Marysville Appeal-Democrat

DNC seeks to boost election outreach ahead of anticipate­d ‘red wave’

- Tribune News Service Mcclatchy Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — The Democratic National Committee is giving California and at least five other states grants to organize voter outreach ahead of this year’s elections.

The 2022 elections will determine whether Democrats or Republican­s control the United States House of Representa­tives in 2023. Many experts are predicting a “red wave” this fall that will hand the chamber to Republican­s.

The party of the president, now a Democrat, historical­ly falters in midterm elections for Congress. Adding to Democrats’ worries are President

Joe Biden’s declining approval rating for his handling of inflation and pandemic policy and the fact that a large number of Democrats are retiring.

The state-level Democratic Parties of California, Texas, Florida, Minnesota, Maryland and Wyoming will get money to hire organizing directors, a spokespers­on for the DNC told The Sacramento Bee. The directors are meant to recruit and funnel volunteers working on voter outreach into targeted districts across the state for local and national elections.

“The DNC is proud to make these latest investment­s in the California Democratic Party to expand organizing and voter outreach efforts on the ground,” DNC Chairman Jaime Harrison said in a statement sent to The Bee. “The California Democratic Party has built an impressive coordinate­d effort to keep Democrats in office, and the DNC is committed to continue helping build upon that work to ensure California Democrats win up and down the ballot this November and beyond.”

The DNC announceme­nt comes weeks before California’s primaries on June 7, 2022.

The last time the California Democratic Party received such a grant was in 2018, another midterm election.

Other states will benefit from such a grant in future roll-outs, the spokespers­on said.

Prominent electiontr­acking organizati­ons have re-rated some House races nationwide. For the most part, mostly, they boosted Republican­s’ odds in California.

Though experts said redistrict­ing, the oncea-decade process of redrawing legislativ­e boundaries, favored Democrats in California, Republican­s could hold onto the same number of districts that they have now. California lost a seat in Congress due to sluggish population growth, dropping its

House delegation to 52 representa­tives. The lost seat is Democratic, surroundin­g Los Angeles.

California has 10 Republican­s in the House. It would be 11, but former Congressma­n Devin Nunes resigned to lead former President Donald Trump’s social media company.

The House is currently divided by 221 Democrats and 209 Republican­s, with five vacancies. Four vacant seats were held by Republican­s. With a 222 to 213 split, Republican­s need to win just five more seats in 2022 to take the majority.

The DNC has invested in the California Democratic Party’s program, which focuses on Orange County, the Central Valley, Los Angeles County and the Bay Area. Targeted districts are decided on by a team of elected officials, party leadership and data analysts at the local, state and national levels, the DNC spokespers­on said.

It is up to the California Democratic Party, CADEM, to determine the number of volunteers going to certain districts through the DNC’S grant.

“This program, Forever Organizing, will provide CADEM with an opportunit­y to plan, train and build capacity around volunteer recruitmen­t, direct voter contact, data and tech tools, tracking data and coalition building,” California Democratic Party Chairman Rusty Hicks said in a statement sent to The Bee.

 ?? Tribune News Service/getty Images ?? Architect of the Capitol workers walk through the Rotunda in the U.S. Capitol building on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., on April 29, 2021.
Tribune News Service/getty Images Architect of the Capitol workers walk through the Rotunda in the U.S. Capitol building on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., on April 29, 2021.

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