CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, MAY 9, 2023, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“DEMO
PRESUMPTIONS MAY FAIL IN COMPLEX SENATE RACE”
California Democrats have acted as if
both this state’s Senate seats automatically belong to them from the first
moment it became clear longtime Sen. Dianne Feinstein must step down sometime
within the next 20 months.
Early on, she announced plans to leave
office when her term expires at the end of December 2024, after her fifth full
term in the office where she’s been the most durable of the last half century’s
California politicians.
Three prominent congressional Democrats
–Adam Schiff of Burbank, Katie Porter of Irvine and Barbara Lee of Oakland –
continually act as if the ongoing race for the seat Feinstein will vacate due
to age-related difficulties will without doubt go to one of them.
All three are actively raising money and
priming supporters to vote next March, when they figure the California primary
election will cut the field down to two of them, for a Democrat-on-Democrat
contest in the November 2024 general election.
They showed no concern when frequent
candidate Eric Early, a Republican, announced his own candidacy in mid-April.
Early lost handily to Schiff in a 2020 congressional contest and never got past
the primaries in running for state attorney general in 2018 and 2022.
But add him to the mix, and Republican
voters and others who don’t like the idea that Democrats figure this seat
somehow should belong to them forever now have someone to vote for.
Put another Republican – say Northern
California state Sen. Brian Dahle for one possible example – into the running,
and GOP voters would have two choices.
Now factor in California’s almost-unique
“top two” primary system, which applies in all elections here for state offices
lesser than president. This system has sometimes produced runoff elections
pitting two Republicans in legislative or congressional districts with heavy
Democratic majorities, when enough Democrats ran in primaries to splinter their
party’s vote and give GOP candidates both runoff slots.
That’s also happened in Republican
districts where too many GOP hopefuls ran and Democrats became the top two.
This so-called "jungle primary" system produced an all-Democratic
Senate matchup in 2016, when former state Attorney General Kamala Harris beat
then-Congresswoman Loretta Sanchez of Orange County.
In fact, Democrat-on-Democrat races are
fairly common in this state, where registered Republicans are outnumbered
almost 2-1.
Now mix in the possibility that Feinstein
succumbs to steady pressure on her to step down even sooner than she’s
promised. With Gov. Gavin Newsom having committed himself two years ago to
appoint a Black woman to the next vacant Senate seat, he would most likely name
Lee, who could then identify herself on next year's ballot as an incumbent, a
huge advantage in most political races.
Newsom made that commitment while
appointing old friend Alex Padilla to the Senate seat Harris vacated on
becoming vice president. Padilla later won election on his own, but Newsom felt
pressure because Black women vocally believed the former Harris seat should
have gone to one of them, as her moving up in rank left the Senate without any
Black females.
So Newsom essentially confirmed the
presumption by Black women – about 4.5 percent of the state’s populace – that
one of California’s Senate seats “belongs” to them, when in fact Senate seats
belong to no group, but must be won by individuals.
If Lee were to get Newsom’s nod before
the primary, she might dominate the Democratic vote and allow a Republican to
sneak into the runoff against her, despite the fact both Schiff and Porter have
far larger campaign war chests.
Meanwhile, Lee supporters are doing all
they can to set up just that situation. One example: Her campaign co-chair,
Silicon Valley Rep. Ro Khanna, the other day made headlines when he virtually
demanded Feinstein’s resignation because she’s been laid up at home with
shingles for more than a month, while President Biden’s judicial nominees
languished without majority votes to confirm them in the Senate Judiciary
Committee, where Feinstein has been a longtime member.
The upshot is that this Senate race is
fraught with possibilities for new and different situations that could make it
even more interesting than it now appears.
-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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