CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, MARCH 20, 2018 OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, MARCH 20, 2018 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“GOP STARTS TO WISE UP; WILL DEMS FOLLOW?”
California’s top two primary system is living up to its
“jungle primary” nickname more than this spring than ever, with dozens of
candidates vying in both statewide and district races across the state for
rare, elusive spots on the November general election ballot.
Before Proposition 14 passed in 2010, every political party
recognized by the state got one slot and no more in the fall runoff. But now
only the two leading primary election vote-getters make the final, regardless
of their party.
Over three election cycles since voters adopted the system,
this has created dozens of one-party races for legislative and congressional
seats and once put a congressional district with a significant Democratic registration
margin into a runoff involving two Republicans.
So far, there’s been only one statewide, top-of-ticket
single-party race: Two years ago, Democrat Kamala Harris easily defeated fellow
Democrat Loretta Sanchez for the U.S. Senate seat long held by a third
Democrat, Barbara Boxer.
Barring a major upset, there will be another one-party Senate
race this fall, Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein facing off against longtime
state Senate President Kevin de Leon.
There also could be a one-party run for governor, as Democratic
Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom and ex-Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa have paced
the field since polling began early last year.
But Republicans now show signs of smartening up to one
basic law of the jungle primary – when too many candidates from one party run,
they can splinter their supporters’ vote so much that none of them makes the
runoff.
Barely a week before the filing deadline for the June
primary, one of the three significant GOP candidates for governor dropped out for
the sake of party survival. That was former Sacramento-area Congressman Doug
Ose, who entered the race late and never drew many campaign donations or decent
poll numbers.
Ose, like San Diego County businessman John Cox and Orange
County Assemblyman Travis Allen, hoped to capture the bulk of the votes of
California’s Republicans, who now total just one-fourth of those registered to
vote. But he never got above 3 percent in the polls.
If Allen and Cox split Ose’s meager support, both would
still be running far behind Newsom and Villaraigosa, unlikely to advance to
November. To field a fall candidate, the GOP probably needs one more of its hopefuls
to drop out, the survivor presumably netting virtually all Republican votes and
possibly pulling more currently undecided voters than any Democrat. An unlikely
scenario.
But at least the Republicans recognize the danger of having
too many candidates for one office.
So far, Democrats hoping to flip some of California’s
Republican seats in Congress don’t seem to have gotten this message. It won’t
matter in districts with an incumbent running, as that single Republican will
make the November ballot along with whoever tops the Democrats in June.
But in the 39th and 49th districts,
where longtime incumbents Ed Royce and Darrell Issa are retiring, Democrats
risk not making the ballot despite Hillary Clinton’s carrying both districts in
2016.
When he announced his impending departure, the 13-termer
Royce endorsed longtime aide and former Orange County state Assemblywoman Young
Kim. But several other strong GOP candidates also entered that race, along with
four significant Democrats. It’s likely that Kim will advance to November, and
there’s a possibility one of the other Republicans might pull a few more votes
than any Democrat. Which would leave a one-party Republican race in a district
Clinton won by almost 10 percent.
In Issa’s longtime district, Oceanside Assemblyman Rocky
Chavez and state Board of Equalization member Diane Harkey are strong
Republican candidates, running 2-3 in a February poll behind Democrat Doug
Allen, who came within less than 1 percent of beating Issa in 2016.
But if any of the four other Democrats in the running
becomes even a bit stronger, Allen could drop to third in the splintered primary
vote, leaving a two-Republican runoff in another district Clinton won.
The bottom line: Just as Ose dropped out for the sake of
his party, some Democrats running for Congress must leave the field or risk
failure for their party’s efforts to take over control of the House of
Representatives.
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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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