CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
"GET SET FOR WILD RUN FOR GOVERNOR”
Just over one year from today,
Californians will be focused on helping elect the next president and picking
their next U.S. senator.
That so-far-sedate race looks like it
will boil down to either Democrat state Attorney General Kamala Harris or
Democratic Orange County Congresswoman Loretta Sanchez against a Republican,
take your pick among state Assemblyman
Rocky Chavez of Oceanside and former state party chairmen Duf Sundheim and Tom
Del Beccaro.
Partly
because all are underfunded and partly because they represent the
ever-shrinking California GOP, it just may happen that no Republican survives
next June’s Top Two primary, letting
Harris and Sanchez split the larger Democratic vote and duke it out in
the fall. To prevent that, two of the Republicans will have to drop out
long before that primary.
But
all this drama will only be an appetizer.
Yes, for those folks, Election Day
will be a finish line. But to many others in California politics, it’s just a
starting point. Replete with early opt-outs from the Senate race, the field for
the 2018 run for the much-more-powerful office of governor will be off and
racing the moment next November’s returns are counted. Candidates are already
making moves.
This field looks far more prominent
and monied than those vying to replace current four-term Democratic Sen.
Barbara Boxer.
At least four major Democrats are now
gearing up to run, including Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, the ex-mayor of San
Francisco; former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, billionaire investor
Tom Steyer and former state Controller Steve Westly, himself a Silicon Valley
near-billionaire. An early Field Poll showed Villaraigosa with a narrow lead
over Newsom, with current Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, thus far a
non-candidate, in third place.
So far, only one Republican is
currently nosing around the race – Fresno Mayor Ashley Swearingen. Like current
presidential candidate Carly Fiorina, handily defeated by Boxer in 2010,
Swearingen isn’t letting a mere statewide defeat dissuade her from seeking a
much bigger office. Swearingen was narrowly defeated a year ago by Betty Yee in
a run for state controller.
As with the Senate race, most eyes and
the big money will be on the Democratic side in this race. Not only are Steyer
and Westly capable of writing enough personal checks to fund their campaigns
entirely, but Newsom had $5.5 million on hand for the run as early as July 1,
his staff saying his fund-raising had barely begun.
Nationally, Newsom may be the
best-known of this group because of his pioneering 2004 executive order
permitting same sex marriage in San Francisco, a move that set a national
precedent upheld this year by the U.S. Supreme Court.
But Villaraigosa has at least as much
name recognition in Southern California. To gain even more, one of his
preliminary moves was a “listening tour” of the Central Valley, with stops in
places like Bakersfield and Visalia. No miscues from him like the one by L.A.
mayoral predecessor Richard Riordan, who took a similar tour while he
considered running for governor in 1998, reporting on his return that he had
visited some “strange places.”
Riordan’s campaign didn’t go very far
after that.
One question mark hangs over both
Villaraigosa and Newsom: How much will past womanizing hurt them among female
voters, the majority of California Democrats? Newsom’s past includes trysts
with the wife of his onetime top aide, while Villaraigosa’s indiscretions with
a television reporter led to the end of a long marriage.
There’s no such spice in the
backgrounds of Garcetti, Steyer or Westly. Steyer is a former hedge fund
executive and Westly an early leader of the eBay online auction house.
Their money could assure that Westly
and Steyer quickly become as well-known to voters as Newsom or Villaraigosa,
via an onslaught of TV commercials.
No such big money is available yet to
Swearingen, but if she should survive the primary as its lone Republican, thus
becoming a November finalist, she’ll likely get plenty. So Swearingen and her
party need other Republicans to stay out. Democrats have become so dominant in
California that any split in the GOP vote could put two Democrats into the
runoff matchup, the same as it could in the ongoing Senate race.
So while the political season just now
getting underway will end in about a year, chances are that campaign will
amount to little more than an appetizer for the much larger California race to
come.
-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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