CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, APRIL 9,
2021, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“NEWSOM’S FOOT IN MOUTH MAY HURT HIM IN
RECALL”
Gov. Gavin Newsom’s notorious foot-in-mouth problem may be his
worst enemy as he faces the recall vote that will likely be scheduled for this
fall.
No, it will probably not cost him his job, as intended by the
Donald Trump supporters and anti-vaxxers who started the recall and the more
standard conservative Republicans who jumped on their bandwagon.
But it is giving him problems. The governor who told
Californians not to gather in groups of more than 10 and not to do even that
indoors – and then attended an infamous somewhat larger indoor birthday dinner
for a lobbyist pal – keeps making new gaffes.
One came in mid-March when he described himself as a “Zoom
parent,” while his four children had been back in their private school classes
for months.
More
serious was his pledge that if the 87-year-old longtime U.S. Sen. Dianne
Feinstein leaves office for any reason before her term is up after 2024, he
will appoint a Black woman to the job.
This was in response to entitled-feeling Black women politicians
who did not find any of their number named to the Senate seat vacated by Kamala
Harris when she became vice president. They felt slighted, and whined that now
there are no Black woman in the Senate.
It did not appear to occur to them that this was because the
Senate’s only Black woman had just received a big promotion and that no other
Black woman had managed to win any other Senate seat. To make up for that, and
to satisfy their craving always to have at least one of them number in the
upper house of Congress, they pressured Newsom to appoint one of them at his first
opportunity.
This was the essence of identity politics, where a person’s ethnic
and gender background counts for more than their ability or achievements. Reality
is that no one group owns California’s Senate seats. They have at times gone to
the son of an Irish-American heavyweight boxing champion, two Jewish women, an
Asian-American semantics expert, a onetime movie soft-shoe dancer, a former
presidential press secretary, a Latino graduate of MIT and a variety of others.
Most of these folks won the job on their own, but a few were
appointed, and appointees often don’t fare well in elections when they finally
roll around. Think of appointed Republican John Seymour, a former Orange County
state senator who gave way to Feinstein in 1992.
But Newsom’s bow to identity politics didn’t help him, not especially
after Feinstein pointedly asserted she has no plans to go anywhere and thus
forced the governor to awkwardly try pulling his foot from his mouth.
What Newsom did is sometimes called pandering. It’s difficult
to put that tag on his appointment of former California Secretary of State Alex
Padilla to the Senate because – beside being an old Newsom friend – Padilla has
a long record of achievement, most recently setting up the state’s universal mail
voting system which worked with few flaws in the last election.
But his pandering to Black women led Asian-American groups to
push him to name one of their number to replace Xavier Becerra as state
attorney general now that he’s the national secretary of Health and Human
Services.
For Newsom to achieve the unity he seeks among Democrats as
he fights the drive to recall him, he must go cold turkey on his impulse to
pander.
If he’d simply pledge to name the individual he believes will
do the best job to any vacant post, he would be much better off. It’s difficult
to be offended by someone trying to find the best public servant possible, but
easy to turn against someone more interested in identity than merit.
Newsom has enlisted the likes of Sens. Bernie Sanders and
Elizabeth Warren as part of his effort to present a unified Democratic front
and lend credibility to his campaign to label the upcoming vote a “Republican
recall.”
But if he keeps turning off Democrats by turning one group
after another against him because he didn’t pick someone for a top job who
looks just like them, he could have more trouble this fall than he now expects.
-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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