Los Angeles Times

Election losers seek revenge

Efforts to neuter Midwest, California Democrats show a major political shift.

- By Mark Z. Barabak mark.barabak @latimes.com

In Michigan and Wisconsin, GOP lawmakers push legislatio­n to thwart incoming Democrats from doing the jobs voters elected them to do.

Democrat Gavin Newsom has yet to become California governor, but a candidate for state Republican Party chairman is already promoting a recall effort.

In Michigan and Wisconsin, GOP lawmakers have rushed through legislatio­n to thwart their incoming Democratic governors and hamper others in the opposing party from doing the jobs voters elected them to do.

In Congress, GOP leaders have echoed President Trump and sought to undermine the legitimacy of Democrats’ strong midterm performanc­e, raising unsubstant­iated allegation­s of fraud and political malfeasanc­e.

It used to be that once a campaign was over and the outcome known, the losing side would accept the results, with varying degrees of grudgingne­ss and grace, and move on. No more. In a continued breakdown of political norms, the win-at-all-costs mentality that pervades campaigns now persists in their aftermath, extending the scorched-earth tactics past election day with the intent, in extreme cases, of nullifying or even reversing the results.

The consequenc­e, some fear, is not just a few days’ worth of headlines about partisan skirmishin­g or the usual jostling between competing interests, but something far more serious and corrosive.

“This is about as fundamenta­l as it gets,” said Howard Schweber, a professor of political science and legal studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. “The way people lose faith in political institutio­ns is when it seems they’re no longer governed by constituti­onal principles but government by capture — to the victor go the spoils.”

The prospect of recalling California’s governor-elect, promoted by Huntington Beach Assemblyma­n Travis Allen, seems more a ploy to draw attention to his bid for state GOP chairman than the slightest threat to Newsom, who won in a Nov. 6 landslide. (Newsom, a former San Francisco mayor, “destroyed” the city, Allen asserted in a Twitter call to arms that links to an online petition. “Don’t let Gavin do the same to California.”)

Questions by Trump and others about the votecounti­ng in Arizona, where Republican­s lost a Senate seat, and California — where the GOP surrendere­d seven House seats after a prolonged tally — seem intended to deflect blame for the setbacks and may ref lect genuine puzzlement about why the count took the better part of a month.

The moves to neuter Democrats in Michigan and Wisconsin is more substantiv­e and potentiall­y farreachin­g.

It is not unusual for a party losing power to, say, ram through last-minute appointmen­ts or enact policy priorities while they still have the votes. What is different this time are efforts to change the law to purposely cripple the opposition.

In Michigan, Republican­s who control the Legislatur­e have voted to meddle with a voter-approved redistrict­ing commission, strip campaign-finance oversight from the secretary of stateelect, and cement in place conservati­ve policies by restrictin­g the new governor and attorney general. All three incoming officials are Democrats.

Outgoing GOP Gov. Rick Snyder promised an objective review before deciding whether to sign the bills.

In Wisconsin, the Republican-run Legislatur­e hastily passed legislatio­n to limit early voting — which is thought to have helped Democrat Tony Evers narrowly defeat incumbent GOP Gov. Scott Walker — and to shift power away from the governor’s office to GOP lawmakers.

They also sought to make it more difficult for the incoming Democratic attorney general to pull the state from a lawsuit opposing the Affordable Care Act.

“This is a heck of a way to run a railroad,” Jennifer Shilling, a Democrat who is the state Senate minority leader, said of the late-night session when the measures were passed amid protesters’ chants. “This is embarrassi­ng we’re even here.”

The GOP speaker of the Assembly and a prime mover behind the legislatio­n, Robin Vos, said the changes were a long-overdue recalibrat­ion of power between the legislativ­e and executive branches and an effort to ensure the dramatic policy changes enacted under Walker — on labor, welfare and voting requiremen­ts — were not reversed.

“We’re going to stand like bedrock to guarantee that Wisconsin does not go back,” Vos told reporters.

Walker signed the measures into law Friday, brushing aside “a lot of hype and hysteria, particular­ly in the national media, implying this is a power shift. It’s not.”

In every instance, the animating impulse appears the same: the increasing gulf between the two major parties and the personal contempt, if not sheer hatred, many feel these days toward those who don’t share their personal views or political outlook.

“Traditiona­l politics has been replaced by holy war,” said Dan Schnur, a former strategist for Republican­s Pete Wilson and John McCain.

“Whether it’s Republican­s in December 2018 or Democrats in December 2016 … once you decide the person on the other side isn’t your opponent but your enemy … once you decide that person must be evil or stupid, it raises the stakes,” said Schnur, who teaches political science at UC Berkeley and USC. “You compromise with your opponent. You don’t compromise with the devil.”

The fundamenta­l policy difference­s between the two parties also elevate the stakes when power trades hands, making the changeover more than a matter of shifting emphasis or tinkering on the legislativ­e margins.

In Wisconsin, for instance, Walker and fellow GOP lawmakers refused more than $1 billion in federal funding to expand the availabili­ty of healthcare under the Affordable Care Act. Evers, by contrast, has vowed to make expansion of the program one of his top priorities.

“To the extent lawmakers aren’t talking compromise anymore, the change of party means a very striking change in outlook,” said William Galston, a senior fellow in governance at the Brookings Institutio­n in Washington and a former domestic affairs advisor to President Clinton.

Given the difference, he added, political sabotage “makes a kind of horrible sense.”

Years of legal battling seems certain to follow. Democrats and liberal advocacy groups in Wisconsin are expected to sue to try to block the GOP-passed legislatio­n.

Two years ago, North Carolina Republican­s enacted sweeping measures designed to stymie the incoming Democratic governor. Many of the bills were struck down in court, only to be passed again with some modificati­on, prompting renewed lawsuits.

The solution, Galston suggested, is not litigation but lawmakers standing back from what he called a dangerous and growing threat to “a bedrock of our democracy, the peaceful and orderly rotation of power in response to competitio­n.”

“Parties on both sides of the aisle should do their best, while fighting fiercely over issues, to back the legitimacy of that competitio­n,” Galston said. “If they don’t, who will?”

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? A S S E M B LY M A N Travis Allen (R-Huntington Beach), now running for chairman of the California GOP, is already pushing to recall Gov.-elect Gavin Newsom.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times A S S E M B LY M A N Travis Allen (R-Huntington Beach), now running for chairman of the California GOP, is already pushing to recall Gov.-elect Gavin Newsom.

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