CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JULY 20, 2021, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“THE CREDIBILITY PROBLEMS ON BOTH
SIDES IN RECALL"
From
their first day of circulating petitions targeting Gov. Gavin Newsom, backers
of the upcoming recall election attacked his credibility.
They make
some strong points, but those same organizers also suffer credibility problems
of their own.
Their favorite
target all along has been Newsom’s notorious dinner party last fall with
lobbyist pals at Yountville’s super-pricey, Michelin-starred French Laundry
restaurant. It was largely indoors at a time when Newsom’s administration had
banned inside restaurant dining, and the crowd was above the state-imposed limit
also enforced by the governor.
How
credible was his professed concern over COVID-19, when he combined this event
with sending his own children to in-person private school, while mandating closure
of virtually all public schools?
Then
there were wildfires, which ravaged California last year and figure to be in
full flame when the recall vote is held Sept. 14. Newsom trumpeted figures
about fire mitigation efforts by the state that turned out to be exaggerated by
a factor of about nine. A difference of more than 80,000 acres. The governor
tried to let a state bureaucrat take the fall for that lie by admitting he gave
Newsom wrong numbers.
It didn’t
matter…politicians are always responsible for the veracity of what emerges from
their mouths.
This most
recent episode of non-credibility brought caustic comment even from some of the
governor’s usual supporters.
And
yet…the other side has plenty of its own credibility problems. For one, while
circulating the recall petitions, major backers blasted Newsom for mishandling
the rollout of Covid vaccines. Many of the same folks spent years before the
pandemic inveighing against mandatory vaccinations for schoolchildren against
often-fatal diseases like rubella, whooping cough and polio. Now they’re griping
about a governor doing whatever he can to get every Californian protected from
COVID-19 and its variants?
There are
credibility problems, too, among the Republicans working to oust and to replace
Newsom. One big example came in late June, with word from something called the
Election Integrity Project (EIP) that it has lined up as many as 30,000 poll
watchers to “ensure the integrity” of the recall vote.
This
outfit turns out to be the creation of a former Tea Party leader for whom
California government seems too liberal and too concerned with the welfare of
minorities, now a large majority of the state populace when taken together.
EIP previously failed in pursuing
baseless claims of election fraud and improper registration, essentially following
the model of ex-President Donald Trump and his false claims of actually having
won last fall’s election.
The
group’s history suggests its real purpose – if it can actually turn out 30,000
poll watchers in September – will be to intimidate voters it thinks will go
against the recall.
That’s a
big credibility problem for recall organizers.
Then
there are some of the positions taken by significant candidates to replace
Newsom, all Republicans at this writing. Businessman John Cox, defeated by Newsom
by a near-record margin in 2018, announced his plan for solving the homeless
problem, one that would essentially force homeless individuals into counseling
or therapy whether they like it or not. The trouble is, that tactic runs
counter to both state law and a longstanding U.S. Supreme Court ruling.
How
credible is a candidate who advocates an illegal practice to solve one of
California’s big problems?
So there
are no saints headed for this fall’s ballot as yet, and there is plenty to
question about both the governor and his political enemies.
The usual
outcome of elections that pit negatives against each other is that voters
choose the devil they know over the one they don’t.
But there
could be a wild card this year: So far, Newsom and state Democratic leaders
have managed to dissuade all significant Democrats from entering the list of replacement
candidates. But that list is far from complete right now.
If a
major Democrat who is relatively scandal-free – like former Los Angeles Mayor
Antonio Villaraigosa, for one example – were willing to risk becoming a party
pariah for the rest of his life should he lose, the balance of credibility
could change substantially.
And then
all bets would be off.
-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
Suggested pullout quote: “There is
plenty to question about both the governor and his political enemies.”
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