CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JANUARY 1, 2021, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“WILL FEINSTEIN ADD TO THE MUSICAL
CHAIRS?”
The game of musical chairs that is the upper echelon of California
politics in late 2020 began with the election of U.S. Sen. Kamala Harris as
vice president and continued with President-elect Joe Biden naming state Atty.
Gen. Xavier Becerra his secretary of Health and Human Services. Will Dianne
Feinstein create the next empty seat?
Feinstein
enjoys nothing more than chairing an important U.S. Senate committee. Anyone
looking on from 2006 to 2008, years when Democrats last controlled the upper
house of Congress, could see this as Feinstein ran the Senate Intelligence
Committee.
But left-wing
Democrats stirred a national outcry over her courtesy to Republican Judiciary Committee
chairman Lindsay Graham of South Carolina during the Amy Coney Barrett Supreme
Court confirmation hearings, even raising questions of senility. Feinstein took
this silently for awhile, but when leading Senate Democrats failed to defend
her, she relinquished her spot as Judiciary’s ranking Democrat, along with her
plain hope that the Jan. 5 runoff races for two Georgia Senate slots might make
her committee chair.
Will
she now feel motivated to keep taking red-eye flights back and forth to Washington,
D.C. or might she just retire quietly? It now looks like an even bet, with
Feinstein noncommittal so far.
Without
the responsibility to shepherd Biden-appointed judges through hearings and onto
the Senate floor, Feinstein is merely one of 100 senators, with no distinguishing
status. What would motivate her to stay on?
There
is, of course, her avid interest in California issues from desert preservation
to creating national parks and monuments to making sure her state gets the
funding it’s entitled to. While paired with Harris in recent years, Feinstein did
much more for California, letting Harris seek spotlights. There was no contest
in the accomplishment department.
So although
Feinstein is 87 years old and would be 91 if she ran for reelection when her current
term is up in 2024, it’s just possible the rumors of her resignation might not be
fulfilled soon.
Working quietly for this state, Feinstein will not have to
apologize to anyone for the friendships and relationships she’s developed with the
Republican likes of Graham and Iowa’s Chuck Grassley.
When she got in trouble, it was for doing what most pundits
say American needs more of: Being kind to people across the aisle.
Far
left Democrats like Los Angeles City Councilman Kevin de Leon can’t stomach
that. They would rather play smashmouth politics. De Leon, then a termed out state
senator, took that hardline approach when he challenged Feinstein in an
all-Democrat runoff during the 2018 election.
DeLeon’s attitude won him majority support from delegates
to the state Democratic Party convention that year, but not the two-thirds supermajority
needed for party endorsement.
What followed in the 2018 primary election showed how
misleading the seeming leftist domination among California Democrats can be:
Feinstein took more than 70 percent of the Democratic vote despite de Leon’s
constant carping.
By contrast, de Leon scored less than 13 percent in that
primary, but still came in second and made the fall runoff thanks to some
support from mischievous Republicans who wanted an obstacle for Feinstein. Their
ploy failed.
Folks who have taken over the once-noble progressive label usually
miss the fact that Feinstein’s collegial approach allowed her to accomplish
more for California over the last quarter century than any of the state’s other
representatives in Congress – including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Feinstein’s
fellow San Franciscan.
She has created national parks, steered large defense
contracts to state companies and steadfastly upheld the women’s rights so key to
the vast majority of Californians.
The evidence suggests her approach still appeals to more
Californians than that of any other state politician. Hence her longevity as a
San Francisco supervisor, mayor and senator.
It was rare and unexpected for Feinstein to be deterred or
discouraged by the kind of scoldings she got after the Barrett hearings. But
she’s still pursuing California’s interests actively, showing the same determination
she’s demonstrated all her life.
So despite some indications Feinstein may quit, California just
might continue getting effective, firm and civil representation from her for some
time to come.
-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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