The Mercury News

Valadao lone state Republican to impeach

The moderate dairy farmer already faces a Democratic challenger

- By Emily DeRuy ederuy@bayareanew­sgroup.com

To understand why David Valadao became the only Republican in California — and one of

10 in the House of Representa­tives

— to vote in favor of impeaching President Donald Trump this week, look no further than the shade of the dairy farmer’s sprawling Central Valley district: It has gone purple.

Nestled among the deep-red Republican stronghold­s represente­d by House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy and ardent Trump supporter Devin Nunes is Valadao’s district, which has swung from Republican to Dem

ocrat and back to Republican again in the past three elections. That also might explain Valadao’s pivot from not endorsing Trump in 2016 to backing the president’s reelection bid in November to his eyebrowrai­sing vote Wednesday to impeach Trump for inciting the violent mob that stormed the Capitol complex last week.

“There was definitely a political calculatio­n.” said Nicole Parra, a Central Valley Democrat who already has announced her candidacy to take on Valadao in 2022. “I bet they said, ‘Parra’s coming.’ ”

Valadao’s vote raised the ire of Republican­s in Fresno County, but it wasn’t generating much public debate in Hanford, including at the Sanchez Feed and Seed supply store, where a member of the Sanchez family told this news organizati­on that though workers have their own opinions, they won’t be sharing them out of respect for customers with other views. In a district where political views are mixed and arguments heated, few people want to risk alienating someone they might rely on in the future.

Central Valley political observers say the congressma­n most certainly had the blessing of McCarthy, who is well aware of the balancing act Republican­s must play to keep the District 21 seat, which covers farming country in Kings County and parts of Fresno, Kern and Tulare counties. The moderate GOPer, political analysts say, was doing his best not to alienate voters in one of the nation’s most competitiv­e congressio­nal districts.

“Kevin needs Valadao to be safe,” said Mark Martinez, a political science professor at Cal State Bakersfiel­d. “He’s covering his flank.”

Even as Valadao, who contracted COVID-19 in

January and missed his swearing-in ceremony, accused Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, a San Francisco Democrat, of creating a “rushed political stunt” out of what should be a “thorough investigat­ion,” he said his conscience demanded he vote in favor of impeachmen­t.

Trump’s “inciting rhetoric was un-American, abhorrent and absolutely an impeachabl­e offense,” the congressma­n said on Twitter. “It’s time to put country over politics.”

Martinez thinks that the impeachmen­t vote, paired with the stunt comment, is Valadao’s latest attempt to appeal to liberals and moderates without turning off too many conservati­ves, who aren’t likely to ditch him anyway because he generally votes their way.

It’s “politicall­y shrewd,” he said.

Valadao’s office did not respond to an interview request or answer its phone to say how many constituen­ts were calling in to slam the congressma­n — or slap him on the back — for his vote.

Valadao, 43, was born and raised in Hanford, a cluster of dairy and cattle farms about 30 miles south of Fresno, by parents who emigrated in the late ’60s from Portugal.

A farmer by trade, Valadao served in the Assembly from 2010 to 2012 before winning a seat in Congress. He represente­d the 21st Congressio­nal District from 2013 to 2019. That year, he ceded the seat to Democrat T.J. Cox after losing by a razor-thin margin.

In November, he won reelection, successful­ly ousting Cox after just one term and narrowly reclaiming the seat by only about

“There are lots of liberals and Democrats surprised by this,” political science professor Mark Martinez said of Republican Rep. David Valadao’s impeachmen­t vote. “He’s got his work cut out for him already” to get reelected.

1,500 votes.

Known for being centrist on issues like immigratio­n, Valadao represents a largely Latino district that trends Democratic in presidenti­al elections — it went for Joe Biden in 2020 and Hillary Clinton in 2016 — but retains a deep conservati­ve streak. Valadao has tried to straddle the fine line between appealing to and alienating Trump supporters

And although Valadao already is taking heat from some conservati­ves, the impeachmen­t vote is an attempt to hold onto voters who might otherwise flow to Bakersfiel­d native Parra, a former assembly member with a UC Berkeley degree and name recognitio­n whose campaign to oust Valadao is likely to be competitiv­e.

“There are lots of liberals and Democrats surprised by this,” Martinez said, adding that Valadao knows “he’s got his work cut out for him already” and that Parra is likely even to pull some Republican voters.

Parra, 50, said that as someone who has lived across the district and spent years working for Cal Dooley, who represente­d the area in the 1990s and early 2000s, she’s deeply familiar with what voters want and capable of building the infrastruc­ture Democrats need to win back the seat.

“This is a Democratic district,” Parra said. “I know how to win.”

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 ?? CAROLYN KASTER – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rep. David Valadao, R-Hanford, watches as President Donald Trump hands a pen to Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Tulane, after signing a Presidenti­al Memorandum Promoting the Reliable Supply and Delivery of Water in the West in a ceremony Oct. 19, 2018, in Scottsdale, Ariz.
CAROLYN KASTER – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rep. David Valadao, R-Hanford, watches as President Donald Trump hands a pen to Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Tulane, after signing a Presidenti­al Memorandum Promoting the Reliable Supply and Delivery of Water in the West in a ceremony Oct. 19, 2018, in Scottsdale, Ariz.

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