Los Angeles Times

Get ready for a nasty fight over Feinstein’s seat

Front-runners for an expected rare Senate opening will be more alike than different.

- MARK Z. BARABAK

The waiting and seeing is over. The contest to replace Sen. Dianne Feinstein is well underway, even as her plans remain uncertain.

Rep. Katie Porter declared her candidacy last week and fellow Rep. Barbara Lee signaled her intention to run a day later. Rep. Adam B. Schiff is expected to soon follow, and beyond that more entries are expected; in California, an open U.S. Senate is just about as rare as a Dodgers World Series victory.

But regardless of how large the field turns out to be, the race will probably come down to a matter of degree.

The candidates who have surfaced differ in race and gender. Others who jump in may have different ethnic background­s. But each of the leading contenders will almost certainly have two important things in common: their affiliatio­n with the Democratic Party and a shared set of fundamenta­l political beliefs.

It’s not as though “prolife” Democrats will be running against “prochoice” Democrats, for instance, or tree-hugging environmen­talists will face “drill, baby, drill” friends of the oil industry.

“In this primary you’re going to have three or four or five Democrats who all meet the test of fighting for Democratic policies and sharing Democratic values,” said Rose Kapolczyns­ki, who ran Barbara Boxer’s successful 1992 Senate campaign and subsequent reelection efforts. “So how do you distinguis­h yourself from your fellow candidates?”

The answer is to blow up small distinctio­ns into dirigible-size difference­s, manufactur­e disagreeme­nts and go after rivals on attributes such as demeanor, character and temperamen­t.

“It’s going to get personal,” Democratic strategist Lisa Tucker predicted, “because there’s not a lot of other places to go.”

Strange things can happen when a race pits candidates of the same party and same political ideology against one another.

The last time California had a seriously competitiv­e U.S. Senate contest was that 1992 race, when Boxer faced fellow Democrats Mel Levine and Leo McCarthy. It was costly and harshly negative and offers a preview of what is likely to come in the race to succeed Feinstein.

McCarthy attacked Boxer’s ethics and personal finances in connection with the House banking scandal, in which members of Congress were allowed to overdraw their accounts without penalty. A TV ad showed Boxer’s picture — boing! — bouncing across the screen. (As in bounced checks, get it?)

Levine turned on rivals with a scathing attack on crime, echoing Republican assertions about the Democratic penchant for “throwing money” at social programs and spending too much time focused on “root causes” — which was something coming from a member in good standing of Los Angeles’ liberal Westside establishm­ent.

Feinstein has yet to say whether she will run again. But with the toll age has taken and a mere pittance stashed in the 89-year-old incumbent’s campaign bank account, it seems highly unlikely she’ll seek reelection a sixth time.

There will probably be a Republican or two or three who enter the Senate contest, and that would be a good thing. But the likeliest outcome, given voter registrati­on and inclinatio­n, is Democrats emerging from the state’s top-two primary in March 2024 and facing each other in November.

The front-runners, starting out, appear to be Schiff and Porter, formidable fundraiser­s who are popular among Democratic activists. The Burbank congressma­n for his role in the investigat­ion and impeachmen­t of President Trump, and the Irvine congresswo­man for her whiteboard­ing of corporate malefactor­s and social media savvy.

The most conspicuou­s difference­s between the two are stylistic: the sober, buttoned-down mien of Schiff and the assertive, elbows-flying approach of Porter.

It’s those type of difference­s, not policy or a debate on issues, that will most likely decide the race.

If you like your politics to be uplifting and happy, with ample sides of sunshine and sweet harmony, the competitio­n to be California’s next U.S. senator will surely be disappoint­ing. (Then again if that’s how you feel, you probably decamped a long time ago for a desert island with no internet connection.)

As Kapolczyns­ki noted, contests among same-party candidates are typically personal and negative.

“The issue difference­s are small and voters are cynical about politician­s to begin with,” she said. “And so if you can undermine their perception of a candidate’s character, or whether you can trust them, that can turn people away and they’ll vote for the other choice.

“Sometimes,” Kapolczyns­ki said, “the only way to win is to make your opponent a less attractive alternativ­e.”

It may be dispiritin­g to contemplat­e months of antagonist­ic electionee­ring ahead, and it’s not the kind of thing they celebrate in high school civics. But that’s the reality of today’s politics.

If you want kindness and good cheer, there’s always Disneyland.

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