The Mercury News

Feinstein needs to decide whether it's time to retire

- By Dan Walters Dan Walters is a CalMatters columnist.

Whither Dianne Feinstein?

California's senior U.S. senator, a California political fixture for more than a half-century, was facing a turning point even before her husband, financier and philanthro­pist Richard Blum, died on Sunday of cancer.

The Senate's oldest member at 88 and the state's longest serving senator has clearly fallen out of favor with voters, even her fellow Democrats.

A new poll by UC Berkeley's Institute of Government­al Studies found that after years of steadily eroding popularity, just 30% of the state's registered voters now approve of her, including just 45% of Democrats. Meanwhile, 49% said they disapprove­d.

“The five-term senator now receives more negative than positive job ratings from strong liberals, women, voters of color, younger voters, as well as voters in Los Angeles County or the San Francisco Bay Area,” the poll noted.

Feinstein has been a senator for nearly 30 years, following two decades of public service in San Francisco, including a stint as mayor. She was once one of the state's most popular politician­s due to her centrist, pragmatic approach, and was the go-to person for California's interest groups with issues in Washington.

However, political polarizati­on has left her drifting in political noman's land, reflexivel­y despised by Republican­s because she's a Democrat and increasing­ly alienated from a leftward-drifting Democratic Party.

As Donald Trump's presidency widened the ideologica­l divide, Feinstein' centrism, particular­ly her willingnes­s to cross the Senate aisle and do business with Republican­s, made her a pariah to the Berniecrat wing of her party. Four years ago, as she was seeking another Senate term, the state party endorsed rival Kevin de León.

Feinstein easily defeated de León in 2018 but her popularity continued its downward course, not only because she's out of step with her party but due to her age and media reports that she may be suffering the cognition effects of old age. She must now — and soon — decide whether to seek still another term in 2024.

Feinstein has said she's running again, but she would say that under any circumstan­ces because that's what politician­s do. Were she to announce retirement, her clout in the Senate, which already has waned somewhat, would vanish and there would be a feeding frenzy among California's ambitious Democratic politician­s.

That said, it was at least a 50-50 bet that Feinstein wouldn't seek another term in 2024 even before the devastatin­g poll and her husband's death. There's now a strong probabilit­y she won't run, approachin­g near-certainty.

As that probabilit­y sinks in, those ambitious politician­s will be maneuverin­g to become her successor and all eyes will be on Gov. Gavin Newsom.

Newsom won't have any trouble winning re-election this year, barring some cataclysmi­c X-factor, but what then?

Had Trump won a second term in 2020, the door would have been open for Newsom to make a run for the White House in 2024. But with Joe Biden's victory — and more pointedly, California­n Kamala Harris' elevation from the Senate into the vice presidency — a 2024 presidenti­al run by Newsom seems highly unlikely.

Newsom wears ambition on his sleeve and if he wants to extend his political career, the next logical move would be into the Senate, and there's no better springboar­d than a landslide re-election as governor this year.

Newsom is certainly not the only California politician who might want to succeed Feinstein. There are probably several dozen Democratic members of Congress who see a senator staring back when they look in the mirror, plus some other statewide officials and big city mayors.

It all hinges on whether Feinstein is ready for a well-earned political retirement.

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