CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 2020, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 2020, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“AT ALL
LEVELS, PRIMARY ABOUT MODERATES, EXTREMES”
The
California primary election officially went to the voters’ hands early this
month, when many began receiving mail-in ballots shortly before early-voting
centers started opening all around the state.
No
registered voter should lose sight of what this election is about in both major
parties: At several levels, the current vote will decide at least for awhile
whether moderates are in effect drummed out of the two major parties, leaving
extremists on both sides to rule for the next two or four years.
For
Democrats, this choice has been obvious on the presidential level since the
party’s first televised debate last summer. The choice there for Democratic
moderates is between former Vice President Joe Biden, former South Bend, Ind.,
Mayor Pete Buttegieg, Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar and, possibly, late entrant
Michael Bloomberg, the billionaire ex-mayor of New York City.
So-called progressives among
Democrats will for the most part choose between Vermont Sen. Bernard Sanders
and Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren.
Democratic
Party rules mandating proportional representation likely will see to it that at
least four of these folks each wins some California delegates to the national
nominating convention, but their specific vote totals will be telling.
If any candidate fails to draw
15 percent of the statewide California Democratic vote, they can most likely
kiss their presidential chances goodbye, even if they’ve done well in the
primaries and caucuses of Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina and Nevada –
where results will be finalized while most Californians are still mulling their
votes.
Republican
President Donald Trump, having just survived an impeachment trial in the U.S.
Senate, will have only nominal opposition here, but if a significant number of
moderate GOP voters cast protest ballots for former Massachusetts Gov. Bill
Weld or one of several lesser-known candidates, it will signal big trouble
ahead for Trump.
The
same kind of moderate vs. extremist contest will also occur in a few much more
local votes, even though California’s new 12-year legislative term limits give
a huge advantage to incumbents both in the primary and the November runoff to
follow.
At
least three key contests will shape November runoffs.
The
perpetually challenged Steve Glazer, a state senator from Orinda in the 7th
Senate District, faces the labor-backed ultra-liberal Marisol Rubio in one
race. In Orange County’s 72nd Assembly District, incumbent and
fairly moderate Republican Tyler Diep faces strong intra-party opposition from
conservative Janet Nguyen, who lost her former nearby state Senate seat two
years ago to Democrat Tom Umberg.
And in
the 25th Congressional District, covering turf from the Simi Valley
in Ventura County to Lancaster in Los Angeles County’s high desert area,
multiple conservatives and moderates from both parties seek to replace liberal
Democrat Katie Hill, forced to resign by a sex scandal after only a few months
in office. This field includes conservative former Republican Rep. Steve
Knight, unseated by Hill in 2018, and Democratic Assemblywoman Christy Smith,
the early-book favorites to make the runoff elections both for the fall
election and the special election to fill the seat until then.
The two
hardest fought of these races may come in the East Bay and Orange County. With
former county GOP chairman Scott Baugh backing Nguyen in part because of Diep’s
voting with Democrats on some housing measures, the ex-state senator has a good
shot.
One
mystery here is why Democrats, who saw Hillary Clinton carry this district in
2016 and then lost it to Diep by less than 3 percent two years later, have not
run a well-funded candidate with deep local name recognition. The likelihood
there is an all-GOP November runoff.
Rubio,
meanwhile, has gotten donations from three large labor unions and endorsements
from a few local Democratic clubs in her bid to oust Glazer. “My life
represents everything that is wrong about his voting record,” Rubio says.
Neither Rubio nor Glazer won support from the state party.
All of
which means that while the California vote will say a lot about the future of
both major parties nationally, it may do the same for the two California
parties, even if the moderate vs. extreme battlegrounds are less numerous this
time than in some past primaries.
-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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