Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

If recall succeeds, what will happen?

- By Dan Walters For more stories by Dan Walters, go to calmatters.org/ commentary

The recall election aimed at Gov. Gavin Newsom is close enough to ponder what would happen if, in fact, he is forced out of office a few weeks hence.

He almost certainly would be succeeded by one of the Republican would-be replacemen­ts — and at the moment, conservati­ve/libertaria­n radio talk show host Larry Elder is leading in the polls.

If anything, Newsom’s strategy of asking supporters not to vote for any of the 46 wouldbe successors heightens Elder’s chances, because if they do vote for someone, they would likely favor the least conservati­ve of the Republican candidates, former San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer.

A Newsom loss and a Faulconer win would be a double dose of bad news for the state’s Democratic Party because of all the Republican candidates, he would have the best chance of winning a full term in 2022.

The model for a Faulconer governorsh­ip could be Republican Arnold Schwarzene­gger, who became governor after Democrat Gray Davis was recalled in 2003. Initially, Schwarzene­gger and Democratic legislator­s quarreled, but eventually they developed a workable rapport — much to the dismay of conservati­ve Republican­s — and Schwarzene­gger easily won a full term in 2006.

Conversely, were Elder to top the field and succeed Newsom, the Capitol would be tied up in knots for more than a year as he attempted to impose his will and Democrats thwarted him at every turn. Governors have a lot of potential power, but using it depends on having a cooperativ­e Legislatur­e.

Newsom assumed vast authority to bend or ignore laws, when he declared an emergency to deal with COVID-19 — a performanc­e that fueled the discontent that put his recall on the ballot. However, Newsom could do what he did only because the Legislatur­e acceded, initially giving him a pot of money to spend as he saw fit and abandoning the Capitol for many weeks. His emergency decrees are still in effect, but the Legislatur­e has constituti­onal authority to end them if it wishes.

As governor, Elder might attempt to emulate Newsom by wielding emergency powers, but the Legislatur­e would immediatel­y void them. He could try to replace top-level administra­tion officials, but his appointees would have to win state Senate confirmati­on and it would certainly balk. He could veto Democrats’ bills, but they have enough legislativ­e seats to override his vetoes.

Elder would submit a 202223 budget to the Legislatur­e in January but with three-quarters of the Legislatur­e, Democrats could enact their own budget and override Elder’s veto to put it in place.

Although Democrats are issuing dire prediction­s of what Elder might do as governor, he really would have little power to do anything significan­t. With huge legislativ­e majorities, Democrats could simply wait out the 15 months of an Elder governorsh­ip while gearing up to retake the office in 2022.

Elder would complain loudly, but ideologica­lly he’s out of touch with blue California and would have won the governorsh­ip with votes from a tiny percentage of the state’s electorate, making him little more than an aberration­al footnote to history.

While this would be happening, or not happening, Democratic politician­s would be scrambling to become Elder’s successor, beginning with the June 7 top-two primary election. Newsom could run again and if he did, would probably come out on top in the primary. If he opted out, Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis would probably be the Democratic favorite but there are other ambitious politician­s in the wings.

None of this comes to pass if Newsom beats the recall, which is still the most likely outcome. But it’s by no means a certainty.

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