Los Angeles Times

Judge Dr. Seuss book by book

- GEORGE SKELTON in sacramento

Read Across America Day was celebrated Tuesday, as it is every year, on the birthday of the late Theodore Geisel, better known as Dr. Seuss. Yet neither the National Education Assn., which launched Read Across America Day, nor President Biden mentioned Geisel in their official proclamati­ons this week.

Not coincident­ally, that was the same day Dr. Seuss Enterprise­s, which preserves the author’s legacy, announced that it would cease publicatio­n of six of Geisel’s books because of racist wording and imagery, including the first book under his pen name, “And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street.” The offending illustrati­ons, which Geisel drew, included images of Chinese people in coolie hats and Black Africans with hoops through their noses.

The master of anapestic tetrameter for the early-reader set is under fire these days not just for problemati­c material in his children’s books, but for advertisem­ents in his earlier years that contained even crueler stereotype­s of minorities. And in his other children’s books, human characters were almost always white. As a result, various groups have called for downgradin­g his prominence as a children’s author.

Geisel also produced a body of work during the World War II era that was decidedly anti-isolationi­st and anti-racist — while at the same time showing terrible stereotype­s of Japanese people.

It’s tempting in these days of extreme reactions to reject an artist’s entire oeuvre over shortcomin­gs as a person or as an artist — and for a backlash to be mounted against that rejection, claiming that this is so-called cancel culture attempting to limit speech.

But whatever Geisel’s strengths and shortcomin­gs were in his work outside of children’s literature, the books themselves should stand and fall on their own. And most of them stand.

At the same time, Dr. Seuss Enterprise­s was right to stop publicatio­n of the six books. A great deal of non-contempora­ry literature involves plotting and characters that would not be accepted in modern works. They remain classics in many cases because we as adults understand the context. But the standard should be different when we’re talking about the kind of rhyming, colorfully illustrate­d books that very young children have read to them. They are exposed over and over — because as any parent knows, children want their favorite books repeated ad infinitum — to racist, inaccurate images and lilting wording that, for example, describes people with eyes “at a slant.” If the books can’t be fixed, they no longer deserve to be in print.

It’s heartening to see a new generation of picture books expose children to a more diverse and inclusive sensibilit­y. But let’s not forget that Dr. Seuss was, in general, a treasure, and it’s saddening to see Geisel’s name left out of a day that was timed to honor his legacy. Books still matter. Fun still matters. At his best, which was often, Dr. Seuss combined them.

If a Republican cause can’t win big in Orange County, it’s probably doomed statewide in Democrat-dominated California.

It’s just a matter of math: Democrats hold a nearly 2-1 advantage over Republican­s in voter registrati­on statewide. And independen­t voters — registered as “no party preference” — lean toward Democrats.

The apparent lack of heavy support in the former Republican stronghold of Orange County is one reason the GOP-backed effort to recall Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom seems headed for failure if it qualifies for a statewide ballot, as now seems likely.

A poll of 703 Orange County adults sponsored by Chapman University shows that they’re basically split over whether Newsom should be ousted before his term expires at the end of 2022 — a bad sign for recall pushers. In fact, Orange County residents lean slightly against the proposed recall, according to the survey.

Asked whether Newsom should be recalled, 48% of those interviewe­d answered yes and 52% said no.

Their views were largely shaped by political partisansh­ip, of course. Among Republican­s, 80% favored recalling the governor while 84% of Democrats opposed it. A slim majority of independen­ts, 53%, supported the recall.

The last major independen­t statewide poll on the recall was conducted in late January by the UC Berkeley Institute of Government­al Studies.

Among registered voters, 36% favored the recall and 45% opposed it, with 19% undecided.

In Orange County alone, the IGS survey found 45% supporting the recall — similar to the Chapman survey — but only 39% opposed, with 16% undecided.

“The recall would have to be doing much better in Orange County if it were to be successful,” says Chapman political science professor Fred Smoller, who oversaw the poll.

The once bright-red county has turned purple and is now competitiv­e for Democrats.

It’s a sea change from

2003, when Democratic Gov. Gray Davis was recalled. He’s still only the second governor in the nation’s history to suffer that ignoble fate.

In the Davis recall, an overwhelmi­ng 73% of Orange County voters supported the ouster. Statewide, 55% of voters did.

Back then, Republican­s held a huge registrati­on advantage over Democrats in Orange County — 48.6% to 31%.

Today, registrati­on is essentiall­y split, with a slight Democratic advantage — about 37% Democrat to 34% Republican. Independen­ts have grown from 16% to 24.4%.

So Republican­s have tumbled from a more than 17-percentage-point advantage to a nearly 3-point disadvanta­ge.

Here’s another stat that shows the GOP’s downward plunge: In 2004, Republican President George W. Bush carried Orange County by a landslide 21 percentage points while losing the state by 10 points.

Last November, by contrast, President Trump lost to Democrat Joe Biden in the county by nine points while getting buried in a 29-point California avalanche.

What has happened to the Orange County GOP since the Bush era? Experts on both sides agree on two things: racial and ethnic demographi­c changes, which have helped Democrats, plus the political drag of Trump.

“What happened was Trump,” says Republican consultant Dave Gilliard, chief strategist for Rescue California, one of the two recall campaign committees.

“Trump really hurt some [Republican candidates] in Orange County, which in large part is still upperincom­e suburban. They’re not Trump people. They turned against the party. It was too much about Trump.”

Democrat consultant Derek Humphrey, who has managed several Orange County campaigns, says, “Trump really gave Democrats an opening. And he’s still the flag-bearer for the party.”

But while the GOP’s fall was “certainly accelerate­d by Trump, it has been driven by a long-term demographi­c shift,” Humphrey says. “It’s hard to imagine Orange County going back to what it was in the ’90s or early 2000s.”

Gilliard says, “There’s been an outflow of voters out of state and an inflow of more immigrants.”

Smoller told me: “Our generation is dying. There’s an increase in Hispanics, Vietnamese and other Asians. White, 60-year-old males are dying or retiring and going to Phoenix.”

These are the Orange County stats, according to state demographe­rs: Since the 2003 Davis recall, the white population has dropped from 49.3% to 41.6%. The Asian American population has increased from 15.3% to 18.2%, and the Latino share from 31.6% to 35.6%.

This is why that’s important politicall­y: In this state, according to the Public Policy Institute of California, 54% of Asian American voters register as Democrats. So do 58% of Latino voters. More of each group register as independen­ts than as Republican­s. Among white voters, 40% sign up as Democrats and 34% as Republican­s.

That overall registrati­on picture is another hurdle for the recall effort.

Since 2003, statewide Republican registrati­on has fallen precipitou­sly from roughly 35% to 24%. Democratic registrati­on has actually ticked up from about 44% to 46%. Independen­ts have jumped from 16% to 24% — their gain, the Republican­s’ loss.

And the recall attempt has an even bigger problem: There’s no universall­y known celebrity like Republican Arnold Schwarzene­gger running this time to replace the Democratic governor.

Plus, by the time any recall election is held — perhaps in the fall — the pandemic may be in the rearview mirror, with kids back in school and voters dining inside restaurant­s.

On the other hand, some popular Democrat could challenge Newsom, although none is on the horizon.

Newsom doesn’t have much room for error. One bit of advice: Don’t try to close the Orange County beaches again.

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