CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JULY 5, 2013, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JULY 5, 2013, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“CENTRAL
VALLEY REMATCH A POLITICAL WEATHERVANE”
Jim Costa had to wait more than a year
for the rematch that ignited his political career. Letitia Perez will only have
to wait about two months.
Now
a veteran Democratic moderate congressman from the Fresno-Madera area, Costa
lost to Hanford Republican Phil Wyman in a special election in the 16th
state Senate district in 1993, but came back a year later to win the seat and
hold it until he was termed out in 2002.
Perez lost the same seat to a
Republican in a May special election – or so it seemed until all votes were
finally counted. Perez conceded after the May vote, saying in a written
statement that “I want to congratulate (Republican) Andy Vidak on winning this
hard-fought race.”
The Wall Street Journal hailed Vidak’s
“victory” as a “farmers’ rebellion.” The state Republican Party looked on Vidak’s
“win” as a sign it could succeed even in districts where Democrats have large
registration advantages (17 percent in this case).
But not so fast. Turns out it was no
win for Vidak at all. Even though his share of the vote hovered above 51
percent all through Election Night and into the next day, when provisional
ballots and late absentee votes were counted, he fell to 49.8 percent, while
Perez’ total eventually crept near 44 percent, and the two headed for a July
runoff.
The questions for Perez, a rookie Kern
County supervisor: Can she win the 5.6 percent of votes that went to the other
Democrats in the race, both Latino like her? Can she get the 471 votes cast for
a Peace and Freedom Party candidate?
For sure, Democrats in May didn’t vote
in the numbers expected in the populous Kern and Fresno county portions of the
district. Meanwhile, Vidak, a Kings County cherry farmer who lost a previous
race for congress to Costa, dominated in Kings and Tulare counties, while Perez
didn’t win her key areas by the margins expected.
As far as party control of the state
Senate right now, this race means little. Democrats already hold 28 of the 40
seats there, while Republicans have only 11. That gives Democrats a veto-proof
two-thirds majority, no matter who wins in the 16th, even though
they will lose one seat temporarily when Curren Price takes his newly-won seat
on the Los Angeles City Council.
But if Perez wins, she could hold the
seat for as long as 13 years, since legislators can now serve up to 12 years worth
of regular terms in the same house before having to leave. The 18 months
remaining in the current term would not keep her from serving three more full
terms if she can win enough elections.
Republicans
initially saw this contest as a very hopeful sign. Yes, they generally do
better in special elections than in general elections when votes are also cast
for president, governor and the U.S. Senate. Yes, this district (or parts of
it, since it was reconfigured in 2012) has been represented by Republicans in
recent years.
But the “farmers’ rebellion”
(presumably against environmental rules mostly promulgated by Democrats) wasn’t
all the Wall Street Journal thought it was, despite the state GOP investing
more than $200,000 in the race. The runoff might determine whether there really
is a farmers’ rebellion of any significance.
Now the main question is whether Perez
can draw Democratic voters who stayed home in May. She won’t have to produce
very many of them. And if she can win in an area whose elected offices often
are decided by small margins, it will be a sign that the Democratic
registration advantages so common all over California mean a lot.
There’s also the question of whether
Democrats can turn out voters better in July in Republican-leaning Kings and
Tulare counties, which are dominated by farm interests to a greater extent than
Kern and Fresno counties, both of which contain large cities – Bakersfield and
Fresno.
Democrats pointed at heavily Latino
towns like Lindsay, Woodlake and Dinuba as places where they can get more
votes next month.
It’s
a quick turnaround, amounting to a rematch between Vidak and Perez, who were
the clear frontrunners from the day the special election was scheduled.
This runoff will also be more of a
pure harbinger than the first go-‘round, if only because the less popular
candidates are gone.
The bottom line: If a moderate
Republican like Vidak can’t win in an agricultural district like the 16th,
the GOP will once again have to wonder about its prospects anywhere outside its
base areas of Orange and northern San Diego counties.
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Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
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