Los Angeles Times

How state GOP can get out of wilderness

Republican­s need better candidates and an agenda beyond kowtowing to Trump.

- MARK Z. BARABAK

Barring something extraordin­ary, like, say, being caught on videotape dynamiting the Golden Gate Bridge, Gavin Newsom will be reelected as California governor in November.

And even if Newsom were to be jailed and convicted of such a nefarious assault on the Bay Area landmark, it is virtually certain he’d be succeeded by one or another of his fellow Democrats.

It’s been a decade and a half since a Republican won statewide office in California and more than a quarter of a century since the once-dominant GOP controlled either legislativ­e chamber.

The ranks of Republican lawmakers in Sacramento are so shrunken that they have about as much say over legislatio­n as the shrubbery growing outside the Capitol.

None of which is good for California.

Politician­s and political parties need serious competitio­n to hold them in check, keep them honest and avoid arrogance and overreach.

For our system of selfgovern­ment to keep working, voters need to feel as though they have a voice and stake in the actions of their elected leaders.

Millions of California­ns, who either identify as Republican or conservati­ve, feel unheard and unseen in Sacramento, bobbing like red pinpoints in an ocean of blue. That alienation was a major impetus behind last year’s fruitless and extravagan­tly wasteful effort to recall Newsom and feeds the perpetual — if fanciful — talk of breaking off a chunk of rural California and creating a 51st state.

So what will it take for Republican­s to regain relevancy and for California to once more benefit from a healthy and competitiv­e two-party system?

The short answer is winning the governorsh­ip, not just electing more lawmakers to the Assembly and Senate, or to other statewide offices — though that would certainly help.

“In California, governor is an exceedingl­y powerful position,” said Marty Wilson, a former advisor to Pete Wilson and no relation to the ex-governor. “You’ve got a media platform. You make appointmen­ts. You can raise money for yourself as well as other candidates.”

Not least, a Republican chief executive could rebrand the party and improve its acrid image in the state.

Even before Donald Trump came along and warped the GOP into something resembling a zombie cult, the national Republican Party was seen in California as increasing­ly harsh, intolerant and beholden to its white Southern base. That guilt by associatio­n has hurt any candidate running statewide under the party banner.

Winning the governorsh­ip will require a different kind of Republican than most of those put forth over the last two decades — which is to say one capable of winning over more than a limited slice of the electorate. California is a Democratic state, but not a flamingly liberal one. When Republican­s got behind gubernator­ial candidates who appealed to voters at or near the center — George Deukmejian, Wilson, Arnold Schwarzene­gger — they succeeded. (Notably, the first time the politicall­y moderate Schwarzene­gger ran was in the 2003 recall election, a free-for-all of 135 candidates on a single ballot, avoiding a Republican primary he might well have lost.)

More often, the party has rallied behind gubernator­ial hopefuls — the hapless Bill Simon Jr., vapid John Cox, combustibl­e Larry Elder — who excited the most ardently conservati­ve California­ns but were too inept or extreme for a majority of voters to swallow.

In theory, when — or if — things get bad enough under one-party Democratic rule, a meaningful number of voters will be amenable to giving Republican­s another look. Call it the wreckage-and-ruin road to party redemption.

“A Democratic screw-up would open the door,” said Jack Pitney, a politics professor at Claremont McKenna College and former Republican National Committee staffer. But even then, he said, “It takes a quality Republican to walk through it .... Somebody who’s qualified, reasonable and pays attention to governance.”

To that point, if Republican­s want the California GOP to be more than a regional party, they’ll need to reject the nihilistic, torchit-all mentality that has become the animating philosophy of Trump’s grievance-fueled comeback effort.

“The Republican Party is now a countercul­ture movement,” said Mike Madrid, a former political director of the California Republican Party and co-founder of the Trump-taunting Lincoln Project. “It’s anti-establishm­ent and anti the institutio­ns that dominate society, like media and academia and government. It’s more about tearing down institutio­ns than building them up or partnering to improve them.

“As the old adage says, you have to be for something to unite people behind an agenda,” Madrid said. “It’s hard to make the case for a party without a platform and a party where the only inviolate orthodoxy is fealty to the leader.”

For the good of the GOP — and the good of California — Republican­s need to stop their self-gratifying but ultimately self-defeating political behavior.

Quit pushing Trump’s lies about election fraud. Put forth serious proposals rather than simply take potshots with the intent of “owning the libs.”

Quit litmus-testing gubernator­ial candidates and rejecting those who are less than 100% ideologica­lly pure.

Otherwise, the GOP will keep burning bridges — and losing statewide elections — for a long time to come.

 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? AFTER BEATNG back the recall, Gov. Gavin Newsom is favored to win reelection, in part because of the growing irrelevanc­e of the Republican Party statewide.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times AFTER BEATNG back the recall, Gov. Gavin Newsom is favored to win reelection, in part because of the growing irrelevanc­e of the Republican Party statewide.
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