CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JUNE 1, 2021, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“RECALL FEVER: MORE
THAN JUST A BEAR AND A TV STAR”
“All
politics is loco,” the New York Times headlined during California’s 2003 recall
campaign.
That never looked more true
than in mid-May, when gubernatorial recall replacement candidate John Cox
campaigned with a Kodiak bear to demonstrate his “beastly” qualities, then
complained loudly because the bear got more attention than he did.
Or when reality TV star
Caitlyn Jenner, running as a “compassionate” right-winger, griped that seeing
too many homeless drove a fellow airplane-owning neighbor at a small airport to
move his plane out of state.
But there’s more than mere
strangeness to the recall fever that’s swept much of California since it became
plain that Gov. Gavin Newsom faces a bid to dump him.
Sure, Cox
and his rented bear pulled a successful publicity stunt, his claims about
Newsom errors and how Cox can fix them drawing far more attention than such a
Harold Stassen-like repeat candidate could get on his own.
And yes,
Jenner, a transgender TV reality star who won the Olympic decathlon in her
former gender, drew plenty of ink with several TV appearances and a gauzy
commercial.
Plus, the
roll-call of candidates to replace Newsom will apparently include at least one
or two porn stars, just like the list did during the 2003 recall of ex-Gov.
Gray Davis that made a “governator” out of movie muscleman Arnold
Schwarzenegger.
There has
also been some game-playing with facts. One example: Republican candidates Cox
and Kevin Faulconer both excoriated Newsom in late April for his alleged
“release” of 76,000 felons – including violent ones – from California prisons.
But none had been released early at the time those claims were made. Instead,
the state Department of Corrections expanded a good behavior program to make
76,000 prisoners eligible for slightly sooner than normal releases.
But no
one had been set loose when the candidates complained, inmates still needing to
demonstrate good behavior and finish rehabilitation programs before getting
lowered sentences. The prison system said it will be months, maybe years, before
even one felon is released early.
Yet,
recall fever involves more than looney tunes. Unlike the last attempt to unseat
an elected governor, this one is spurring other major recall attempts around
the state.
Perhaps
the two most significant are in Los Angeles County. Both are still gathering
signatures to qualify for the ballot.
One
effort targets Los Angeles City Councilman Mike Bonin, a vocal advocate for the
homeless. Bonin has pushed his city to place temporary housing centers in many
areas, spurring outcries in several locales.
In the
Venice portion of his district, vocal homeowners and apartment dwellers
objected loudly when temporary supportive housing arrived in their midst. Some
also appealed to city boards to prevent conversion of a Ramada Inn on a busy
boulevard to temporary housing. The appeal failed.
At the
same time, a local council in the affluent Pacific Palisades, also in Bonin’s
district, opposed putting a tent village in a beach parking lot down a steep
hill from the main part of the area.
If Bonin
should be recalled, there could be major consequences all around California.
This would warn other local officials that okaying new quarters for the
homeless in almost any residential or commercial location might lead to their
political demise.
Another
significant recall-in-progress hits at Los Angeles County District Attorney
George Gascon, who ran successfully last year promising to ease criminal
sentencing and eliminate cash bail. Some Gascon critics claim he won mainly
because the husband of former D.A. Jackie Lacey was arrested on firearm charges
after pointing a gun at unruly demonstrators outside the couple’s home. Lacey
also took heat for allegedly being soft on police violence.
Critics
say Gascon went far beyond his campaign promises in ordering his many hundreds
of deputies not to seek death penalties. He also told deputies not to try for
sentencing enhancements for most repeat offenders.
Should
Gascon be recalled and removed, it would carry implications for the 2022
election bid of appointed state Attorney General Rob Bonta, who shares many
Gascon beliefs, and for other ultra-liberal D.A.s.
All of
which means recall fever may have strong meaning for many others besides Newsom
and the dozens who will try to replace him.
-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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