The Denver Post

Schiff cheapened himself with his cynical effort to help Garvey

- By George Skelton Los Angeles Times George Skelton is a political columnist who has covered government and politics for 60 years and for The Times since 1974.

Rep. Adam B. Schiff’s clever and cynical ploy in California’s Senate primary enabled him to avoid risk in the November runoff. But he subjected himself to another risk.

The Burbank Democrat may have dug some potholes in the high road he normally travels.

There may be tarnish on the Mr. Clean image.

Not that it will substantia­lly affect how many votes he’ll win in November or future elections. Voters are pretty cynical themselves and aren’t shocked when politician­s veer to the low road for expediency.

People are trapped in polarizati­on these days and vote for the candidate of their party, regardless of any character flaws — Donald Trump’s followers being the sorriest example.

So what was the risk? Probably little in the short run. But some voters may no longer look up to the veteran congressma­n as a courageous idealist.

Certainly many young supporters of Democratic Rep. Katie Porter of Irvine, the potential November rival Schiff feared most, are ticked off at his tactics and are likely to long remember.

In any case, Schiff’s ploy was somewhat disappoint­ing and may not have been necessary.

Former Los Angeles Dodgers and San Diego Padres star Steve Garvey — the race’s only recognizab­le Republican — may have advanced to the November runoff on his own without being propelled by Schiff, who handpicked his preferred weak opponent for November.

But if Schiff’s push was indeed necessary for Garvey to finish among the top two votegetter­s and qualify for the November runoff, then it’s another example of the California GOP’S pathetic weakness.

Think of it: A Republican candidate needs the back-door help of a Democrat to reach the November finals in a major statewide race.

In his election night speech, Garvey should have thanked Schiff. He did not. But he cautioned him.

“Know this: It ain’t over till it’s over,” Garvey said, quoting the late Yankee catcher Yogi Berra. “It’s true in baseball, and it’s true in politics.

“And my opponent has been advertisin­g that he wants me. He’s mistaking kindness for weakness. I would suggest that he keep in mind that old saying: Be careful what you ask for.”

But numbers are determinat­ive in baseball and politics. No Republican has won a statewide race in California since 2006, and GOP voters are outnumbere­d nearly 2-to-1 by Democrats.

In early vote counting from Tuesday’s primary, support for the three major Democratic candidates exceeded that for the top three Republican­s by 20 percentage points. And it was an extraordin­arily low voter turnout that helped the GOP.

Schiff’s TV ads ostensibly attacked Garvey for being a twotime Trump voter who could swing the Senate to GOP control. The ads also falsely implied that Republican Garvey — not Democrat Porter — was Schiff’s principal primary opponent. That disingenuo­us message was aimed at Democrats.

But the TV spots’ No. 1 goal was to promote Garvey’s conservati­ve bona fides among Republican voters. Garvey couldn’t afford to promote himself. He didn’t spend a dime on TV. So, Schiff did it for him.

Schiff didn’t invent the strategy of boosting a preferred opponent. It’s time-tested in California.

Example: In the 2018 gubernator­ial primary, then-lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom used the same tactic successful­ly while running against two high-profile Democrats — former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigo­sa and state Treasurer John Chiang. Newsom’s TV ad promoted unknown Republican John Cox and pushed him into the November runoff. Newsom then trounced Cox by 24 percentage points.

One problem is that this undermines a goal of California’s top-two open primary system, which is to advance the two most qualified and viable candidates — regardless of party — to the November election.

Ironically, Schiff made his congressio­nal bones fighting to preserve and advance American democracy — including investigat­ing alleged Russian interferen­ce in Trump’s 2016 presidenti­al election and Trump’s attempt to overturn President Biden’s 2020 victory.

But in this primary election, Schiff undercut democratic ideals.

OK, maybe that’s a little too purist. Idealism is not a standard requiremen­t for campaign combat. All’s fair in love and war and primaries. Blah, blah.

“I think what he did was perfect,” says veteran Democratic strategist David Townsend. “What is the job of a candidate in a political campaign? To win. No. 2, don’t do anything illegal or attack your opponent for something that’s not true.”

Schiff certainly did nothing illegal. But he skirted close to the edge on truth.

“Schiff’s people should be applauded,” Townsend continues. “Brilliant.”

Fine. But I dread the next games-playing, smelly tactic some brilliant politician is bound to concoct.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States