CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, AUGUST 6, 2021, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“NEWSOM GETS IT HIS WAY: WILL IT
WORK?”
In almost
every aspect of the Sept. 14 recall election that is now mere weeks away, Gov.
Gavin Newsom has had it his way.
His most
recent “victory” was in dissuading every other substantial (read: well
financed) Democrat in California to stay off the list of candidates to replace
him if the ‘yes’ side of the recall should win a majority vote.
This was
Newsom’s aim from the moment it became clear recall advocates would gather
enough signatures to put the notion to a statewide vote. The tactic is designed
to let Newsom use his massive and thus far largely untapped war chest to
convince voters this contest is really between him and ex-President Donald
Trump.
If he can
do that, enthusiasm among California Democrats to vote ‘no’ seems likely to
rise enormously. Right now, polls show almost all the registered Democrats who
outnumber Republicans in this state by nearly a 2-1 margin oppose the recall,
but essentially yawn as they say so.
Associate
the recall with Trump, whom they despise to the extent of twice giving his
election opponents margins above 3 million votes, and their determination to
vote stands a chance of approaching the enthusiasm displayed by recall backers,
who salivate at the prospect of throwing out Newsom (known to many of them as
“Gov. Nuisance”).
Can
Newsom make the recall synonymous with Trump? He shouldn’t have too hard a
time, as the most prominent of the 33 Republicans in the replacement field all
have ties to the defeated President.
San Diego
area businessman John Cox, for example, was strongly endorsed by Trump when he
ran against Newsom in 2018 and lost in a 62-38 percent landslide. Ex-San Diego
Mayor Kevin Faulconer proudly says he voted for Trump last year and can be seen
in Oval Office photos fawned over him. Reality TV star Caitlin Jenner has had
ex-Trump operatives in her so-far ineffective campaign. And so on.
So Newsom
has an early election date and everything he said he wants and needs in order
to defend himself, save one. A blunder attributed to his aides deprives him of
the tag “Democrat” following his name in the recall question.
But he
has plenty of money and plenty of name recognition, with almost no Californian
unaware that Newsom is in fact a Democrat, even if the ballot doesn’t say so.
Among the funded, he has only Republican opponents. He has a state budget that
will put significant Covid recovery checks in millions of mailboxes just before
the vote.
He has
$5.2 billion to pay more than a year’s rent for almost all Californians who
lost jobs to the pandemic. He has an electoral system that will furnish mail
ballots to every registered voter, making it easier than ever for them to vote,
even if they’re not feeling fired up about it.
For most
candidates, this looks like a dream world.
And yet, no poll so far shows great enthusiasm for
keeping Newsom around.
So there
remains plenty of work for the governor to do if he really wants to stay in
office and maybe later move on to either the Senate or the White House – or
both.
It’s a
situation very different from what faced ex-Gov. Gray Davis, who was recalled
within months of getting reelected in 2002, the only American governor ever to
lose his office so ignominiously.
But Davis
faced an electorate that blamed him for a major energy crunch and a series of
rolling blackouts. Plus he ran up against the Terminator, movie muscleman
Arnold Schwarzenegger, who emerged as the favorite to ignite the recall and
replace Davis from the moment he declared himself a candidate.
There is
no one like that today. Newsom has been among the most effective governors in
America at getting his state vaccinated and reducing pandemic damage. He has
for the most part kept the lights on, even while he’s favored utility companies
financially.
So it
would be a major upset if Newsom were to be dumped. But there’s still that huge
enthusiasm advantage Republicans now have over Democrats. Which means we all
must stay tuned.
-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, go to www.californiafocus.net
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