Los Angeles Times

GOP’s ‘bad year’ just got a little worse

As Rohrabache­r falls, party fears additional House losses in state.

- By Joe Mozingo and Jazmine Ulloa

Rep. Dana Rohrabache­r has lost the congressio­nal seat he held for 30 years in one of the most conservati­ve stretches of Orange County, a stunning defeat for the GOP as other Republican­s’ early leads receded in the latest ballot counts, putting the party in fear of losing all six tightly contested House races in California.

Rohrabache­r’s loss to Democratic real estate entreprene­ur Harley Rouda represents a landmark shift away from the GOP for suburban America. No county — no part of a county — has been at the heart of conservati­sm since the 1960s like the coast between Dana Point and the Los Angeles County line.

This was John Wayne country.

Even now Republican­s have a 10-point voter registrati­on advantage in Rohrabache­r’s 48th Congressio­nal District — but President Trump and his supporters in Congress do not.

The loss was projected Saturday night by the Associated Press. Dale Neugebauer, a spokesman for Rohrabache­r, noted there were more ballots to be tallied and the campaign would not have an official statement until the count was complete.

Rouda, a former Republican, had already declared victory Saturday morning, saying he was “deeply humbled and honored to have the opportunit­y to serve.”

Rouda’s win came after two decades of erosion in the Republican base and at a time when Rohrabache­r’s ties to Russians have become more controvers­ial.

“The Russian thing was ridiculous,” said Tony Quinn, a demographe­r and California campaign analyst. “That didn’t help him.”

Neither did his support for the president.

During the election, Rohrabache­r, a speechwrit­er for President Reagan, doubled down on his advocacy for Trump and his hard-line immigratio­n policies — neither of which are popular in the college-educated suburbs he represents. And his vocal support for Russian President Vladimir Putin became a heavy liability after Russia’s suspected meddling in the 2016 presidenti­al campaign.

Few members of Congress have been as enigmatic as Rohrabache­r: a Hawaiian-shirt-wearing Orange County surfer who has crusaded with equal quixotic passion for the Kremlin and federal marijuana legalizati­on — and once took up arms with the mujahedin in Afghanista­n.

He has been an avuncular presence in his district, going to Eagle Scout badgepinni­ng ceremonies, speaking at junior high schools, opening yacht club sailing seasons in Newport Harbor.

Rohrabache­r, of Costa Mesa, had not had a serious challenge to the seat until this year, when discontent with Trump ran high in the 48th.

“The district became much more of an antiTrump suburb, and he no longer connected to the people there,” Quinn said. “He had an opponent who was a former Republican businessma­n, not some wild-eyed lefty. And for at least two years, people were willing to try something new.”

It is a stark change for the region once embodied by legendary movie cowboy John Wayne — its internatio­nal airport’s namesake — who was an ultra-right John Birch Society member and lived on the harbor in Newport Beach.

Republican­s have now lost three of the six races Democrats targeted most in the state.

They have fallen behind or are holding thin leads in the remaining unresolved races, as suburban voters nationwide rebuked Trump and his allies in the House of Representa­tives.

Democrats earlier won the seats of GOP Reps. Darrell Issa of Vista, who declined to seek reelection, and Steve Knight of Palmdale, who was ousted by Katie Hill.

On Friday, Democrat Josh Harder overtook Republican Rep. Jeff Denham in the latest tally in the Modesto-area district.

In two other races, GOP Rep. Mimi Walters, who represents the Irvine area, and Republican candidate Young Kim of Fullerton are holding thin leads over their Democratic opponents, who have gained votes with each ballot count since election day.

With the three losses, Republican­s will hold only 11 of California’s 53 seats in the House. Overall, Democrats are in a position to make the greatest gains their party has seen in the chamber since Watergate.

“This is more than just a bad year,” said Mike Madrid, a GOP political strategist. “This is essentiall­y a realignmen­t in California politics, and the traditiona­l base that has served the Republican Party no longer exists.”

Madrid said “a clean sweep” of GOP incumbents was possible. He said he expects the party to see worse results in 2020 because it didn’t have “leadership with the strength and the foresight to get us out of this.”

Election officials could take several more weeks to tally up the final ballots. As of Saturday, 934,000 ballots remained uncounted in Los Angeles County alone.

In Orange County, 365 employees have been working 12 hours a day, six days a week, to process 365,000 uncounted ballots. Saturday’s tally gave Rouda a lead of more than 8,500 over Rohrabache­r.

Walters has seen her election-night lead of 6,233 votes plummet to 2,009 in her race against Democrat Katie Porter.

Kim’s lead against Democrat Gil Cisneros has shrunk from 3,879 to 2,423 votes in a congressio­nal district containing pieces of Orange, Los Angeles and San Bernardino counties.

Andrew Acosta, a Democratic strategist in Sacramento, called the ballot counts a “slow-moving train wreck” for Republican­s.

“I believe Mimi Walters and Young Kim are breathing a little easier, but it is not done yet,” Acosta said. “Count the ballots before you spike the ball.”

Historical­ly, votes tallied latest in the state have tended to skew Democratic.

Denham on Friday fell 3,362 votes behind Harder after leading the Democrat by 1 percentage point in a district spanning Stanislaus County and southern San Joaquin County. Harder called the latest results “extremely encouragin­g.”

San Joaquin County, where 91,7000 ballots remain uncounted, is expected to release its next round of results on Tuesday. Stanislaus County elections officials plan to tabulate all their remaining uncounted ballots — roughly 20,000 — before releasing more results.

“If the trend continues, I will work every single day in Congress to put the Central Valley first,” said Harder, who had volunteers from across the state pour into his district in the final days of the election to knock on doors and get out the vote.

 ?? Mark Boster For The Times ?? HARLEY ROUDA greets supporters Tuesday at a get-out-the-vote rally in Laguna Beach. The Democrat, a former Republican, defeated longtime GOP Rep. Dana Rohrabache­r in the 48th Congressio­nal District.
Mark Boster For The Times HARLEY ROUDA greets supporters Tuesday at a get-out-the-vote rally in Laguna Beach. The Democrat, a former Republican, defeated longtime GOP Rep. Dana Rohrabache­r in the 48th Congressio­nal District.
 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? KATIE PORTER, a Democrat challengin­g GOP Rep. Mimi Walters in Orange County, on election night. Walters has seen her lead of 6,233 votes fall to 2,009.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times KATIE PORTER, a Democrat challengin­g GOP Rep. Mimi Walters in Orange County, on election night. Walters has seen her lead of 6,233 votes fall to 2,009.

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