CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY
THOMAS D. ELIAS
“WILL TOP TWO ‘JUNGLE PRIMARY’ AID
FEINSTEIN?”
Strong irony is in the air as
California heads into the hot political year of 2018, with an initiative to end
the state’s “top two” primary election system in play just as top two, also
known as the “jungle primary,” may be about to accomplish its central purpose.
That aim was to allow voters in the minority party
to influence elections and elect more moderate members of the larger party when
their own party either has no candidate in a race or fields a sure loser.
So it is today as moderate Democratic U.S. Sen.
Dianne Feinstein bids for another six years in Washington, D.C. amid opposition
from state Senate President Kevin de Leon and possibly others from the
Democrats’ left wing.
So far, no Republican has entered the race, and in
past reelection efforts, Feinstein has trampled GOP opponents anyhow. This leads
to two key questions to be answered in the next 11 months: Will the ‘jungle
primary’ system so detested by Republicans and fringe party members help save
Feinstein’s long career? And will she be the last to benefit from that system,
which pits the top two primary election vote-getters for any office below the
presidency against each other in the November runoff, regardless of party?
Mostly likely, Feinstein next fall
will share the ballot with the initiative seeking to return California to its
previous primary system based on parties, with each party participating in the
primary entitled to have a candidate in the runoff. Candidates and parties now
must earn runoff slots with strong primary election performances.
If top two is even partly responsible for
a Feinstein win, she would be the most prominent case of that system fulfilling
its aim.
The Democratic left, which came within
a hair of taking over the party’s state apparatus last fall, excoriates
Feinstein because she once urged patience with President Trump, because she’s
had Wall Street ties and has not been as shrill in opposing Trump as some
younger senators, including California’s other senator, fellow Democrat Kamala
Harris. (Harris endorsed Feinstein the day she announced for reelection.)
No one yet knows how wide the appeal
of a so-called progressive candidate like de Leon or activist billionaire Tom
Steyer might be among baseline Democratic voters, so it’s impossible yet to
determine whether Feinstein might need Republican votes to win reelection. But
that is a definite possibility, and if it happens, it would fulfill the purpose
of the jungle primary, backed when it began by former Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger and ex-Lt. Gov. Abel Maldonado, both moderate Republicans. They
wanted their sort of candidates to have a chance to win and their sort of
voters to be able to influence election outcomes in places where they
previously could not.
Now comes Feinstein, who could be the
rare California incumbent getting less than half her own party’s primary
election vote. Republicans, with barely over a quarter of California’s total
voter registration, would be unlikely to place a candidate on the ballot this
year, just as they failed in the 2016 Senate contest.
But if they vote in decent numbers, they
are more than sufficient to combine with moderate Democrats to keep a far-leftist
candidate from winning. That only works if Republicans actually vote for
Feinstein, even if they would much prefer voting for a fellow Republican.
Returns from 2016 show that almost
exactly 1 million fewer Californians voted for a U.S. Senate candidate than for
president, indicating many Republicans didn’t
bother to vote in a race between two liberal Democratic women, Harris and
then-Congresswoman Loretta Sanchez.
If most of those in the vote dropoff
were Republicans and there is less dropoff this fall, they could assure that
California gets the moderate Feinstein and not someone substantially to her
left and less patient or willing to compromise.
Such an outcome would represent the explicit
purpose of top two, and it’s just possible that it might also be the last gasp
of that system. For if voters opt to go back to party-driven primaries, the
extreme wings of both major parties will once again provide almost all candidates.
This would assure plenty of November choices,
but would essentially disenfranchise Democrats in Republican-dominated
legislative districts and Republicans statewide, as well as those living in the
many Democratic-dominated districts.
-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, go to www.californiafocus.net
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