CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, APRIL 6, 2018 OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, APRIL 6, 2018 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“FEINSTEIN’S JUMP: PATIENCE MAY PAY OFF”
U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein took months
of heat from the most left-leaning of her fellow California Democrats after she
counseled patience with President Trump during a Democratic Party gathering
last summer.
But lately, she has literally jumped
for joy, at least partly because of her approach.
Most vocal in lambasting her since she
advocated for patience is former state Sen. President Kevin de Leon of Los
Angeles, who also blasted Feinstein for being too old (she’s 84) for another
term and too compromised by her past votes for things like the invasion of Iraq
and the federal Patriot Act in the wake of the 9-11 attacks.
But Feinstein’s moderate approach may
pay off big on the issue she’s cared about most ever since a few fatal 1978
gunshots from onetime San Francisco Supervisor Dan White suddenly propelled her
into political prominence.
For decades since then, Feinstein has
pushed for strict gun control, often not a sexy cause. As an example,
immediately after last year’s Las Vegas massacre, she filed a bill to ban the
bump stocks used by the gunman in that attack. The day after an AR-15 automatic
rifle was used to kill 17 students and teachers in Parkland, Fla., she sought
to reinstate the 10-year ban on assault weapon sales she wrote and carried
earlier in her Senate tenure. That ban lasted from 1994 to 2004.
So it was no wonder Feinstein became
excited while sitting beside Trump during a White House meeting on gun control
when he suggested adding her assault weapons measure to a bipartisan bill for
which he had just announced support.
What are the odds that if Feinstein
had been one of his most rabid critics, Trump would have jumped aboard a
Feinstein gun control bill unpopular with Republicans in Congress and their
sponsors at the National Rifle Association? Slim to none for a President known
to act frequently out of pique.
It’s unknown yet whether that measure
will ultimately pass or how long the fickle Trump will keep supporting it. But
at least he’s on record favoring it, even if he did pull back support of
increasing the age limit for buying assault weapons.
So, when de Leon’s campaign airs ads
showing Feinstein with Trump, it will pay to remember this reward for her more
moderate approach, born of a mature recognition that as long as Trump is
President she will have to deal with him.
Call Feinstein a radical practicalist
if you like, but at least she’s gotten Trump to support part of her pet cause,
far more than the more radically resistant style of fellow California
Democratic Sen. Kamala Harris has yet achieved.
That won’t stop de Leon’s carping,
also likely to include some re-showing of a Saturday Night Live satire of
Feinstein’s gleeful little jump.
De Leon, whose campaign attacks on
Feinstein were labelled “shoddy” by the non-partisan national Bloomberg News
service, frequently suggests Feinstein does not hold “California values,” by
which he means sympathy for illegal immigrants and unwavering support for labor
unions. De Leon also cherry-picks votes to blast, lambasting her okay for the
Iraq war, even though all three of the most recent Senate Democratic leaders voted
the same way.
While everyone in politics knows that
over 26 years, any senator will cast some controversial votes, de Leon’s
attacks cost Feinstein the endorsement of the state’s Democratic Party
convention. That likely won’t matter much in November, as she has a huge
campaign finance edge and can easily air messages demonstrating that she has,
in her words, “always voted with labor.”
But her emotions become stronger on
gun control, at least partly the product of her having been nearby when White
assassinated both fellow San Francisco Supervisor Harvey Milk and then-Mayor
George Moscone.
Feinstein has so far avoided even
mentioning the fact that de Leon was the longtime Sacramento roommate of
disgraced state Sen. Tony Mendoza, who allegedly brought young women he was
harassing back to their quarters. De Leon maintains he never saw or heard any
such Mendoza activities.
The bottom line here is that de Leon
plainly believes he can only make headway if he attacks Feinstein for being too
moderate. But every poll so far indicates this approach will not get him
elected.
-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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