Los Angeles Times

Newsom is target of another long-shot recall bid

GOP group points to budget deficit and the governor’s campaigns in other states.

- BY TARYN LUNA

SACRAMENTO — A group of Republican­s involved in the failed 2021 recall of Gov. Gavin Newsom said they are making another attempt to remove him from office, a long-shot bid that would require more than 1.3 million valid voter signatures to qualify for the ballot.

Rescue California, which ran a campaign in support of the 2021 attempt to recall Newsom, is the main proponent of the new effort, said Anne Dunsmore, the group’s campaign director. Dunsmore said the group delivered recall papers to Newsom’s office on Monday. The plan was first reported by Politico.

She pointed to California’s massive budget deficit and what she described as

Newsom’s focus on campaignin­g for Democrats in other states as reasons why voters should back the recall.

“It’s not a good time for him to check out,” Dunsmore said. “But if he’s going to check out, we’ll kick him out.”

Newsom has pegged the state budget deficit at $37.9 billion. The Legislativ­e Analyst’s Office, which provides fiscal and policy advice to the state Legislatur­e, released an updated estimate this month that suggests the shortfall is more than double that amount.

Newsom dismissed the latest recall attempt as an effort by Republican­s to divert attention from their unpopular push to restrict abortion and support former President Trump’s bid to return to the White House.

“Trump Republican­s are launching another wasteful recall campaign to distract us from the existentia­l fight for democracy and reproducti­ve freedom,” Newsom said on X, formerly Twitter.

“We will defeat them.”

The governor has been raising money for Democrats in other states ahead of the November election and actively campaignin­g for President Biden’s reelection bid. On Sunday, he returned from Washington, where he attended a meeting with other governors and the president and participat­ed in national television interviews as a surrogate for the Biden campaign.

The new recall effort would be among more than half a dozen attempts to oust Newsom since he took office in January 2019. All but the 2021 recall campaign, which was spearheade­d by retired Yolo County sheriff ’s Sgt. Orrin Heatlie, failed to qualify for the statewide ballot.

California election law requires recall petitioner­s to gather valid signatures from at least 12% of the total number of registered voters who participat­ed in the last gubernator­ial election in order to force a statewide election. They have 160 days to gather the signatures.

Backers of the prior recall effort pointed to Newsom’s decision to attend a dinner at the French Laundry in Napa Valley on Nov. 6, 2020, as an example of hypocrisy from a governor who at that time of the COVID-19 pandemic had advised California­ns to avoid indoor gatherings with other households.

That same day, the coronaviru­s offered another key blow to Newsom’s campaign when a judge granted recall petitioner­s four more months to gather voter signatures.

The pandemic had hampered efforts to gather signatures outside grocery stores, and proponents successful­ly petitioned the court for more time in a decision that went unconteste­d by the California secretary of state’s office.

The emergence of rightwing conservati­ve Larry Elder as a replacemen­t candidate helped boost Newsom’s campaign to remain in office. Final results showed 61.9% of voters rejected the recall, while 38.1% backed the effort to remove Newsom from office in September 2021.

This time around, Dunsmore said, the recall campaign needs fewer signatures to qualify for the ballot.

She said she also plans to mail petitions to the same volunteers who circulated them last time.

“We don’t have to restart it at all,” she said. “We actually get to use the resources that we built up over a period of time last time. We don’t have to spend as much money.”

A spokesman for Newsom said the governor and his team are taking the new effort seriously. Newsom reported $11.8 million in cash in his state officehold­er account at the conclusion of the last reporting period that ended Dec. 31.

State elected officials targeted in recall campaigns can raise money to defeat the effort without being subjected to normal contributi­on limits in California.

Newsom immediatel­y seized on the recall campaign as an opportunit­y to raise money.

Shortly after noon Monday, the governor’s fundraisin­g team sent out an email calling on his supporters to donate to help him beat the recall and to keep “some anti-science, anti-woman far right conspiracy theorist from becoming governor of California.”

“These Trump Republican­s are targeting Gov. Newsom because he is out there defending democracy and fighting for the reelection of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris,” said Nathan Click, a spokespers­on for Newsom, in a statement.

“He’s not going to be distracted from that fight. Democracy’s on the ballot, and he’s going to keep fighting.”

 ?? GENARO MOLINA Los Angeles Times ?? GOV. Gavin Newsom dismissed the recall bid as an effort to divert attention from the GOP’s unpopular antiaborti­on push and to support Donald Trump.
GENARO MOLINA Los Angeles Times GOV. Gavin Newsom dismissed the recall bid as an effort to divert attention from the GOP’s unpopular antiaborti­on push and to support Donald Trump.
 ?? Associated Press ?? “WE WILL defeat them,” Gov. Gavin Newsom said of the latest attempt by a group of Republican­s to oust him.
Associated Press “WE WILL defeat them,” Gov. Gavin Newsom said of the latest attempt by a group of Republican­s to oust him.

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