CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JULY 10, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JULY 10, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“LONG WAIT LOOMS FOR GOP CONGRESS GAINS
HERE”
Few things gall California Republicans
more than realizing they hold just 14 of this state’s 53 seats in Congress.
That’s only 26 percent of California’s representatives, while the opposition
Democrats, with 14 percent more registered voters, hold 39 seats, or about 74
percent.
The GOP had a big chance last year to
remedy that, targeting vulnerable Democrats who won their offices by narrow
margins in President Obama’s 2012 reelection landslide.
But Republicans failed. Yes, they ran
plenty of close races, but in the end lost every one. Now it appears they’ll have
to wait at least until 2018 before there’s much possibility Californians might
become a significant part of the GOP’s big overall majority in Congress.
How did Republicans blow the chance to
oust vulnerable figures like Scott Peters of San Diego, Julia Brownley of
Ventura County, John Garamendi in the Sierra Nevada foothills, Jim Costa in the
Fresno area, Ami Bera in the Sacramento suburbs and Jerry McNerney in the
Stockton area?
The missed opportunity was partly
because of the candidates they ran and partly because the national party didn’t
fully support what candidates it had.
The survival of Peters in a San Diego
district bordering on Mexico was prototypical. He was opposed by Carl DeMaio, a
former city councilman and longtime crusader for tightening public employee
pensions. Peters’ district was ripe for Republican plucking, having gone for
Republican Mayor Kevin Faulconer by an overwhelming 62 percent in his 2013
special election victory.
But even though DeMaio ran for mayor
in 2012 and had plenty of prior public exposure, he was done in when two of his
former staff members accused DeMaio of sexual harassment, a claim at least
partially debunked months after the election. What could have been, maybe
should have been, an easy GOP pickup instead became a 6,000-vote reelection for
Peters.
With the district’s populace growing
steadily more Latino and the strong likelihood that turnout in 2016 will be
well above the roughly 24 percent of last year – if only because the presidency
will at stake – Peters could have a much easier reelection next year.
It’s much the same for Costa, who was
blindsided and almost knocked off by a Republican unknown last year, and for
McNerney, who also squeaked by narrowly against a little-known hopeful. If the
national party had recruited major figures against them or had simply financed
those who did run, those could have been two pickups. But the GOP blew it.
Now Costa and McNerney, along with the
other Democrats who won only narrowly, figure to get less of a challenge next
year for the same reasons Peters will be safer. All will have the advantages of
several more years of incumbency to establish ties and loyalties throughout
their districts,
In many ways, the Republican
ineptitude in making congressional inroads in California is emblematic of how
they’ve mismanaged things in this state for years, their only respite in
decades being the Arnold Schwarzenegger years, which were mostly a product of
his star power as a movie muscleman.
The party was proud last year to have
prevented Democrats from achieving two-thirds supermajorities in both houses of
the state Legislature, a dominance they enjoyed only sporadically in the two
years after their big Obama-led wins of 2012. But that’s like a football team
rejoicing because it narrowly beat the oddsmakers’ point spread, while still
losing by three touchdowns. The GOP is far short of the numbers it will need to
have any major impact on state policy in any area, and there’s little chance it
will change anything soon.
The party’s problem is simple: In
order to win in most parts of California, it will have to become more tolerant
of undocumented immigrants and same-sex marriage, more environmentally
conscious and less hardline in opposing changes to the Proposition 13 property
tax rules.
But making any such revisions would
also alienate the party from its hard-core backers, and might deprive it of
even its recent levels of support.
So the GOP in California is in a bind,
and so far has shown few signs of finding its way out of this long-term jam.
-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, 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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