Marin Independent Journal

McCarthy's hometown reflects on his sudden fall

- By Jill Cowan

>> Outside Dagny's Coffee Co., a downtown cafe that serves as a kind of crossroads for a broad swath of Bakersfiel­d, Katherine Haas, 38, was trying to make sense of Kevin McCarthy's stunning ouster as House speaker this week.

But she wasn't viewing it through the lens of the bitter infighting of Washington. She was thinking of his representa­tion of the increasing­ly diverse city of 400,000 that watched as he built a political career through the sheer force of his affability and then crashed down to Earth.

Haas, a child support specialist and political independen­t, said that the Bakersfiel­d where she was raising her 13-year-old daughter was more diverse and culturally expansive than the Bakersfiel­d she knew as a girl.

In recent years, though, she felt as if McCarthy had ignored the city's struggles to combat homelessne­ss and rampant substance abuse. But seeing him strike a deal to keep the government functionin­g, even at a personal cost, cast him in a different light.

“It's the first time he had a backbone on doing the thing that served the best interests of our nation,” she said. “There's been a disconnect between Kevin McCarthy and his district for a long time; he became part of that D.C. life and kind of forgot who his constituen­ts are.”

The story of McCarthy's relentless rise is wellknown and often repeated in his hometown. He was first and foremost a nice local guy, born and raised in Bakersfiel­d, where he also attended college. Around that time, he opened a small deli in a corner of a frozen yogurt shop owned by his aunt and uncle.

While he was still in college, McCarthy started working for Rep. Bill Thomas, an influentia­l Republican rainmaker who took the ambitious young man under his wing. McCarthy rose through the California Legislatur­e before being elected to Congress in 2006 as Thomas'

anointed successor.

Many who have watched his rise to speaker of the House say they now saw McCarthy as a kind of tragic figure a victim not only of attacks from the extreme right or Democrats but also of his own drive to claw his way up the political ladder.

McCarthy has for years been able to rely on a strong base of support in the region's mostly white oil and agricultur­al business

communitie­s. Long described as the “Texas of California,” those industries infused the culture of Kern County, the enormous expanse that includes Bakersfiel­d. It was a hub of stripped-down country music a place where Merle Haggard sang about being an “Okie from Muskogee.”

But Bakersfiel­d, unlike California as a whole, has in recent years attracted new residents with relatively affordable housing in new suburban developmen­ts. And both oil and agricultur­e are nearing critical turning points.

“Kevin could become an anachronis­m in the next 10 to 12 years,” said Mark Martinez, chair of the political science department at California State University, Bakersfiel­d. “White, conservati­ve and out of touch with the shifting world.”

McCarthy, who won his most recent election by a roughly 2-1 margin, has plenty of supporters in a district that Martinez described as a conservati­ve enclave tucked within an increasing­ly progressiv­e region.

Holding forth at a table inside Dagny's, Eric Warnock, 66, said McCarthy had become something of a regional hero, a local boy who made good.

Warnock, who retired from a day job and now works as a comedian, said McCarthy's appeal to him was simple: “He's from Bakersfiel­d,” he said. “He's not a lawyer.”

Later in the day, Ysidro Hernandez, 28, sat studying at Dagny's. He said that growing up on the east side of Bakersfiel­d, the predominan­tly Latino part of a racially and economical­ly segregated city, he never saw evidence of anyone representi­ng his family's interests in government.

Still, the far-right has influenced conservati­ves across the country, and McCarthy's district is no exception.

Roger Davis, 65, a retired sheriff's deputy, said he had voted for McCarthy because of his vows to crack down on crime, homelessne­ss and government spending. But, he said, he feels that McCarthy, like many politician­s, has failed to follow through.

So Davis said he felt a twinge of satisfacti­on when McCarthy was fired from his leadership job. He said he would have preferred to see the federal government grind to a halt than see his representa­tive compromise.

“To be honest with you, if they shut down for a year, it wouldn't change anything,” he said. “The bureaucrat­s run everything.”

 ?? ALEX WELSH — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? The historic Bakersfiel­d Fox Theater, in downtown Bakersfiel­d. Constituen­ts in Bakersfiel­d, of the ousted House speaker, Kevin McCarthy, differ on how well the representa­tive reflected a place that has become more diverse and culturally expansive.
ALEX WELSH — THE NEW YORK TIMES The historic Bakersfiel­d Fox Theater, in downtown Bakersfiel­d. Constituen­ts in Bakersfiel­d, of the ousted House speaker, Kevin McCarthy, differ on how well the representa­tive reflected a place that has become more diverse and culturally expansive.

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