CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JUNE 21, 2016, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JUNE 21, 2016, OR THEREAFTER
BY
THOMAS D. ELIAS
“GOP HAS ONLY ITSELF TO BLAME FOR
BALLOT ABSENCE”
One clear precedent emerged Tuesday
night from California’s primary election results: There will be no Republican
contending this fall for the U.S. Senate seat about to be vacated by the
retiring Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer, the first time the race for a statewide
office has ever devolved into a one-party affair.
The reason is clear, too. Not only did
the GOP fail to field a truly formidable Senate candidate this year, but the
party had only one hopeful among its five (somewhat) significant springtime
candidates with any experience in elective office. Keep this up and the GOP
will be seeing many more big Democrat-on-Democrat contests.
By contrast, the Democrats fielded two
electoral veterans, two-term state Attorney General Kamala Harris, also a
former two-term district attorney of San Francisco, and 10-term Orange County
Congresswoman Loretta Sanchez.
The returns left little doubt that
Republicans could have won a place on the fall ballot if their vote had not
been completely fractured. Instead, all five at least somewhat well-known GOP
hopefuls stayed in the race to the bitter end (which ended bitterly for them
all) even though their party probably could have won a November slot if four of
them had dropped out and essentially instructed Republican loyalists to vote
for the remaining survivor.
This actually should have been done
before the March 16 filing deadline if the party expected to make a Senate run
in the fall. Instead, the last of the GOP candidates to file – Silicon Valley
entrepreneur Ron Unz – waited until that very date before submitting his
papers. A party once known for its firm internal discipline had none this year.
Even when polls repeatedly showed GOP
candidates drawing less than 10 percent each among likely primary voters, none
dropped out to let Republicans coalesce around someone.
The reason for all this was as clear as
the result: No GOP candidate cared much if their party fielded no autumn
candidate. All were apparently content to leave that election strictly to the Democrats,
with GOP voters perhaps a moderating influence, as they often have been in
all-Democrat races for state legislative jobs. Such one-party races have been
common since voters adopted the Top Two primary election system as Proposition
14 in 2010, but until now, never before for a choice top-of-ticket job. It’s
bound to leave rank-and-file Republicans frustrated.
“I doubt this will have long-term
ramifications for the party,” said Palo Alto legal arbitrator George (Duf)
Sundheim, the leading vote-getter among GOP candidates and one of two former
state Republican Party chairmen who insisted on staying in the primary.
“Yes, it would be helpful to other
candidates further down the ballot to have a Republican at the top of the
ticket, but with the Top Two primary, we’re simply going to get situations like
this from time to time.”
Not exactly a cry of despair for the
party he once headed.
Said Unz, the author and chief funder
of the 1998 Proposition 227, which all but ended bilingual education in
California, “The truth is, I probably don’t care whether there’s a Republican
candidate in the runoff. I’ve never been anything but a registered Republican,
but I’ve been disappointed with the positions many Republicans have been taking
lately. And from the other two Republicans in this race, I did not see anything
interesting.
“To win, any Republican would need a
lot of crossover voters, but it’s difficult to see two longtime party
functionaries managing that.” Unz began by admitting he expected to lose the
primary, but wanted the bully pulpit the campaign offered for talking about how
to preserve his 1998 Proposition 227, which ended most bilingual education in
California.
The result leaves the field to Harris
and Sanchez, with the winner likely to be the one who can attract the most
Republicans this fall. Neither came close to dominating the spring campaign,
both falling far short of the vital 50 percent benchmark.
-30-
Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. He has covered esoteric votes in eight
national political conventions. 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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