The Bakersfield Californian

Feinstein’s health has Newsom in a political trap of his own making

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Whither Dianne Feinstein? Feinstein, a fixture of California politics for more than a half-century and a U.S. senator for three decades, recently returned to the Capitol after a weekslong battle with shingles, a very debilitati­ng disease.

One might have thought that her return, after much carping from those on the Democratic Party’s left wing about her absence, would quiet those who wanted her to resign.

However, the critics didn’t miss a beat. They could no longer complain that she was AWOL and thus inhibiting the party’s ability to advance an agenda in the closely divided Senate. But they continued the drumbeat, citing the obvious fact that age (she’s 89) and the lingering effects of shingles have worsened the decline of her cognitive abilities.

Feinstein’s impairment has virtually no effect on the Senate’s operations. As long as she is alive and can an answer the roll call, President Joe Biden and Majority Leader Chuck Schumer can do whatever they would be able to do with any other Democrat occupying one of California’s Senate seats.

The continuing demands for her resignatio­n — which she steadfastl­y insists will not happen — aren’t really about her cognition, but rather her somewhat centrist position on the ideologica­l scale.

Feinstein has already said she won’t seek another Senate term next year and her successor will be another Democrat, but what kind of Democrat is somewhat uncertain. Three major contenders, all members of Congress, are already campaignin­g and none has emerged as the clear frontrunne­r.

The progressiv­e left would prefer Rep. Barbara Lee of Oakland or, perhaps, Rep. Katie Porter of Orange County. Progressiv­es don’t want Rep. Adam Schiff of Los Angeles, who’s had centrist leanings in the past but is now trying, with little apparent success, to rebrand himself as a progressiv­e.

Lee seems to be trailing Porter and Schiff and if it’s a three-way battle, the two women could split the progressiv­e vote and thus give Schiff a better chance of winning. So the progressiv­es want a Feinstein resignatio­n that would, they hope, result in Lee being appointed to the seat by Gov. Gavin Newsom.

That hope hinges on something that Newsom — rather foolishly — said two years ago after appointing Alex Padilla to California’s other Senate seat, replacing Kamala Harris once she became vice president.

Newsom took heat from Black political figures for not naming a Black woman to replace Harris, who identified as Black and South Asian. He attempted to cool off the criticism by naming a Black woman, San Diego Assemblywo­man Shirley Weber, as Padilla’s successor as secretary of state. However, as the critics persisted, Newsom pledged on a national television to appoint a Black woman to succeed Feinstein if she resigned.

That pledge — essentiall­y a throwaway line to get off the political hook — could now bite back if, in fact, Feinstein were to resign. Newsom would be pressed to put Lee in the Senate, thus giving her a huge advantage to win a full term next year. He would also be hammered for interferin­g in the election.

Newsom surely hopes that Feinstein, even impaired, serves out her term. But were she to resign, as those on the left demand, he would face some difficult options. He could appoint Lee, bypass Lee and appoint another Black woman, such as San Francisco Mayor London Breed, who would run for a full term. Or, he could name someone else as a caretaker who would not seek a whole term.

Each option is fraught, given that the campaign to succeed Feinstein is already underway. Newsom is potentiall­y caught in a no-win political trap of his own making.

Email Dan Walters of CalMatters at dan@calmatters.org. CalMatters is a nonpartisa­n, nonprofit journalism venture committed to explaining how California’s state Capitol works and why it matters. For more columns by Walters, go to calmatters.org/ dan-walters.

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DAN WALTERS

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