CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, AUGUST 17, 2021, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“THE CELEBRITY FACTOR IN RECALL
ELECTIONS”
Many
Californians laughed out loud back in 1998, when Minnesota voters by a wide
margin elected longtime professional wrestler and sometime talk show host Jesse
Ventura their governor.
But
almost exactly five years later, those same Californians by a wide margin made
longtime movie muscleman Arnold Schwarzenegger their governator and then kept
him and his cigars in office for seven years.
Neither
Ventura nor Schwarzenegger had an iota of administrative experience, but both
had shown some interest in public affairs. Schwarzenegger, for one, campaigned
hard five years before he became governor in the recall of ex-Gov. Gray Davis
for an initiative that created today’s First Five pre-school education program
and then helped promote it.
So it was
no shock that in the first two polls taken on candidates to replace Gov. Gavin
Newsom in case he’s recalled, a celebrity with no government experience led the
field.
That’s
Larry Elder, who polled 16 percent in one survey and 18 percent in another that
appeared days later. In both surveys, Elder was 10 points ahead of political
veterans John Cox and Kevin Faulconer in a field that includes no well-funded
Democrats, largely because Newsom pushed his party to keep established figures
out.
There is
one Democrat with political experience who’s running: Joel Ventresca, who took
third in the 2019 San Francisco mayoral election and has run for office several
times. Ventresca, a longtime administrative analyst for the San Francisco
International Airport, has had several runs, never coming close to a win. In
his mayoral attempt, he got about 10 percent as many votes as current Mayor
London Breed.
Ventresca,
clearly, has no wide following. But Elder, a conservative Black man whose talk
show has run for decades on Los Angeles radio station KABC-AM plainly does.
When he was omitted from a column naming a few recall candidates last month,
dozens of readers wrote to complain of “Elder abuse.”
Should
Newsom get around to trying to make the recall seem a contest between him and a
bunch of Donald Trump acolytes, it would be easy to include Elder. He has long
used his talk show to promote extreme conservatives, some of whom went on to
become key aides to the former president. Trump adviser Steven Miller, said to
be the author of most Trump immigration policy, began appearing with Elder
while still in high school.
But if
celebrity is such a big advantage in politics, and especially recall elections,
what about Caitlin Jenner? The transgender reality show star and former Olympic
decathlon champion pulled only about 3 percent support in the same polls that
Elder led.
It might
be her transgender identity, detested by many Republican politicians and much
of the party’s rank and file. Or it might be her utter lack of civic
involvement and her spotty voting record prior to declaring herself a
replacement candidate. Or it might be that voters don’t care much for
celebrities with unconventional lifestyles or conditions. The late actor Gary
Coleman, who stopped growing at 4’8” and ran as a replacement candidate in
2003, drew very few votes, as Jenner seems likely to this time.
There may
be a lesson for Democrats in all this – especially if Newsom doesn’t survive
the recall. Should that happen, the party does not now have any obvious
candidates to step up and oust Elder or any other recall replacement in next
year’s regular election. A lieutenant governor might often be the logical
successor candidate. So might an attorney general.
But Lt.
Gov. Elena Kounalakis has not built a major following in three years as the
state’s No. 2, while appointed Attorney General Rob Bonta struggles to make his
ultra-left leaning views acceptable to voters.
Yes, U.S.
Rep. Adam Schiff of Burbank created something of a following with his impeachment
efforts against Trump. Orange County Rep. Katie Porter is widely admired among
Democrats, too.
But
neither enjoys robust statewide support.
So might
Democrats take a leaf from the playbook of California Republicans, who have
turned to celebrities like actors George Murphy, Ronald Reagan and
Schwarzenegger when they didn’t have experienced officeholders to lead their
tickets? If so, someone like George Clooney might be their man next year, since
activist actor Warren Beatty’s political time likely has passed.
-30-
Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most
Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” now
available in an updated third edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com
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