The Mercury News

California GOP could gain from Newsom recall election

- By George Skelton George Skelton is a Los Angeles Times columnist. © 2021 Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

California Republican­s have a golden opportunit­y to strengthen their weakened status during the recall campaign even if they fail to boot Gov. Gavin Newsom.

But a win-lose scenario isn’t a sure thing. It could easily turn into a loselose outcome, depending on how Republican­s play it.

It’s highly unlikely to wind up win-win for the GOP.

The odds on Newsom surviving seem astronomic­al.

He’s much more popular than Gov. Gray Davis was when he was recalled in 2003. No Republican candidate has nearly the voter appeal that actor Arnold Schwarzene­gger did when he ousted Democrat Davis. California is a much more Democratic state today than 18 years ago. And the incumbent will have a huge fundraisin­g advantage.

“I think Newsom stays in office,” says veteran Republican consultant Matt Rexroad. “If anybody wants to bet me $100 straight up, I’ll take the bet.”

Someone who might take the bet is Jessica Millan Patterson, chairwoman of the California Republican Party. She insists there’s “a great opportunit­y” to dump Newsom.

But Bob Shrum, a former Democratic strategist who is director of the Center for the Political Future at USC, says that by the time the expected special election is held in fall, “the pandemic could well be under control and California’s economy … booming.”

“The recall will become nothing more than psychic satisfacti­on for Republican­s — until they get the results on election night,” he said.

OK, but before that the GOP will have rare access to a golden mic to shout its message to voters.

“People are going to pay attention,” predicts Republican consultant Dave Gilliard, a major strategist in collecting the 1.5 million voter signatures needed to qualify the recall effort for the ballot. “This is the biggest political story of the year.”

“Republican­s have to start clawing back bit by bit, and it’s not going to happen in one election cycle,” says Republican consultant Rob Stutzman, who was Schwarzene­gger’s communicat­ions director.

The California GOP hasn’t elected a statewide officehold­er since 2006. And its status in the Legislatur­e has tumbled into a virtually irrelevant super minority.

Republican­s could begin rehabilita­ting their image among moderate Democrats and independen­ts by articulati­ng solutions to problems that trouble centrist voters most: public education, affordable housing, homelessne­ss, middle-class jobs and high taxes.

“The Republican Party should make the case that under one of its candidates, schools would have opened earlier,” Rexroad says.

There’s certainly a market for that pitch. A recent UCLA survey found that three-quarters of Los Angeles County parents with public school children believed their kids have been “substantia­lly hurt” by stay-at-home Zoom classes.

“The challenge for Republican­s is to come across as the party of governance and not insurrecti­on,” says Jack Pitney, a government professor at Claremont McKenna College.

“They should tell voters directly what they would do differentl­y,” Pitney says. “Talk about costs and benefits of the governor’s policies. How they can provide services at lower costs. How voters are paying too much money for too little.

“They can go after Newsom for being too close to the unions.”

Especially the teachers unions that have balked at reopening classrooms. Newsom has lectured, but not ordered them to return to campus. Perhaps he legally can’t, but he hasn’t tried either.

“California has lots of very serious problems that this governor hasn’t addressed,” says GOP adviser Mike Madrid. “But California­ns are not going to turn over that range of power to a Trumper. Until Republican­s understand that, they’re going to be digging their hole deeper.”

Trump’s a proven landslide loser in California. That’s the easy touch Newsom is trying to run against.

But some issues are GOP winners for the future: education, housing, jobs and taxes. Shout about them.

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