CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2014, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2014, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“DOES FEINSTEIN REMARK IMPLY BIG SENATE RACES AHEAD?”
No doubt the
California Republican Party is down, but anyone who counts it out of big
statewide races is a fool who disregards the ego-satisfying appeal prominent
public office can hold for the very rich and very famous.
Arnold
Schwarzenegger is Example A of a fabulously wealthy celebrity who seized an
opportunity to run for high office – governor – and then had more fun while
holding the office than he appears to have had as a muscleman movie star before
or since.
This is relevant
today not because there appear to be few or no immediate high-visibility
opportunities today for celebrities or business people with big bucks.
California offers no U.S. Senate races this year and Gov. Jerry Brown looks
pretty secure as he piles up campaign cash while delaying any direct mention of
reelection.
But one remark last month by U.S. Sen.
Dianne Feinstein suggests there may be plenty of chances ahead. Explaining her
vote to end the U.S. Senate’s tradition of allowing minority parties to use
filibusters to stymie presidential appointments, she said she did it because
she wants “the remainder of my five-plus years to get something done.” As of
now, she has just four-plus years left in her latest term.
The reality is that
Feinstein will turn 80 on June 22 and would be 84 in June of 2018, the next
year she might run for reelection, 85 just six months into what would be her
fifth full six-year term, plus. (First elected in 1992 to fill out the
unexpired term of then-Gov. Pete Wilson, a Republican, she then had to run
again in 1994 for a full term). That’s not terribly ancient for the Senate, but
it would make her the oldest top-of-ticket candidate in California history.
Did her remark mean
she thinks about leaving office when her current term expires, even if she remains
in good health? There is, of course, nothing political wonks love more than
finding meaning in officials’ words, even where there may be little.
Longtime Feinstein
campaign manager Bill Carrick says his friend and client was talking only about
her current term. “She hasn’t made any decisions about 2018 yet,” Carrick said.
“So I wouldn’t read too much into a casual remark.”
He noted that even
now, four years before her campaign could begin in earnest, Feinstein has more
than $1 million in her political kitty, while still pursuing a lawsuit against
a bank she contends allowed a former campaign treasurer to embezzle another $4
million or so from her in 2012. The theft didn’t matter much: Feinstein won
handily that year over a virtual unknown, taking more than 7.75 million votes,
the most ever for any senator.
Still…her remark
might stir the cadre of ambitious Democratic politicians now waiting
patiently for a big chance while holding lesser statewide offices – people like
Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, Attorney General Kamala Harris and Insurance
Commissioner Dave Jones. For there’s the possibility of a plum job appearing on
the horizon.
There’s also the
Senate seat of Democrat Barbara Boxer, 73. The former Marin County supervisor
and congresswoman spurred talk of impending retirement when she moved to Rancho
Mirage in Riverside County’s Coachella Valley even before she sought reelection
in 2010.
Unlike Feinstein,
who has had a series of weak opponents, Boxer is perpetually deemed among the
Senate’s more vulnerable Democrats and has drawn significant opponents like
Bill Jones, then the California Secretary of State, and the partially
self-funded former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina.
Since first winning
her Senate seat in 1992, Boxer has used long series of coffee parties in
individual homes as a key part of her campaigns, which have usually seemed far
more arduous than Feinstein’s. Boxer will be 75 if she runs two years from now,
and should she choose to bow out, that’s a possible big opening for the wealthy
and ambitious.
But Boxer in 2010
foiled those who thought she might step down and has been more visible than
ever in her current term.
All of which means
there may be two big political openings forming on the California horizon – or
there may not. We’ll all have to stay tuned as two redoubtable women decide how
long they want to continue fighting for women’s rights, abortion rights and on
other key issues they’ve made their own.
-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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