CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JULY 18, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JULY 18, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
"NEWSOM
LOSES 'SURE THING' STANDING"
For a long time, it seemed Lt. Gov.
Gavin Newsom’s unspoken (at least publicly) agreement with Sen. Kamala Harris
would bear the fruit he intended – inauguration about 17 months from now as
governor of California.
The early-2015 understanding between
the two San Francisco Democrats, both with campaigns managed by the same San Francisco
political consulting firm, was this: To avoid a brutal fight over the Senate
seat being vacated by the retiring Barbara Boxer, Newsom would stay out of the
2016 Senate race and concentrate on running for governor two years later.
And so, with help from the SCN
Strategies firm headed by longtime San Francisco consultant Ace Smith, Harris
won Boxer’s old seat in a cakewalk.
Meanwhile, Newsom took the early lead
in the run for governor, becoming the first to declare his candidacy, raising
millions of early dollars and running far ahead of everyone else in the first
polls.
Newsom hoped to make his move to the
governor’s office seem as inevitable as Harris’ accession from San Francisco
district attorney to state attorney general to the Senate. Essentially, he
hoped to scare away most serious competition just as Harris did.
The former San Francisco mayor began
issuing press releases cum fund-raising appeals every time any significant news
story occurred. His anti-Donald Trump posts are as frequent as they are
predicable. Early polls showed him with double-digit leads over all other
potential candidates, emphasis on the “potential,” because no one else declared
for the race until this spring.
But now several others have. They are
out gathering both money and support – apparently at least in part at Newsom’s
expense. In fact, anytime he looks back these days, Newsom sees someone gaining
on him.
Most prominent is former Los Angeles
Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa. Like Newsom, Villaraigosa must overcome a history
of womanizing, but with previous candidates like President Trump and ex-Gov.
Arnold Schwarzenegger winning office despite their own similar peccadillos,
this may not prove as big a problem as it might have in previous eras.
In this year’s first version of the UC
Berkeley Institute of Governmental Studies poll, successor to the usually
reliable Field Poll, Newsom ran 11 points ahead of Villaraigosa, with 28
percent support to Villaraigosa’s second-place 11. Just two months later, in
May, Villaraigosa had closed that gap to a mere five points, with Newsom still
leading, but by only 22 percent to 17.
In short, Villaraigosa, not yet in
hyperactive campaign mode and still holding onto the bulk of his campaign cash,
gained as much backing as was lost by the very active Newsom, who saw a loss of
almost one-fourth of his prior support.
State Treasurer John Chiang, a former
two-term state controller, had five percent in both polls, holding steady.
Republican businessman John Cox’s backing dropped by half, from 18 percent to
9, perhaps because his support for an initiative creating a 12,000-member state
Legislature received significant publicity in the interim. Many GOP voters
moved over to support the new candidacy of former Republican Assemblyman David
Hadley of Torrance, who drew 8 percent. It’s uncertain how the early-summer
entry of conservative Republican Orange County Assemblyman and surfer Travis
Allen might affect this race.
Cox and Hadley are little known to
most voters, so the best guess is that their total of about 17 percent poll
support consisted of solid Republicans determined not to vote for a Democrat so
long as any GOP hopeful is still breathing.
Drawing even less support was
Democratic former state Schools Superintendent Delaine Eastin. Put her voters
into the Villaraigosa column, where they could end up if she eventually sees
she has little chance and pulls out, and the race is almost even at the top
level. This picture could change a lot when Chiang begins spending the millions
he’s raised so far,
but no one knows
whether he will take support from either Newsom or Villaraigosa, or win over
some of the undecided, who currently make up nearly 30 percent of voters.
It’s far too early to call Newsom’s
scare-them-off strategy a bust. But so far, no one looks intimidated. So unless
Republican San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer gets in, prospects are for a very
tight primary race likely to produce a Democrats-only runoff election next
fall.
-30-
Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough:
The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch
It,” now available in an updated third edition. His email address is
tdelias@aol.com
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