CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2013 OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2013 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“WHAT IF JERRY DOESN’T RUN?”
There could be no better Christmas
present for bunches of Democratic politicians than an announcement from Gov.
Jerry Brown that he will not seek a second straight term in office, fourth of
his lifetime.
Already the longest-serving governor
in California history, Brown will be 76 if he stands for reelection next year
and 77 barely three months into his fourth term, if reelected. The question is
whether he wants to do it.
He’s hinted he does, of course,
talking occasionally about his wish to see through the budgetary reforms he instituted
after being elected in 2010 and a desire for a lasting legacy of leaving the
California economy in good shape.
He had quietly raised more than $12
million toward a putative reelection campaign by late October, with no
discernible need to spend any of it during the primary election season, meaning
he could use it all in the fall, in case a wealthy, self-funded Republican
candidate emerges from the woodwork in the next few weeks. Just such a
possibility has lately emerged, with former Goldman Sachs executive Neel
Kashkari saying he may run.
But there also have been a few rumors
suggesting Brown might not want to bother, that he might be ready to retire
after a lifetime of having his every move and sentence parsed for deep meaning
and policy implications.
Nobody is betting on the energetic
Brown retiring, but there are hints this is what some voters would like him to
do, even if they have positive feelings about his performance.
That was suggested by a November
USC/Los Angeles Times poll which found more than 50 percent of Californians
generally approve Brown’s performance in office, but only 32 percent saying
they’re inclined to vote for him next fall. This big gap may be explained by
his longevity and a sense voters might like someone new.
Brown didn’t comment publicly on that
survey, which registered public disapproval of how he’s handled prison problems
and saw a paltry 38 percent of likely voters give him credit for erasing the
$26 billion state deficit he inherited from Arnold Schwarzenegger.
Brown has never let hurt feelings
govern his actions. But suppose for a moment he does decide to take his ball
and go home, either to his manse in the Oakland hills or his family’s ranch
north of Sacramento.
Brown’s aura of inevitable reelection –
and his war chest – have prevented Republicans who seem like serious
possibilities from entering the lists.
So far, only ultra-conservative
Assemblyman Tim Donnelly and former appointive Lt. Gov. Abel Maldonado are
definitely in. But the dam could burst if Brown doesn’t run. Kashkari is only
one of many wealthy folks in this state who believe, like previous GOP nominee
Meg Whitman, that they would be terrific governors.
A Brown withdrawal would also destroy
all the decorum currently exhibited by ambitious Democrats eagerly awaiting his
disappearance.
Both Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, the former
San Francisco mayor, and Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris, would love the job. So might
state Controller John Chiang, whose dispassionate analyses and reports on state
finances have impressed even some Republicans. Right now, Newsom and Harris are
talking only about seeking reelection. Chiang, about to be termed out as
controller, plans a run for treasurer, with current Assembly Speaker John Perez
seeking the controller’s slot.
It’s also possible former Los Angeles
Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, an ex-Assembly speaker who never hid his yen to
become governor, might enter.
The only office now being openly
contested among Democrats is secretary of state, California’s top election
officer. Two termed-out state senators, Alex Padilla of Los Angeles and Leland
Yee of San Francisco, are running there, along with Derek Cressman, recently
head of the Common Cause good government lobby.
There could be a considerable shift in
the likely Democratic lineup if Brown opts out and others try to move up.
The sorry state of California’s
Republican Party, with fewer than 30 percent of all registered voters, now
means there are not yet any formidable Republican entrants in races for the
down-the-ticket offices where some Democrats plan to lurk while awaiting their
chance to become governor.
But a political earthquake is certain
if Brown opts out.
-30-
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, visit www.californiafocus.net.
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