Los Angeles Times

Let the voters fill the vacant seats

- GEORGE SKELTON IN SACRAMENTO

Democrats accuse Republican­s of trying to suppress voting all across America. But in California, Democrats actually ban voting to fill a vacancy in one of our most important offices: U.S. senator.

That’s hypocrisy, pure and simple.

A Republican legislator is trying to fix the autocratic practice. But he hasn’t a prayer with Democrats controllin­g both the legislativ­e and executive branches of state government.

Of course, the GOP is equally guilty in other states — arguably even more sinful. Both major parties run elections in their own selfintere­sts, regardless of what might be best for the public. Shock!

The recent Republican strategy, led by President Trump, has been to suppress voting among Democrats. The GOP does this by discouragi­ng mail voting, claiming without significan­t evidence that it leads to voter fraud. Nonsense.

Republican­s also push for voter photo IDs. They seek to reduce the time period for voting and the number of places to cast ballots. They aggressive­ly challenge people’s eligibilit­y to vote. Anything to hold down voter turnout.

The smaller the turnout, the larger slice of votes for GOP candidates, history shows. That’s because Republican voters tend to turn out more reliably than Democrats.

That’s why Democratic lawmakers don’t trust voters in special elections to fill Senate vacancies. Special election turnouts are almost always much lower than in regular state elections. Democratic politician­s are very happy to allow a Democratic governor to fill a Senate vacancy without voter interferen­ce.

And Republican­s do the same thing in most states they control.

In all, 45 states authorize governors to fill Senate vacancies. In 36, including California, the appointee can serve the balance of the Senate term or until the next statewide general election.

But in nine, the gubernator­ial appointee must face voters in an expedited special election. That’s the way it should be in California, at least.

Five states — Oregon, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Rhode Island and Wisconsin — require any Senate vacancy to be filled only by voters.

There’s good precedent for this. That’s the way it is for the other half of Congress, the House of Representa­tives; also in the California Legislatur­e.

Any vacancy in a statewide elective office, however, can be filled by the governor, subject to legislativ­e confirmati­on. A governor is also empowered to fill vacancies on county supervisor boards.

The issue of Senate vacancies arose when California Sen. Kamala Harris essentiall­y began running for president about the time she was sworn into office after her 2016 election. Her candidacy flopped, but she immediatel­y was placed on

Joe Biden’s short list of potential running mates.

There also was speculatio­n in 2018 about whether Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein, who won reelection that year, would serve out her term. She’d be 91 when it expires. My bet is she will.

Republican state Assemblyma­n Kevin Kiley of Rocklin, near Sacramento, introduced a bill in 2018 that would have required the governor to call a special election to fill a Senate vacancy. It had one committee hearing and was killed on a party-line vote. He’s back with a similar bill this year and it hasn’t even been given a committee hearing.

“The whole idea of our system of government is that the people should have a say in who their senators are,” Kiley says. “With senators, it’s especially important because there are six-year terms with no term limits and they can stay in office for decades.”

“Appointmen­ts are an anachronis­m,” he adds. “It’s about time we bring our selection of senators into the 21st century.”

Until 1913, U.S. senators were appointed by state legislatur­es. The 17th

Amendment required elections by voters. If there’s a vacancy, the governor must call a special election. But there’s a hitch: The Legislatur­e can empower the governor to make a temporary appointmen­t until the next election.

“The ability of a governor to appoint a senator has been egregiousl­y abused,” Kiley says, although not in California. Elsewhere, it has invited corruption and nepotism.

When Illinois Sen. Barack Obama was elected president in 2008, Democratic Gov. Rod R. Blagojevic­h was caught trying to sell the vacant Senate seat. He went to federal prison for eight years until Trump pardoned him in February. That’s the same Trump who had vowed to “drain the swamp” of corruption in Washington.

Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska was appointed by her father, Frank Murkowski, who had resigned from the Senate in 2002 to become governor. In fairness, she did have some credential­s as a state legislativ­e leader.

In California, governors have appointed five senators to fill vacancies since the 17th Amendment was ratified.

In 1991, Republican Gov. Pete Wilson chose state Sen. John Seymour (R-Anaheim) to replace him in the Senate. Seymour was easily dispatched by Feinstein in the 1992 election.

In 1964, Democratic Gov. Pat Brown appointed former White House Press Secretary Pierre Salinger to replace Sen. Clair Engle, who had resigned and was terminally ill. Salinger was beaten that November by actor George Murphy, a Republican.

Republican Gov. Earl Warren made two Senate appointmen­ts: State Controller Thomas Kuchel to replace Sen. Richard Nixon, who was elected vice president in 1952; and William F. Knowland, from an Oakland newspaper publishing family, to fill in for Sen. Hiram Johnson, who died in office.

The fifth appointee was a brief office caretaker in 1938: Santa Barbara newspaper publisher Thomas Storke. He served two months and retired.

There’s a valid argument for not holding a special election to fill a vacant Senate seat. It’s costly — around $100 million.

But democracy isn’t free. California taxpayers send Sacramento enough money to foot the bill.

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