CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 2023 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“HANDICAPPING THE SENATE RACE: SCHIFF THE
EARLY LEADER”
For much
of the last few years, Ro Khanna was considered a lock to run for the U.S.
Senate when Democrat Dianne Feinstein eventually succumbed to old age and opted
to retire.
But now
that Feinstein, the 30-year incumbent and former mayor of San Francisco,
officially says she’ll leave the Seante after next year at age 90, Khanna says
uh-uh.
The
four-term incumbent and former presidential campaign co-chair for Vermont Sen.
Bernie Sanders cited a private poll the other day when indicating he’ll stay
out of next year’s Senate primary, now shaping up as an all-Democrat dogfight
among Burbank Congressman Adam Schiff, Orange County Congresswoman Katie Porter
and Oakland Congresswoman Barbara Lee.
The poll,
he said, showed Schiff with a solid early lead among likely Democratic voters –
the vast majority of those participating in this state’s elections. Schiff
tallied 40 percent in that survey to 20 percent for both Porter and Lee, while
Khanna trailed considerably behind. A subsequent poll by the UC Berkeley
Institute of Government Studies found a tighter race between Schiff and Porter,
but some questioned that survey’s methodology.
Right
now, it appears that unless Republicans find an Arnold Schwarzenegger-like
non-politician to bear their standard, California can figure the GOP will have
no hope of picking up this longtime Democratic seat.
But which
Democrat, and why?
First,
there’s the question of why each of the three Democrats is running. Then it’s
logical to wonder what happens when this field is winnowed down to two for the
November 2024 runoff, where voter turnout should be high because the Senate
race will share the ballot with the next presidential contest.
All three
declared candidates have national bases. Schiff is probably the best known,
having led two impeachment efforts against former President Donald Trump. That
made him popular among Democrats nationwide.
Schiff,
62, with his longtime involvement in major issues, is a natural as a Senate
candidate. But he’s a white male in a state that has exclusively elected women
to the Senate for the last 31 years.
Meanwhile,
Porter was a lock to run this year both because, with fellow Democrat Alex
Padilla embedded solidly in the state’s other Senate seat, it may be a long
time before there’s another opening and because after the 2021 redistricting,
her congressional district became more difficult for a Democrat to win. She won
it last year by only a hair.
The
49-year-old Porter, who wields a whiteboard and biting questions during
congressional hearings, has her own national following.
Then
there’s Lee, 76, best known for her almost solitary votes against going to war in
Iraq and Afghanistan, wars that cost thousands of American lives. Lee also
symbolizes the belief that at least one of California’s Senate seats should go
to a Black woman, both because there are not now any female Black senators, and
because some believe that because California elected Vice President Kamala
Harris to the Senate in 2016, Black women are entitled to the seat despite
making up less than 4 percent of the state’s populace.
A
traditional way to handicap Senate candidates is by their capacity to raise
money. Both Schiff and Porter do well in that department, Schiff having started
this year with $20.8 million in his war chest and Porter with $7.4 million on
hand after raising more than $25 million last year.
Those
figures place Schiff and Porter among the top 10 congressional fund raisers,
while Lee trails far behind with barely $50,000 in the bank at the end of 2022,
after raising just over $2 million last year.
Then
there’s the charisma department, where Schiff has little and Porter and Lee
lots, an advantage that cannot be accurately measured until serious polling
begins early next year.
Anyone
betting just now would likely expect a November 2024 runoff between Schiff and
Porter, unless a yet-unknown and -undeclared Republican rises up soon to knock
one of the Democrats out of the general election. Should Gov. Gavin Newsom opt
to enter this race, it would of course change almost everything in this contest.
But that
appears unlikely just now, as does a solid Republican run for this open seat.
-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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