Los Angeles Times

GOP on verge of being third choice of state voters

- By John Myers

California Republican­s, who haven’t won a statewide election in 12 years and are fighting a pitched battle for the political ground they now hold in the state’s congressio­nal delegation, found themselves facing a new dilemma Thursday.

They are on the edge of losing their decades-old status as the second-largest bloc of the state’s voters, their ranks now only twotenths of a percentage point greater than those of unaffiliat­ed, “independen­t” voters.

“The registrati­on numbers are a reflection of how far away this state has slipped for Republican­s,” said Rob Stutzman, a longtime GOP strategist.

The latest blow came from the state’s official voter registrati­on report, which showed only 28,649 more Republican­s than independen­t voters as of April 6. Elections officials update state voter tallies at regular intervals before each election; a final report will be issued about two weeks before the June 5 primary.

The disintegra­tion of strong party affiliatio­n in California has struck a blow to Democrats and Republican­s over the last several election cycles. Independen­t voters, who technicall­y chose “no party preference”

on their registrati­on forms, were all but an afterthoug­ht as recently as 2002. But in every election for governor since, they’ve grown in size and importance.

“Democrats are keeping stable. That’s not necessaril­y something to be gloating about,” said Paul Mitchell, one of the state’s leading experts on political data.

Even so, their share of the state’s electorate has grown a few times in recent years, especially in the run-up to the 2016 presidenti­al election. Republican­s, by comparison, have been on a steady downward slide. Research from Mitchell’s forprofit company, Political Data Inc., shows that only about 20% of California voters who registered since 2017 chose to be a Republican.

Among the youngest of newly registered voters, between the ages of 18 and 24, the share of Republican­s is only 13%. That may be the strongest evidence to date that the party’s problem could worsen as older voters dwindle.

Matt Fleming, a spokesman for the California Republican Party, said Thursday that there are opportunit­ies to persuade unaffiliat­ed voters. He suggested the increase in independen­ts is more about voters “fed up with the status quo,” which he defined as Democrats who control state government.

Still, the state’s last Republican governor has embarked on an effort that acknowledg­es the extent of the problem. Former Gov. Arnold Schwarzene­gger, who famously told his own state party in 2007 that it was “dying at the box office,” has teamed up with a small group of Republican­s to promote candidates who can sell a different message to voters. One of the group’s leaders, Yucca Valley Assemblyma­n Chad Mayes, said in March the group is looking to help “rational Republican­s and centrists” win office in California.

Keeping the seats they have, though, is the more immediate problem. Republican­s represent only onethird of the state Senate and a slightly smaller portion of the Assembly. They hold just 14 of California’s 53 seats in the House of Representa­tives, and several of those seats are in danger of flipping to Democrats this fall. Republican­s don’t make up the majority of voters in any congressio­nal district in the state. And even Orange County, the state’s most reliable Republican stronghold in the modern era, voted for Hillary Clinton over Donald Trump — the first time the GOP’s nominee lost there since 1936.

“The Republican Party has changed, and it’s unattracti­ve to a lot of voters in California,” Stutzman said.

The embrace of bigmoney politics by the major parties is among the reasons that Sara Burns, a retired public school teacher, said she changed her registrati­on to be an independen­t. “Both parties play the same game [and] cooperate with each other to keep their political games going,” said Burns, 60, of Redondo Beach.

Thursday’s registrati­on report from Secretary of State Alex Padilla reported 18.8 million registered voters in California, about 1.2 million more than the gubernator­ial primary four years ago. No state comes close to the size of its electorate. U.S. census data show California now has as many voters as did 20 states combined in 2016.

Not all states track political affiliatio­ns of registered voters, and California isn’t alone in the growing muscle of independen­ts. In strongly Republican Utah, no-party voters outnumber Democrats by more than three to one. In Democratic Massachuse­tts, there are five voters “unenrolled” with a party to every registered Republican.

And few states have been as accommodat­ing to voters who want to shed their political party affiliatio­n. California’s top-two primary, enacted by ballot measure in 2010 and now in its fourth election cycle, eliminated the barriers that parties often erected for unaffiliat­ed voters to participat­e in the selection of candidates appearing on the November ballot.

Here too, though, Republican­s have been resistant to change. The new primary rules don’t apply to presidenti­al contests, and state GOP leaders refused to let unaffiliat­ed voters participat­e in the June 2016 primary that resulted in a decisive Trump victory. Democrats, on the other hand, gave independen­ts the chance to vote for either Clinton or Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders in their presidenti­al primary.

But unaffiliat­ed voters are not ideologica­lly neutral, say political strategist­s and researcher­s. They generally split along traditiona­l party lines when casting ballots, even though they have a disdain for party labels.

The challenge, Stutzman said, is that GOP candidates playing only to the party’s ultra-conservati­ve base can create a self-fulfilling prophecy. He pointed to the Tuesday debate performanc­e of the two major Republican candidates for governor, businessma­n John Cox and Huntington Beach Assemblyma­n Travis Allen.

“We’ve gotten to this point where there’s an open seat for governor, and two candidates are on stage bending over backward trying to win a majority of 25% of the electorate,” he said. “They weren’t coming close to a message that can win 51% of all voters.”

One of the most heated topics in the debate was immigratio­n, a perennial sore spot for Republican­s in comparison to the broader California electorate.

Cox and Allen both praised Trump’s approach on those who are in the U.S. illegally, a position aligned with GOP sentiments in a March poll by the nonpartisa­n Public Policy Institute of California. Eighty-two percent of Republican voters in California said the Trump administra­tion’s crackdown on immigratio­n is a “good thing” for the country. By contrast, 55% of selfdescri­bed moderate likely voters called it a “bad thing.” Opposition to the president’s approach rose to 57% among the youngest voters, 58% among Latinos.

What may save Republican officehold­ers, for now, is that the remaining party faithful show up to cast their ballots more frequently than do either Democrats or unaffiliat­ed voters. In some places, that can temper the otherwise unbridled enthusiasm of GOP critics.

For now, though, the party’s statewide strength continues to fade as the ranks of unaffiliat­ed voters keep growing.

“This isn’t a revelatory moment,” Stutzman said. “This is where the numbers have been going for several years.”

‘We’ve gotten to this point where there’s an open seat for governor, and two candidates are on stage bending over backward trying to win a majority of 25% of the electorate.’

— Rob Stutzman,

GOP strategist, speaking about the debate performanc­e of Republican gubernator­ial candidates John Cox and Travis Allen

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? CALIFORNIA now has 18.8 million registered voters, according to new state data, as many as 20 states combined in 2016. Above, a voter in Van Nuys in June 2016.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times CALIFORNIA now has 18.8 million registered voters, according to new state data, as many as 20 states combined in 2016. Above, a voter in Van Nuys in June 2016.

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