CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, MARCH 23, 2021, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“THIS RECALL COULD BECOME NEWSOM VS.
TRUMP”
California’s Republican Party appears bent on making the seemingly
inevitable fall recall election against Gov. Gavin Newsom into a symbolic vote
on the political revival ex-President Donald Trump so avidly desires.
As the days wound down before the March 17 deadline for
submitting recall petition signatures, it became clear that three men with
links to Trump would likely be the most prominent figures on the recall’s list
of prospective Newsom replacements.
As in any statewide recall election, voters would have two
votes this time – a yes-or-no choice on dumping Newsom and a second vote choosing
from a list of would-be alternatives. The winner in that contest would not need
a majority, just more votes than anyone else running.
So
far, the three most prominent likely candidates include former San Diego Mayor
Kevin Faulconer, San Diego County businessman John Cox and Trump’s former
acting director of national intelligence, Richard Grenell.
If
the list of alternates does not soon add a figure or two who’s more palatable
to the state’s dominant Democratic voters, it appears the recall won’t have
much chance no matter how poorly Newsom may fare in the polls.
Cox lost to Newsom in the November 2018 runoff election by a
massive 62-38 percent margin, running as a strong Trump ally determined to end
California’s status as the state most resistant to his policies. That’s almost exactly
the same margin by which Trump lost California last fall. It may represent the best
any conservative Republican can do in this era.
The thumping
frequent candidate Cox took did not dampen his enthusiasm for calling Newsom
incompetent and hypocritical. Yet, he likely won’t get as enthusiastic backing
from Trump this time as three years ago.
For Grenell, said to plan on entering this list when the
recall formally qualifies for a vote, has been among Trump’s most loyal
operatives.
During the Trump presidency, Grenell served first as
spokesman for the U.S. mission to the United Nations, then ambassador to
Germany and finally as acting director of national intelligence during Trump’s
final year, after the ex-president fired the previous chief spy for reporting publicly
that Russia was interfering in the election on his behalf.
Grenell would not enter this race if he did not have Trump’s
blessing, reportedly secured during the annual meeting of the Conservative
Political Action Committee last month in Orlando.
Faulconer is not so obvious a Trumpist. He downplays his
Republican identity in this state where the GOP label has lately meant certain
defeat in statewide races other than those involving movie muscleman Arnold Schwarzenegger.
But Faulconer at times leans heavily to the right. Example: he
endorsed former U.S. Rep. Darrell Issa early on to replace the disgraced and
resigned San Diego Republican Duncan Hunter in a Mexican-border congressional
seat. The hard-right Issa “retired” in 2018 from his former seat in north San
Diego County when that district became too liberal for him to be reelected. The
Hunter district leans far more toward Trump loyalty.
There was also Trump telling Fox News last June, after
Faulconer visited the Oval Office, that “(Faulconer) was just in my office,
great guy. He came up to thank me for having done the (border) wall…
Faulconer quickly denied saying that, his spokesman claiming
he and Trump discussed only a trade deal. Still, Newsom can use the Fox News video
against him, and never mind Faulconer’s denial.
A big difference between this recall and the 2003 ouster of
then-Gov. Gray Davis is the absence of anyone with the innate popularity of Schwarzenegger,
who dominated that vote.
All this should make it easy for Newsom’s veteran campaign
team to cast this as a Trumpian attempt at a backdoor takeover of California.
If he succeeds at beating back the recall, Newsom would have already
defeated all his likely major 2022 reelection opponents, plus California’s most
active Trump supporters. So he could – like some previous recall survivors –
emerge as a popular hero in his own party, with an easy path to reelection next
year as well as a promising potential national future.
-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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