Marin Independent Journal

Top Senate candidates clash over economy, oil, ads, corporate ties

- By David Lightman Distribute­d by Tribune News Service

California Senate candidates brawled Tuesday night over energy, the economy, corporate ties and almost anything else the state’s residents care about.

But who was right and who was wrong as they traded charges and facts?

With two weeks to go before the state’s March 5 primary, candidates are battling for a shrinking slice of the electorate. An Emerson College Poll taken last week, after the Feb. 12 debate, found 17% of voters undecided, down significan­tly from last month.

U.S. Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., was up to 28%, followed by Republican Steve Garvey, at 22%, U.S. Rep. Katie Porter, D-Calif., 16% and U.S. Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Calif., at 9%.

The top two finishers go on to compete in November’s general election. They’ll be replacing Sen. Laphonza Butler, a Democrat appointed by Gov. Gavin Newsom in October to fill the seat of the late Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif. Butler is not seeking another term.

What’s emerged is a bruising contest between a field of contenders that boasts strong bases of support. Schiff, 63, is particular­ly solid with voters in their 60s and older. Garvey, 75, the former all-star first baseman, does well with voters over 70. Porter, 50, is popular with younger voters, and Lee, 77, has a strong following among progressiv­es.

Tuesday was their third, and final, debate this year. The poll found one-third of those who watched last week’s debate saw Schiff as the winner. Nineteen percent cited Porter as the winner and 18% picked Garvey.

‘Career politician­s’

Porter maintained “career politician­s haven’t focused on our challenges” regarding prices. Garvey also mentioned “career politician­s” as villains triggering inflation, saying “the overspendi­ng in Washington” causes prices to go up.

Economists have debated for years whether the COVID-19 relief measures in 2020 and 2021 bills signed by both President Donald Trump and later Joe Biden were the primary reason for the highest rate of inflation in more than 40 years.

But the bigger influence on prices is largely believed to be the Federal Reserve Board, chaired by Jerome Powell. He was originally appointed by Trump and re-appointed by Biden. The Fed uses interest rates as a way to control economic growth. High rates should slow it down; lower rates stoke growth.

Interest rates were near zero for years, a strategy designed to spur growth as COVID-19 devastated the economy.

As inflation hit a high of an annualized 9.1% in June 2022, the Fed raised rates, helping slow the rate of inflation. It’s raised its key interest rate 11 times since March 2022.

Garvey said inflation has not gone down, but last month’s annualized inflation rate was 3.1%.

Earmarks

Porter renewed her charge that California is treated unfairly in the earmark process, funds lawmakers can designate for local projects.

Earmarks have been controvers­ial for years, and were barred by Congress in 2011. Ten years later, they were resurrecte­d as “community project funding.” Members seeking funds must publicly explain why the project is important.

Porter said California is being shortchang­ed by the system, since its 39 million people get 2% of the earmarks a percentage point for each senator.

But House members also get to designate earmarks, and California has 52 House members.

Not all seek earmarks. Porter does not, nor does U.S. Rep. Tom McClintock, R-Calif. And they are not always distribute­d equally.

The party in power usually does better.

In 2022, a Roll Call study found that about 43% of the House earmark money that year was targeted to five big states. California topped the list at $1.2 billion, followed by Texas, Florida, New York and Illinois. Feinstein, who died last year, was at the time a senior member of the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee, which writes that chamber’s spending bills.

Gas and oil

In response to separate questions about inflation and climate policy, Garvey asserted that U.S. “gas and oil lines were turned off.” But it was unclear just what he was talking about, since oil production boomed last year.

Shortly after taking office in 2021, Biden directed his administra­tion to stop issuing new oil and natural gas leases on public lands and waters, but many lease transactio­ns later resumed. The U.S. produced about 13.3 million barrels daily last month, and is supposed to produce at an even faster pace this year. When Biden took office in January 2021, it was producing about 11 million barrels daily..

So far production has continued at the 13.3 million barrel a day pace, the federal Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion says.

And despite a spike in recent weeks in gasoline prices, they averaged $3.27 for a gallon of regular gasoline Tuesday, down 17 cents from a year ago, according to AAA.

Corporate money

Porter and Schiff again battled over who’s taking corporate money. Neither

is taking funds from corporate political action committees in this race, though Schiff has in his past campaign.

But an ad from cryptospon­sored PAC Fairshake charges that she “takes her campaign cash directly from Big Pharma, Big Oil and the Big Bank executives. More than $100,000.” The PAC’s donors include AH Capital Management, Coinbase, Ripple and Jump Crypto, has raised more than $85 million this election cycle, according to the website OpenSecret­s.

Porter blasted the ad again Tuesday, and cited the Bee’s Feb. 14 fact check, which found the ad mostly false.

As the Sacramento Bee’s Andrew Sheeler reported, the ad “lists Spectrum Pharmaceut­icals as part of ‘Big Pharma,’ Wood Oil Company as part of ‘Big Oil’ and Royal Business Bank as a ‘Big Bank.’ Spectrum Pharmaceut­icals, owned by Assertio Holdings, is a Boston-based pharmaceut­ical company.

However, neither Spectrum nor Assertio belong to the industry trade group PhRMA, which lobbies on behalf of the industry’s biggest drug makers. Wood Oil Company is an oil supplier based out of Gardena.

It does not belong to the American Petroleum Institute, which lobbies on behalf of the industry. Royal Business Bank is a Community Developmen­t Financial Institutio­n based in Los Angeles that specialize­s in providing financial services to Chinese American, Korean American and other Asian American markets.”

 ?? PHOTOS VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS AND GETTY IMAGES ?? Left to right: Former baseball player Steve Garvey, Rep. Katie Porter, Rep. Barbara Lee and Rep. Adam Schiff.
PHOTOS VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS AND GETTY IMAGES Left to right: Former baseball player Steve Garvey, Rep. Katie Porter, Rep. Barbara Lee and Rep. Adam Schiff.

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