 21st Congressio­nal District. Huerta was the only person in the race.

Andrew Janz — challengin­g Rep. Devin Nunes in the 22nd Congressio­nal District. He beat out two others.

Bryan Caforio — challengin­g Rep. Steve Knight in the 25th Congressio­nal District. One other candidate received votes.

Ammar Campa-Najjar — challengin­g Rep. Duncan Hunter in the 50th Congressio­nal District. One other person ran. Crowded races where the fight continues

There will be another round of voting for the candidates in these races. The favorites are:

Jessica Morse won 55% in the 4th District vote, running against two other candidates. She is challengin­g Rep. Tom McClintock.

Marge Doyle won 60% in the 8th District vote, running against two other candidates. She is challengin­g Rep. Paul Cook.

Hans Keirstead won 65% in the 48th District vote, running against five other candidates. He is challengin­g Rep. Dana Rohrabache­r.

Mike Levin won 57% against four other candidates in the 49th District, an open-seat race in the district represente­d by Rep. Darrell Issa. District races that won’t get party endorsemen­ts

The races for these seats are arguably too crowded with no clear front-runner.

Five candidates split the vote in 10th District so no candidate will have the benefit of a party endorsemen­t when facing Rep. Jeff Denham.

Seven candidates split the vote in the 39th District race to replace retiring Rep. Ed Royce. What does the party endorsemen­t really mean?

The party’s endorsemen­t is certainly a help, but it isn’t a guaranteed ticket to success at the ballot box — after all, the grass-roots activists voting at these small party juntas are different from the people who actually decide to cast a ballot on primary day in June.

Caforio failed to capture the party’s endorsemen­t when he ran for Knight’s seat in 2016 but still beat the endorsed Democrat in the primary. That fact is not lost on Katie Hill.

Though she had a poor showing at the endorsemen­t conference, she has the makings of a strong candidate. Hill is matching Caforio’s fundraisin­g levels, and has secured endorsemen­ts from Emily’s List as well as Southern California female politician­s Rep. Judy Chu and Los Angeles County Supervisor Sheila Kuehl. She also has longer ties to the district than Caforio — who faced criticism for moving into the area to run in 2016.

But Caforio has consolidat­ed support in the district since his loss and boasts the endorsemen­ts of numerous elected officials who endorsed his 2016 Democratic primary opponent.

Some candidates don’t even try for the endorsemen­t.

State Sen. Isadore Hall won 100% of his district’s delegate vote in 2016 when he was running for an open South Los Angeles congressio­nal seat, and his candidacy came along with wide establishm­ent support. But he was defeated in the general election vote by fellow Democrat Nanette Barragan — whose campaign skipped the early-endorsemen­t conference altogether, criticizin­g it as too backroom.

“I am not sure whether I should congratula­te the senator for amassing a large number of votes from paid staffers and appointees of other Sacramento politician­s or go back to watching YouTube clips of cats doing cute things,” Barragan’s campaign manager in 2016, Michael Trujillo, said shortly after the pre-endorsemen­t vote.

For 2018’s hopefuls, the real test comes June 5.

 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? D E M O C R AT Bryan Caforio, left, listens during a debate against Rep. Steve Knight, center, and LAPD Lt. Lou Vince in May 2016. Caforio is again challengin­g Knight in the 25th Congressio­nal District.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times D E M O C R AT Bryan Caforio, left, listens during a debate against Rep. Steve Knight, center, and LAPD Lt. Lou Vince in May 2016. Caforio is again challengin­g Knight in the 25th Congressio­nal District.

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