CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2014, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2014, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“WILL VOTERS CREATE A DE FACTO THIRD PARTY?”
California voters created tectonic
changes in state politics four years ago, when they approved the “top two”
primary election system that takes effect in races for statewide offices next
month.
There is no longer any guarantee
Democrats and Republicans will face off in November runoff elections. In fact,
four years ago, primary election voters set up more than two dozen intra-party
runoffs matching Democrat on Democrat or Republican on Republican in
legislative and congressional contests. It could happen in more than one
statewide race this year.
Every poll in 2010 showed that voters
acted because they were sick of polarization and gridlock in
Sacramento. They got what they wanted, says a new report from a University
of Southern California institute funded primarily by ex-Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger.
Voters also may have inadvertently set
up a de facto third political party in Sacramento, a moderate one, even if it’s
not formally recognized by anyone. For lack of a better term, this group might
be called the “Blue Dogs,” borrowing a name from a group of moderate to conservative
Democrats who served in Congress in the 1990s and carefully picked and chose
which liberal causes to support.
Just such a group now exists in
Sacramento, and it promises to grow larger after the June primary that’s
already taking place via ballots mailed out this month. The group has no formal
organization, but that might come as its numbers grow.
Based on an analysis of all roll-call
votes in both the state Legislature and Congress, USC political scientist
Christian Grose found the average state legislator was more moderate over the
last 18 months than for many years previously (http://issuu.com/lesliebakergraphicdesign/docs/schwarzenegger_institute_report/1?e=0/6824134).
Diminished
polarization of the parties in the Legislature took place against a background
of ever-increasing partisanship in Congress, a phenomenon applying in both the
House and Senate.
Most movement, Grose found, occurred
among Democrats. This may partly be because, as noted in an investigation by
former Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter Gary Cohn, increasing numbers of
Democratic legislators are less beholden to labor unions for their campaign
money and more dependent on corporations and the state Chamber of Commerce.
Cohn found that some of these
lawmakers – he named Marin County’s Marc
Levine and Republican-turned-Democrat Steve Fox of Palmdale as prime examples –
skipped or abstained from several key votes. Abstentions affected the fate of
bills aiming to help farm workers, require economic impact reports for proposed
new big box stores and require more disclosure from some health insurance
companies before they raise rates.
One possible addition to the Blue Dog
ranks this year might be Steve Glazer, until last year a top advisor to
Democratic Gov. Jerry Brown, who later worked as a consultant to the chamber.
Glazer, an Orinda city councilman, now seeks an Alameda County seat in the
Assembly.
“I am trying to redefine what it means
to be a Democrat,” Glazer told one reporter.
For sure, Glazer has parted company
with the labor unions that support most Democratic campaigns. But that doesn’t
make him any less liberal on issues from gay rights to gun control and
abortion, areas of relatively little interest to business.
How many Blue Dogs get
elected this fall will in large part be a product of the current primary. The
more Democrat-on-Democrat races ensue, the more contests will pit union
contributions against business dollars.
Their outcomes can be surprising, too,
as when former Santa Monica Mayor Richard Bloom two years ago won in an
Assembly district created by reapportionment over Democratic Assemblywoman
Betsy Butler, a strong labor ally who previously represented a district that
marginally overlapped the new one. Butler now seeks a vacant state Senate seat
and will very likely this fall face another Democratic rival not funded by
unions.
No one can be quite certain how all
this will play out in the long term: A moderate wing for the most liberal state
Democratic Party in the nation? A three-party system?
These are the kind of non-automatic,
unpredictable developments that make voting both worthwhile and fun.
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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
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
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