CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2016, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“IT’S A MISTAKE FOR STATE DEMS TO FEEL SMUG”
There’s a certain smug quality about the California
Democratic Party as it heads toward a primary election likely to produce more
intra-party runoffs than ever before, possibly ranging right up to the
ballot-topping race to succeed Barbara Boxer in the U.S. Senate.
But just because there may be as many as 30 runoffs pitting
Democrat vs. Democrat this fall does not mean all is hunky-dory for this party,
which before this spring’s big registration rush to vote for Bernard Sanders
for president had gained only about 75,000 registered adherents since 2012,
despite California’s significant population increases.
Yes, Democrats do enjoy a 17-point registration advantage
over Republicans, one reason both major parties have considered this state
“safe” for Democratic presidential candidates for two decades. But no,
Democrats are not justified in crowing about it.
That’s because mid-May figures from Democratic Secretary of
State Alex Padilla, California’s top election official, demonstrate that
typically in recent years, when new voters register, they sign up as “no party
preference (NPP),” refusing to identify with either party.
The rise in NPP registration from 21 percent of the total
in 2012 to more than 24 percent today is completely unprecedented and
represents an almost total rejection of both parties. Yes, Republicans have
actually lost hundreds of thousands of their adherents to the NPP column, far
more than Democrats have lost, but Democratic numbers are not growing much despite
the party’s expensive and labor-intensive outreach and registration efforts.
This could have great meaning in the primary, where polls
show that in the minds of many likely voters, Hillary Clinton represents the
traditional Democratic Party, while rival Sanders has become the latest emblem
of change.
The last time she ran for president – in 2008 – perceptions
were similar, but NPP registration was far lower. So Mrs. Clinton won a big plurality
in California that spring, enough to keep her going through months of losses to
“hope-and-change” symbol Barack Obama in other states.
This time, California votes almost last, and as usual its
vote will have only symbolic meaning. Since NPP voters can cast ballots in
Democratic primaries, but not Republican ones, their impact will be felt far greater
on the Democratic side.
Many of those NPP voters are young people only recently
eligible to participate – the same kind of voters who gave energy and manpower
to Obama’s campaigns. They could create a stark generational split in the
Democratic vote.
The trick for Democrats this fall will be getting those
young NPP voters to turn out again in November.
Academic studies indicate that it’s highly unlikely the new
voters would go Republican in the fall, as very few voters switch parties during
an election year even if the candidate they liked in the primary has lost. But
they might stay home unless Mrs. Clinton can motivate them in a way she has not
so far.
So Democrats appear just as flummoxed by the NPP phenomenon
as Republicans. Both parties sometimes react to the reluctance of youths to
choose a party by reminding new voters of what happened many years ago.
Mrs. Clinton, for example, has difficulty comprehending
that feminist appeals have not worked well with young women voters, who take
for granted the status she helped win for them via her efforts in the 1970s and
‘80s, long before she became a national figure.
Younger voters, male and female, tell poll takers they are
more interested in what they believe a Democrat might do for them in the next few
years. This message from youth, both registered Democrats and those with no
party preference, is one reason Mrs. Clinton this year has adopted a more
strongly liberal tone than ever before. She strongly stresses immigration
reform, increased wages and voting rights.
None of that is likely to change the pattern of new voters
steering clear of all political parties. Which means Democrats can’t be smug,
any more than the shrinking GOP should be depressed. For the tide moving toward
no party preference is not yet fully understood by either party, and if they
make wrong moves, the errors could redound for years.
-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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