CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JANUARY 31, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“PUTTING CALIFORNIA BACK IN NATIONAL POLITICS”
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JANUARY 31, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“PUTTING CALIFORNIA BACK IN NATIONAL POLITICS”
California is in the forefront of most
things. From new tax formulas to new movies, TV shows and electronic devices,
from pioneering farm irrigation techniques to innovative hairstyles and much
more, trends start here and often work their way across the country.
But almost no one anymore believes
California has been even minimally influential in national politics for many
years, despite its place as America’s largest and most innovative state.
This could change if California
legislators want it to, just about three years from today.
California gave Democrat Hillary
Clinton a 4.3 million vote majority in the last presidential election, but it
didn’t matter much. Her rival, Donald Trump, carried the three states of
Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania by a combined total of less than
one-fortieth that number, but together they gave him almost as many electoral
votes as California gave Clinton, and therefore he took the presidency in what
he laughably calls “an easy win.”
Short of seceding from the Union,
there is little prospect for California to evade its disadvantaged status in
the Electoral College. But there is another way for this state to assert
itself, and that can come in the primary election process.
By allowing its presidential primary
to languish in June during the last two election cycles, California opted to
have next to no voice in the selection of the two major party nominees for
president.
To regain a large voice in the matter,
all California need do is move its primary up into mid-February, about two
weeks behind New Hampshire’s protected slot as first primary in the nation and
Iowa’s as the first caucus.
That move would not negate the
Electoral College disadvantage now seeing a vote in Montana or Wyoming or
Delaware count for about 1.3 times as much as one in California. But it would
at least give California a voice in choosing the nominees, something this state
habitually allows others to do.
That’s to our detriment. As Democratic
Assemblyman Kevin Mullin of South San Francisco observed in submitting a bill
to put California into the first Super Tuesday voting of the next primary
season, “There’s not enough discussion of substantive issues that are crucial
to Californians.”
This includes everything from
immigration to oil drilling, from affordable health care to water rights and
water systems. None of it gets debated in California. In fact, almost nothing
was debated in California during the last two election cycles.
It didn’t have to be that way. There
was nothing, for example, preventing California from scheduling its 2016
primary on Feb. 16, one week after New Hampshire. Or on Feb. 23, the same day
Nevada Republicans caucused with fanfare.
Those places each had a voice in the
choice, a major one. Would the likes of Jeb Bush and Lindsay Graham and George
Pataki, all with major experience in high office, have dropped out as early as
they did if California’s winner-take-all GOP primary still loomed? Doubtful,
because a California plurality could have provided one of them almost 20
percent of what was needed for nomination.
Would Bernard Sanders have knocked out
Clinton early because of his strong support in California, thus setting up a
very different November election?
These questions are open, but show how
a moved-up California might have reshaped things.
Mullin’s bill would set California’s
primary in March in presidential years, compromising with colleagues who
believe February is too early. But why compromise on this? If California needs
to spend $100 million or so for a presidential primary separate from the
ordinary June vote on every other significant state office, why not? That’s a
pittance in terms of this state’s budget of more than $200 billion, pennies per
person. It would it be worth far more to
allow Californians to feel involved. The savings in psychotherapy bills alone
could top $100 million, plus there would actually be national candidate
advertising and campaigning in California, something almost unseen here in more
than eight years.
The bottom line is that it’s been
unconscionable for legislators to keep the primary in June in presidential
years, just so they can have more convenient filing deadlines and leisurely
fund-raising schedules.
The need for an early primary has
never been more obvious and hats off to Mullin for being first to do something
about it.
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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