CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, MAY 9, 2014 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“SAN DIEGO SHOWS SOME THINGS DON’T CHANGE IN POLITICS”
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, MAY 9, 2014 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“SAN DIEGO SHOWS SOME THINGS DON’T CHANGE IN POLITICS”
It’s all the rage these days to say
that politics has been changed enormously by the combination of the “top two”
primary election system and voters’ increasing reluctance to declare allegiance
to either major political party.
While it’s true these phenomena
have made some changes, it’s also true that some of the basics remain.
Among thechanges: In districts where
either Democrats or Republicans have very large voter registration margins, top
two can and has produced interesting intra-party matchups. The presence of the
minority party’s voters – whichever party is in the minority in a given
district – causes November winners to conduct themselves in a more moderate
manner than they otherwise might.
But some things remain just as they
were, and that has never been better demonstrated than in the February San Diego
special election making former City Councilman Kevin Faulconer, a Republican,
mayor of a city carried by Democrat Barack Obama by a 25 percent margin in the
last presidential election.
A post-election analysis conducted for
the non-profit Voice of San Diego news site by Ohio State University political
scientist Vladimir Kogan, a former staffer at that site, indicates this
happened because of a seemingly ancient phenomenon: Republicans turn out much
more heavily than Democrats, especially in special elections.
Faulconer, a Republican now trying to
govern as a moderate, managed to win in a city where Democrats have a 13
percent voter registration advantage.
Kogan’s analysis showed that only 36
percent of voters who went for Obama in 2012 went for Democrat David Alvarez
for mayor, while 63.5 percent did not cast ballots in the mayoral election.
By contrast, 76 percent of those who
voted two years ago for Republican Mitt Romney for president chose Faulconer,
while only 23 percent did not vote in the special mayoral election.
Some other statistics Kogan mined from
the February vote demonstrate what political professionals have long known:
Democrats turn out in far greater numbers for regularly scheduled runoffs than
they do for either primaries or special elections.
That’s one big reason some
Democrat-dominated cities have lately rescheduled their municipal elections to
coincide with the November vote and it’s also why the Democratic-controlled
state Legislature voted to move all initiatives that quality for a ballot via
voter signatures into November. They figure the causes they favor stand a far
better chance at that time.
The San Diego result also reinforces
the reality that a disgraced politician can hurt whoever from his own party
tries to succeed him. Alvarez, for example, has never been associated with
wrongdoing, but was trying to hold onto the seat won in 2012 by fellow Democrat
Bob Filner, chased from office in a groping and sexual harassment scandal.
Only 44 percent of the people who voted
for Filner went for Alvarez this year, while 55.5 percent didn’t cast ballots.
Meanwhile, 65 percent of those who picked 2012 loser Carl DeMaio (now running
for a San Diego seat in Congress) voted for Faulconer and just 31.5 percent of
DeMaio voters did not participate.
No one can say for sure that had the
February vote somehow been delayed nine months until November, things would
have gone differently. But for sure, Democrats would have had a better chance.
For there will be other candidates,
other causes on the ballot then that they care about. But even with a big push
from labor unions, Democrats never generated much enthusiasm in February.
Meanwhile, Republicans salivated over
the opportunity to recapture a mayor’s office that had been almost exclusively
theirs for decades.
Does all this mean anything elsewhere,
where voters are not as accustomed to Republican success as they have been in
San Diego? Maybe. For sure, Democrats long have wanted to avoid contesting
anything important anytime other than November, so they clearly knew the danger
to them in a situation like what San Diego saw in February.
It all goes to show that, as humorist
Finley Peter Dunne’s comic character Mr. Dooley pointed out more than a century
ago, “The more things change, the more they stays the same.”
-30-
Elias
is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising
Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” now available in
an updated third edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
I couldn't refrain from commenting. Perfectly written!
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