CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 2021, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“NEWSOM
SURVIVES, BUT MAY BE WEAKENED”
The
conventional wisdom is that beating back the recall election that targeted him
actually strengthened Gov. Gavin Newsom. There is talk of an easy reelection
next year, possibly followed by a run for the Senate in 2024 or even a 2024
presidential run.
But this election wasn’t as easy as the final numbers make it seem, and
Newsom made myriad mistakes while eventually managing to thwart the attempt to
fire him 14 months before the end of the term he won in 2018.
What’s
more, while Newsom figures to top the Democratic slate next year, he might face
tough opposition in the June primary election.
If
the recall demonstrated anything, it was that Newsom has made many enemies
since his 2018 election by a near-record 62-38 percent margin over Republican
John Cox.
Partly
that could be chalked up to the pandemic, in which he made public
health-motivated moves like ordering the vast majority of the populace into
lockdowns within their homes – if they had homes. He closed businesses and
churches, shut down most public transit and generally disabled everyday life in
California, all via executive orders enabled by a state of emergency he called
without consent or input from the state Legislature.
This
brought accusations of dictatorial, one-size-fits-all behavior.
Despite
all this, Newsom managed to keep all previously well-known Democrats off the
ballot’s replacement governor list.
He
may not do so well at disciplining his party next spring. Newsom could face challenges
from the likes of former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, his defeated
2018 primary opponent, and he might be challenged by newcomers like Kevin
Paffrath of Ventura, the 29-year-old financial blogger who won more votes than
any other Democrat among the corps of replacement candidates.
There
will surely be plenty of Republican opposition in the June vote, too. That
election will run on the “Top Two” system sometimes called the “jungle
primary,” where the two leading vote-getters face off again in the November
general election even if one of them wins a majority in the primary.
Republicans who might run again next year certainly include talk show
host Larry Elder, the leading replacement candidate who opposes virtually all
government regulations as he is a GOP figure. In the recall, Elder promised to
end all state restrictions on public gatherings and any government vaccination
and masking mandates.
He
ran, in short, as the anti-Newsom from the day he forced his way onto the ballot
over objections from the Newsom-appointed secretary of state, who noted some
incomplete portions of tax records he was compelled to make public.
Another
Republican likely to show up for the primary is former San Diego Mayor Kevin
Faulconer, who ran a very conventional campaign this year and must get more
imaginative to have a significant chance next spring. Faulconer also could use
a charisma transplant.
Cox,
too, might take another shot despite his abysmal showing in the recall. The San
Diego County businessman faced one humiliating moment during a debate when he
was interrupted and served a subpoena in a legal case alleging he owes one firm
about $100,000 from bills run up during his losing 2018 run.
There’s
also Kevin Kiley, a Republican state assemblyman from the Sacramento suburbs
who ran during the recall as essentially the purest of the GOP possibilities.
Kiley was given to purveying the occasional disprovable half-truth during his
run.
This
didn’t get many votes in 2021, but things could be different in June, when the
electorate may be far larger than this month’s.
Any of these
Republicans could also run for the U.S. Senate against appointed Democratic
U.S. Sen. Alex Padilla.
Newsom
remains the central figure in all this. Just as in 2018, he overcame admitted
moral failings in the recall election, but things like his too-large and
too-inside birthday dinner for a lobbyist pal may rise up again and strike him
down if there are other major Democrats and not just Republicans in the June
field.
All
of which means that even though we know who will serve as California governor
for the next year, things remain unsettled beyond that. For Newsom most likely
emerges from the recall somewhat weakened, rather than strengthened like most
other politicians who survive recall elections.
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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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