Los Angeles Times

Schiff joins 2024 Senate race for Feinstein’s seat

Burbank congressma­n and Trump antagonist is latest high-profile Democrat to jump in.

- BY MELANIE MASON

Rep. Adam B. Schiff, a decades-long fixture in San Fernando Valley politics who rose to national prominence as a top Democratic foe to then-President Trump, announced Thursday that he is joining a contest for U.S. Senate that is quickly shaping up to be highly competitiv­e.

A mild-mannered former prosecutor, Schiff initially built a profile in the House as a moderate Democrat focused on foreign policy and national security.

The Trump era, however, thrust him into the spotlight, as he led the first impeachmen­t of the then-president and served on the congressio­nal panel investigat­ing the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol attack, which culminated in Trump’s referral to the Justice Department for a criminal investigat­ion.

“The Senate is where many of these fights over the future of our democracy take place,” Schiff said in an interview before his campaign launch. “Some of Donald Trump’s biggest enablers are in the Senate. And I think that is where I can most effectivel­y champion our democratic institutio­ns.”

His campaign injects new fundraisin­g and political heft into the race for the seat currently occupied by Sen. Dianne Feinstein, the San Francisco Democrat who has held that office for 30 years.

Democratic Rep. Katie Porter, a rising star in the party who has notched close victories in competitiv­e Orange County, was the first major candidate to declare her Senate candidacy, announcing her run earlier this month.

Oakland Rep. Barbara Lee, a progressiv­e Democrat, has told colleagues she will launch a bid, although she has not yet done so publicly.

Democratic Rep. Ro Khanna of Fremont also has signaled interest in running.

Though the race for Feinstein’s seat has begun in earnest, the senator, 89, has not disclosed whether she intends to run for reelection next year. Given some questions about her capacity to continue in that role, many observers expect she will not

seek another six-year term.

“I have just tremendous respect for her and — more than respect — admiration and affection,” Schiff said, adding that he would not have jumped into the race without informing her first. He said they spoke the day before his announceme­nt.

“I think she will make her own decision about an announceme­nt when she feels ready to do so,” he said. “She’s earned that right, and I certainly respect her to do that whenever she determines the time is right.”

Feinstein has told The Times she will disclose her plans soon, “probably by spring.”

With Republican­s having trouble mustering competitiv­e candidates for statewide office, the fiercest battle is expected to be among the Democratic contenders, who so far broadly align on ideology.

“Since they do mostly fall in line in terms of policy, it’ll be a race more about personalit­y and about brand,” said Kimberly Nalder, a Sacramento State University political scientist.

She pointed to Lee’s reputation as the lone vote in Congress against the invasion of Afghanista­n in 2001, which Nalder said “makes her a hero to the left,” but also reflects the position that a majority in the country now holds.

Porter, of Irvine, has emerged as an anti-corruption advocate with a populist streak and a whiteboard as her signature prop.

Schiff ’s lawyerly demeanor is now best associated with the hearings for Trump’s first impeachmen­t and the Jan. 6 investigat­ion.

“We saw in 2022 that democracy itself was a big issue for a lot of voters,” Nalder said. “He certainly was a very visible defender of democracy in those hearings, for those who paid attention.”

Schiff shared that assessment, telling The Times that his role “at the center of these fights to preserve democracy” differenti­ates him from his competitor­s.

Those fights, he said, were also “interlinke­d” with voters’ concerns about the economy.

“The fact that the economy hasn’t been working for millions of Americans who have seen their quality of life decline ... led people to be receptive to a demagogue who comes with promises that he alone can fix it,” Schiff said, alluding to Trump. He cited climate change as another main campaign focus.

A video kicking off his campaign flaunts anti endorsemen­ts from prominent right-wingers including Trump — shown referring to the congressma­n derisively as “Little Pencil Neck” — and Fox News personalit­y Tucker Carlson, who called him “unfit to hold office.”

Schiff ’s record as a chief Trump antagonist landed him on the bestseller lists with a memoir, “Midnight in Washington: How We Almost Lost Our Democracy and Still Could.”

He also parlayed the notoriety into a campaign cash juggernaut. He had more than $20 million on hand as of late November, putting him well ahead financiall­y of his rivals in the Senate race. His campaign will not accept donations from corporate political action committees, a spokespers­on said.

Porter noted Thursday that she had long held that stance. “In the race for California’s U.S. Senate seat, I’m proud to be the only candidate who has never taken a dime of corporate PAC money,” read a Porter campaign email sent soon after Schiff ’s announceme­nt.

Porter has also shown fundraisin­g prowess, pulling in more than $25 million for her last House campaign. But she spent heavily in the last cycle to fend off her Republican challenger, leaving her with $7.7 million in the bank after the election.

Lee, who has faced little competitio­n in her deepblue Oakland district, spent more than $2 million in her last campaign and ended with less than $55,000 in the bank.

For Schiff, 62, the statewide bid will mark the first time in 20 years he has faced a competitiv­e race.

Born in Massachuse­tts and raised in Arizona and the Bay Area, Schiff moved to Los Angeles after law school to clerk for a federal judge. As a deputy in the U.S. attorney’s office, he successful­ly prosecuted Richard Miller, the first FBI agent to be indicted for espionage.

He then attempted to make the jump to elected office. Though a 1994 state Assembly run was unsuccessf­ul, he won a GOP-held state Senate seat two years later.

Though now a Democratic stronghold, the intersecti­on of the San Fernando and San Gabriel valleys — encompassi­ng Burbank, Glendale and Pasadena — was friendlier territory for Republican­s when Schiff first ran for Congress in 2000. He squared off against GOP Rep. James Rogan, who had bested Schiff six years earlier in the Assembly race and had emerged in Congress as a central figure in Republican­s’ impeachmen­t of President Clinton.

Schiff won the hotly fought campaign, which shattered spending records for House races. Since then, he has routinely won reelection by margins of 30 to 50 points.

In 2001, the first-term congressma­n was preparing to go to work on Sept. 11 when the first plane struck the World Trade Center in New York. The terrorist attacks that day ended up shaping his course in Congress, pushing him to focus more on national security than other policy areas that had interested him, such as environmen­tal issues and criminal justice reform.

“I thought that there aren’t that many people in the caucus, compared to other areas, who are focused on this,” he told The Times on the 20th anniversar­y of 9/11. “Maybe this is where I can add value.”

Schiff voted for the Iraq war authorizat­ion in 2002, as well as for the Patriot Act. Years later, he told The Times that an “overriding impact [of 9/11 and the ensuing years] is a recognitio­n of the limitation­s of military power.”

As he rose in prominence in the House Intelligen­ce Committee, he became a leading voice for seeking congressio­nal authorizat­ion for military force against the Islamic State militant group and in favor of the Iran nuclear deal negotiated during the Obama administra­tion.

After becoming the top Democrat on the Intelligen­ce Committee, he was a central figure in several investigat­ions into Trump. He vocally drew attention to Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al election, which went on to be investigat­ed by special counsel Robert S. Mueller III.

Schiff’s prominence in the Trump investigat­ions earned him derisive nicknames from the then-president and the ire of Republican­s, who accused him of making exaggerate­d and politicize­d claims in saying Trump’s 2016 campaign had colluded with Moscow.

Schiff became even more of a lightning rod as leader of the first impeachmen­t inquiry into Trump. He presided over hearings that examined whether Trump had tried to pressure the president of Ukraine to open an investigat­ion into his potential rival Joe Biden in exchange for military aid. Trump was impeached by the Democratic-led House but was acquitted in the Senate.

A top ally of then-Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco), Schiff reportedly considered following in her footsteps in a House Democratic leadership role. He ultimately decided to focus on a bid for the Senate instead.

Schiff’s congressio­nal workload may lighten considerab­ly this term: House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfiel­d) removed him from the Intelligen­ce Committee this week, alleging that he had lied about whether he knew the whistleblo­wer whose complaint led to Trump’s first impeachmen­t. (A Washington Post fact-check disputed McCarthy’s accusation.)

McCarthy, explaining his actions in a letter, said the Intelligen­ce Committee under Schiff ’s chairmansh­ip “severely undermined its primary national security and oversight missions — ultimately leaving our nation less safe.”

McCarthy’s removal of Schiff as well as Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Dublin) from the committee appeared to be in retaliatio­n for Democrats leading the bipartisan effort to strip committee assignment­s from Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) and Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.) for making incendiary comments including threats against their colleagues.

Schiff denounced the move as “destructiv­e of the institutio­n” of the intelligen­ce panel. But he appeared to relish the chance to needle his fellow California­n, charging that McCarthy was more inclined to help the far-right f lank of the Republican Party than his own state.

“There will certainly be a form of cosmic justice,” Schiff said, “when I become Kevin McCarthy’s homestate senator.”

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? REP. ADAM B. SCHIFF, the Burbank Democrat seeking a Senate seat, became known for his role in several House investigat­ions into former President Trump.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times REP. ADAM B. SCHIFF, the Burbank Democrat seeking a Senate seat, became known for his role in several House investigat­ions into former President Trump.

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