San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

San Diego’s recall goes past politics

- By Joe Mathews Joe Mathews writes the Connecting California column for Zócalo Public Square.

San Diego’s attempts to take out Gavin Newsom have succeeded in producing another recall.

Why are you so desperate to seize the governorsh­ip, San Diego? The attempted recall of Gov. Gavin Newsom has many geographic roots. Its original proponent was a sheriff ’s deputy from Yolo County. The recall petition drew signatures from significan­t percentage­s of the population in our smaller, North State counties.

And East Coast conservati­ve media and rightwing Republican­s from other parts of the country have given it attention and money.

But a recall is about replacing one governor with another. And, for the second gubernator­ial recall in a row, it is the frustratio­ns of San Diego County, and its ambitious politician­s, that are driving the process.

Back in 2003, the frustrated and ambitious San Diegan behind the recall of Gov. Gray Davis was Congressma­n Darrell Issa. An ordinary gubernator­ial election didn’t hold much hope for a conservati­ve Republican like Issa, but the recall election — with a huge field of replacemen­t candidates — seemed to provide an opening. So, Issa, a car alarm magnate, provided the money to qualify the recall for the ballot, and formed a campaign team, only to abandon his candidacy.

This time, two ambitious men from San Diego lead in early polls of who would replace Newsom if the recall succeeds.

Former San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer has long eyed the governorsh­ip but seemed to be too moderate to beat a more conservati­ve Republican in a primary election.

Faulconer embraced the opportunit­y of a wideopen recall race, and began campaignin­g before all the signatures were submitted this spring.

Faulconer’s candidacy has given the recall, which had been backed by littleknow­n proTrump activists, a bit of legitimacy; he is clearly the candidate that Newsom’s team fears most.

The other San Diegan, businessma­n John Cox, lost badly to Newsom in the regular 2018 gubernator­ial election. But Cox, who has spent years searching for a way into political office, saw the recall as a second chance. He has now thrown his fortune behind the recall and his candidacy, broadcasti­ng ads statewide that show him with a bear, to symbolize the “beastly” changes he will bring to the state.

Why is San Diego the home of recall leaders?

Part of the answer lies in the state’s political change. While San Diego — which voted Republican in 19 of 25 20thcentur­y presidenti­al races — has become more Democratic, it’s still not as blue as the state as a whole. The city and county still elect Republican­s like Faulconer, who is popular enough with San Diego Democrats to convince himself he might win statewide.

Another political answer to the question lies in San Diego’s littleknow­n status as a hotbed of direct democracy.

For much of California’s history, San Diego has been the easiest place to gather signatures on petitions for recalls and ballot initiative­s. In some initiative campaigns, San Diego produced signatures at twice the pervoter rate of other counties.

But I suspect that San Diego’s affinity for the recall goes beyond politics. San Diego is a big place, the country’s eighth most populous city, but its cachet and influence don’t match its ambitions — because America’s Finest City, as it bills itself, has the bad luck to be located in California.

San Diego would be the largest metropolis in 43 states, but in California, it’s an afterthoug­ht, only the fourth most populous metro region, smaller than even the Inland Empire.

Its news, its sports teams, and its leaders don’t get the same level of statewide attention that San Francisco and Los Angeles do.

San Diego is also a different sort of place than its big brothers up the coast. L.A. and the Bay Area are global megaregion­s, proudly out of step with the rest of the United States. San Diego, by contrast, is the most unabashedl­y American of California cities.

It’s a place full of military installati­ons and veterans, who fly their flags and host our state’s largest Fourth of July show. Its location on an internatio­nal border also reinforces its American identity.

San Diegans, many of whom have dedicated their careers to defending the nation, often see the rest of California as going too far beyond American law and tradition. So, it’s not hard to see why the recall, a reactionar­y tool, might appeal as a way of pulling California back to reality.

But that doesn’t mean the recall will succeed in installing a San Diegan, much less slowing down change. Back in 2003, the San Diegofunde­d recall was ultimately won by a foreignbor­n movie star from Los Angeles.

It doesn’t help the prospects of Cox or Falconer that the last California governor from San Diego, Pete Wilson, who ran as a moderate, has curdled into a fullthroat­ed supporter of Donald Trump.

Late in life, Wilson, whose statue was briefly taken down in San Diego last fall, defends his antiimmigr­ation politics with the fervor of a man who wants to go down in history as California’s answer to George Wallace.

This year, San Diego’s attempts to take out Gavin Newsom have succeeded in producing another recall election, which is no small feat.

But since the election became a certainty, Gov. Newsom has grown more energized and popular.

In today’s California, San Diego has enough horsepower to demand the state reconsider who should be governor — but not enough to take the reins itself.

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 ??  ?? Kevin Faulconer
Kevin Faulconer
 ??  ?? John Cox
John Cox

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