CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“DEMS CAN’T ASSUME TRUMP MEANS AUTOMATIC CONGRESS WINS”
It’s
not by accident that Jeff Denham, David Valadao, Devin Nunes, Ed Royce, Mimi
Walters, Darrell Issa, Dana Rohrabacher and Steve Knight, all California
Republicans now in Congress, have survived and thrived through multiple terms
in spite of frequent indicators that they were endangered in their very disparate
districts.
Democrats
downplay this political and personal reality this fall, as they gear up for
hotly contested primary contests where the prize is the opportunity to take on
one of those Republicans.
The
assumption among most Democrats is that because of sometimes-looney behavior
and words by President Trump, next fall will see many, many Democratic
victories, perhaps enough for them to take back the House of Representatives
for the first time since 2010, when Republicans won a sweeping majority.
The
GOP margin now stands at 241 members to 194, after Democrats gained six seats
in 2016, still falling 47 shy of taking over. That means Democrats must flip 24
seats next year to regain control of the House, and they see most of those eight
sometimes embattled California Republicans as ripe for the ousting.
The
have no such illusions about this state’s six other Republicans in Congress: the
likes of Tom McClintock, Paul Cook, Doug LaMalfa, Kevin McCarthy, Ken Calvert
and Duncan Hunter all appear safe from any sudden Democratic storm because they
represent essentially rock-ribbed Republican districts. Not even their votes to
kill Obamacare – the Affordable Care Act whose health insurance covers many
thousands in their districts – are enough to threaten any of them.
But
things seem different in those other eight districts, one reason why multiple
hopefuls have risen up in almost all those places in hopes of taking on
long-established incumbents like Royce, chairman of the House Foreign Affairs
Committee. Democrat Hillary Clinton carried his 39th District
straddling parts of Los Angeles, Orange and San Bernardino counties in 2016,
putting a target on Royce’s back for the first time in many years.
Rohrabacher’s
coastal Orange County district was also long considered safely Republican, but
his reputation as Russian President Vladimir Putin’s “favorite congressman”
renders him unusually vulnerable next year. Still, Rohrabacher has often won
with very large margins, and the several Democrats seeking to take him on next
November would be foolish to assume he’s a lame duck.
The
same for Issa, whose district covering parts of northern San Diego County and
southern Orange County was long a safe GOP area. True, he won reelection by
just 1,600 votes last year, the smallest margin of any Republican in Congress,
but his car-alarm fortune has so far provided all the funds he’s needed to
repel threats once he took them seriously. Issa, reputedly the richest man in
Congress, is clearly scared. Yes, he voted for Obamacare repeal, along with all
his California colleagues, but he also plumped for a plan of his own offering
all Americans the same health insurance options open to members of Congress.
He’s
moderated other of his stances lately, too, becoming more of a physical
presence in his district than he’s perhaps ever been.
Meanwhile,
the huge Latino pluralities in the Central Valley districts of Denham, Nunes
and Valadao have never seriously threatened any of them, but could this time
because of their health care votes. Nunes, the committee chairman, also could be dogged by his forced recusal
from the House Intelligence Committee’s investigation into Russian involvement
in Trump’s 2016 campaign.
And
Knight, a narrow winner last time in his Palmdale-Santa Clarita district, will
face at least as formidable a challenge next year as in his last campaign, itself
a close call, even though it’s uncertain who will be his runoff opponent.
Each
of these races is different, but all have the common theme of voters possibly
wanting to crimp Trump’s power, while other voters will not forgive the
incumbents for their health care votes.
Still,
every one of these Republicans has faced concerted opposition before, and none has
lost yet. If Democrats assume they can easily oust any or all of them, they
could be in for a surprise and another national defeat.
-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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