CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2020 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“CHAD MAYES GIVING “TOP TWO” ITS BIGGEST TEST”
Here’s a situation
California’s 10-year-old “top two” primary seemingly was designed for: A
three-term Republican assemblyman from what once was a “safe” GOP district
defies his party, goes independent and gets a spot on the November runoff
ballot against another Republican.
Back when
they were advocating for the 2010 Proposition 10 and the top two system it
created, sometimes called the “jungle primary,” then-Gov. Arnold Schwarznegger
and then-Lt. Gov. Abel Maldonado, both moderate Republicans, insisted it would
give minority party voters a significant say in districts otherwise dominated
by either Democrats or Republicans.
Now look
at the Redlands-to-the-desert Assembly District 42 in the state’s Inland
Empire, where former Republican Chad Mayes faces Republican Andrew Kotyuk in
the November runoff.
Mayes,
now registered with no party preference like about one-fourth of all California
voters, pulled about 35 percent of the primary vote to just a bit less for
Republican Kotyuk, who entered the race on the last possible day – because
that’s when Mayes renounced his membership in the GOP.
Republican
officials reacted very quickly, almost instantly gathering the needed
signatures to put San Jacinto Mayor Kotyuk on the ballot. Although he’s never
said it, Mayes likely timed his announcement in hopes it would preclude his
drawing a GOP opponent.
He didn’t
get that wish. Still, he siphoned more than enough votes away from the only
Democrat in the race, Hemet lawyer DeniAntionette (cq) Mazingo, to make the
runoff against Kotyuk, a conventional Republican whose website proclaims the
standard GOP contention that “Sacramento elites are hurting hard-working
taxpayers.”
Mayes,
once the Republican leader in the state Assembly, was forced out of that post
after he broke with the party’s longtime stance against California’s
cap-and-trade program aimed at reducing greenhouse gases and climate change and
voted in 2017 to continue it.
He
survived the 2018 midterm election despite that, with some support from
Democratic voters in the district. To win this fall, he will need plenty of
support from Democrats who voted last spring for Mazingo.
It’s
uncertain whether they will back him or simply leave vacant the state Assembly
slot on their ballots.
That’s
what makes this perhaps the best test yet of whether the top two system – which
pits the two leading primary election vote-getters in the runoff regardless of
party – can achieve its stated purpose.
Yes,
there have been plenty of Democrat-on-Democrat and Republican-vs.-Republican
races, but until now California had not seen an apostate member of one party
depend on voters from the other party for survival.
In some
cases, including the Santa Clarita-area 25th Congressional District,
where Democratic Assemblywoman Christy Smith is trying to unseat Republican
Mike Garcia, who last spring beat her in a special election for a vacated seat,
two Republicans have combined to almost become the leading primary vote-getters
in districts where voter registration for the big parties is about even. Smith
hopes the large presidential election turnout will let her reverse the spring
outcome.
But no
member of a major party has ever faced off against an independent. In fact,
independents have griped for years that the jungle primary discriminates
against them. The best rejoinder to that was always that independents needed to
find candidates with wider appeal, and Mayes may have given them one.
Now the
question is whether Mayes, who has joined Schwarzenegger’s nascent centrist
advocacy group New Way California, can continue to pick up votes from both
Democrats and independents.
Since
Mayes has sometimes criticized President Trump, who shares the fall ballot with
him, it’s entirely possible moderate Republican “Never Trumpers” may vote his
way, even if they’re holding their noses and after all instinctively voting for
Trump, their fellow Republican.
If Mayes
can put together a coalition of moderates, independents, Republicans and
Democrats, he will demonstrate for the first time that it can be done. Which
would mean there really is a possibility that at least some California
politicians won’t have to worry about party backing in the future. The November
results will tell a lot.
-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
I wish for the great of success in all of our destiny endeavors
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