Oroville Mercury-Register

RECALL FAILS; NEWSOM RETAINS GOVERNORSH­IP

Governor cruises to resounding victory; stronger support for the recall seen locally

- By Kathleen Ronayne and Michael R. Blood

SACRAMENTO » California Gov. Gavin Newsom on Tuesday became the second governor in U.S. history to defeat a recall aimed at kicking him out of office early, a contest the Democratic governor crafted as part of a national battle for his party’s values in the face of the coronaviru­s pandemic and lingering threats from “Trumpism.”

The victory cements Newsom as a prominent figure in national Democratic politics and preserves his prospects for a future U.S. run. It also ensures the nation’s most populous state will remain in Democratic control as a laboratory for progressiv­e policies on immigratio­n, climate change, representa­tion and inequality.

“‘No’ is not the only thing that was expressed tonight,” Newsom said at a news conference. “I want to focus on what we said ‘yes’ to as a state: We said yes to science, we said yes to vaccines, we said yes to ending this pandemic.”

A Republican almost certainly would have replaced Newsom had the recall succeeded, bringing a polar opposite

political worldview, though they would have had to contend with a state Capitol dominated by Democrats.

The vote in Butte County was typically split. With 82 percent of the vote counted, Butte voters were supporting the recall 51.5-48.5 percent (32,195-30,348). The “yes” vote was dominating in both Glenn (68.4-31.6) and

Tehama (67.7-32.3) counties.

The recall, which turned on Newsom’s approach to the pandemic, mirrored the nation’s heated political divide over business closures and mask and vaccine mandates, and both parties will dissect its outcome heading into the 2022 midterm elections.

President Joe Biden sought validation of the Democratic Party’s approach

of tighter restrictio­ns and vaccine requiremen­ts, urging California­ns to show the nation that “leadership matters, science matters.” The race also was a test of whether opposition to former President Donald Trump and his right-wing politics remains a motivating force for Democrats and independen­ts.

“We defeated Donald Trump, we didn’t defeat Trumpism. Trumpism is still alive, all across this country,” Newsom said as he campaigned in a state that the former president lost by 29 percentage points.

Republican­s had hoped for proof that frustratio­ns over months of pandemic precaution­s would drive voters away from Democrats. They also searched for evidence that voters were tiring of liberal leadership. Democrats have controlled every level of government in California for more than a decade, a period marked by a housing crisis and the increasing­ly damaging effects of climate change. Republican­s won back four U.S. House seats last year, success that leaders hoped had indicated revived signs of life.

But a recall election is an imperfect barometer — particular­ly of national trends. Democrats outnumber Republican­s nearly 2-to-1 in California, so the results may not translate to governors in toss-up states or reflect how voters will judge members of Congress next year. That the unusual contest was held at the tail end of summer meant some voters weren’t even tuned in.

Voters were asked two questions: Should Newsom be recalled, and, if so, who should replace him? Only a handful of the 46 names on the replacemen­t ballot had any level of public recognitio­n, but most failed to gain traction with voters.

Conservati­ve talk radio host Larry Elder held a commanding lead on the second question and appeared all but certain to end the race with the votes needed to have replaced Newsom had the recall been a success.

Elder rises to top

He had entered the race just three months before Election Day and quickly rose to the top of the pack. But that allowed Newsom to turn the campaign into a choice between the two men, rather than a referendum on his performanc­e.

Newsom seized on Elder’s opposition to the minimum wage and abortion rights as evidence he was outside the mainstream of California. The governor branded him as “more extreme than Trump,” while Biden called him “the closest thing to a Trump clone I’ve ever seen.”

Though the contest didn’t quite bring the circus-like element of California’s 2003 recall — when voters replaced Democratic Gov. Gray Davis with Republican movie star Arnold Schwarzene­gger — it featured quirky moments of its own.

Reality TV star and former Olympian Caitlyn Jenner entered the race but gained little momentum and left the state for part of the campaign to film a reality

show in Australia. Businessma­n John Cox, who lost badly to Newsom in 2018, tried to spice up his campaign by hiring a live bear to join him, branding himself as the “beast” to Newsom’s “beauty.” The best known Democrat on the replacemen­t ballot was a 29-year-old YouTube star who dispenses financial advice to his followers.

Though Newsom defeated the recall, he may soon be running against Elder again: The governor is up for reelection next year, and the primary, which puts candidates from all parties on one ballot, is just nine months away.

The recall, initiated by an amateur political organizer, wasn’t the first attempt to oust Newsom, and it began as an expression of frustratio­n over Democrats’ grip on power. But when Newsom issued the nation’s first statewide stay-at-home order, the pandemic became the race’s driving force.

Recall organizers needed about 1.5 million signatures — California has 22 million registered voters — to make the ballot. They owe their success in part to a single day in November, when a judge gave them four extra months to gather signatures due to the pandemic.

That same day, Newsom attended a birthday party with friends and lobbyists at the lavish French Laundry restaurant, a gathering that violated his pandemic rules. The episode spiraled into a public relations disaster.

Supporters of the recall expressed frustratio­n over months-long business closures, restrictio­ns that kept most children in distance learning for a full academic year, and the confusing patchwork of rules that governed how people could gather with friends and family. Rising homicides, an unabated homelessne­ss crisis and an unemployme­nt fraud scandal further angered Newsom’s critics.

Virus — defining issue

But the broader public stayed on Newsom’s side. Polling from the Public Policy Institute of California showed his approval rating remaining above 50% throughout the pandemic. With weeks to go, the institute’s poll showed 60% of California­ns approved of Newsom’s handling of the pandemic.

In the early months of his campaign, Newsom declared California was “roaring back” from the virus, and he used a windfall of tax dollars to dole out billions for programs from child education to homelessne­ss. Middle- and lowincome California­ns got checks of up to $1,100 each.

The rise of the highly contagious delta variant over the summer dampened Newsom’s positive messaging, as he began to frame the race as one of “life or death” consequenc­es. He pointed to Texas and Florida, which were seeing worsening surges as their Republican governors rejected mask and vaccine mandates, as cautionary tales for what California could become. When Texas’ new law banning most abortions took effect Sept. 1, Newsom’s comparison with the GOP state only became more stark.

Newsom’s administra­tion

has mandated children wear masks in schools and is requiring all health care workers to get vaccinated. Teachers and government employees must be vaccinated or tested regularly. Ace Smith, one of Newsom’s political consultant­s, said before the race concluded that he believed it would provide Newsom — and the Democratic Party — a “clear mandate” for “sanity” on public health.

The party’s biggest luminaries stepped out for Newsom, highlighti­ng the national stakes. Beyond Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders and former President Barack Obama appeared in state or in campaign ads to help Newsom drive up turnout.

National Republican leaders largely kept the contest at arm’s length. Trump barely commented on the race until the final days, when he suggested with no evidence that the results would be rigged because of mail-in balloting. One of the recall’s original organizers said his comments would do more harm than good.

In the closing days, Elder’s campaign echoed Trump’s messaging, saying he expects “shenanigan­s” and linking to a website insinuatin­g Newsom had already won the election due to fraud. The site included language from a petition circulated to help Trump’s effort to overturn last year’s presidenti­al election, but that wording was removed by Tuesday afternoon.

Former San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer, once considered the party’s best hope to win back statewide office given his record in a Democratic city, failed to find his niche with voters, struggling to appeal to both the party’s base and the broader electorate. Elder immediatel­y captured attention from the party’s conservati­ve grassroots, but he also alienated independen­ts and Democrats who may have considered a vote against Newsom.

Newsom has been viewed as a potential White House contender since at least 2004, when he defied federal law to issue marriage licenses to LGBT couples as mayor of San Francisco. His victory maintained those prospects, though he will still have to navigate around the ambitions of Harris, who came up through San Francisco politics alongside Newsom.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Gov. Gavin Newsom addresses a crowd in Sacramento on Tuesday night. Newsom defeated an attempt to oust him from office, overcoming Republican criticism of COVID-19restrict­ions that shuttered schools and businesses.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Gov. Gavin Newsom addresses a crowd in Sacramento on Tuesday night. Newsom defeated an attempt to oust him from office, overcoming Republican criticism of COVID-19restrict­ions that shuttered schools and businesses.
 ?? RINGO H.W. CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Voters arrive to cast their ballots at the Lincoln Park Senior Center in Los Angeles on Tuesday.
RINGO H.W. CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Voters arrive to cast their ballots at the Lincoln Park Senior Center in Los Angeles on Tuesday.
 ?? ASHLEY LANDIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Supporters of Republican conservati­ve radio show host Larry Elder pray while Errol Webber, left, holds up a cutout of Elder’s face at a gathering as polls close for the California gubernator­ial recall election Tuesday in Costa Mesa.
ASHLEY LANDIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Supporters of Republican conservati­ve radio show host Larry Elder pray while Errol Webber, left, holds up a cutout of Elder’s face at a gathering as polls close for the California gubernator­ial recall election Tuesday in Costa Mesa.
 ?? GREGORY BULL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Kevin Faulconer, former San Diego mayor and Republican candidate for governor of California, greets supporters during a news conference after polls closed in the recall election Tuesday in San Diego.
GREGORY BULL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Kevin Faulconer, former San Diego mayor and Republican candidate for governor of California, greets supporters during a news conference after polls closed in the recall election Tuesday in San Diego.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States