CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2023, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D.
ELIAS
“CALIFORNIA
MAY DECIDE WHO TAKES THE HOUSE”
Never has
it been more clear than today that a majority of just a few, even one or two,
votes in the House of Representatives can have massive effects on national
policy and priorities.
Republicans,
with help from a few California districts, took over the House last year and
essentially retired former Democratic Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who remains in
Congress but as a mere rank-and-filer.
Does
anyone, for example, believe that President Biden’s possible impeachment would
be the subject of hearings in the House today if Republicans were not in
charge? That is, they're in charge when they can choose a leader. If Democrats
were still running the House, there would have been no dispute about expanding
the federal debt ceiling, or preventing a government shutdown, and so on.
A swing
of just five votes toward the Democrats would change the status quo quickly,
giving them a one-vote margin.
The
results almost exactly one year from today might hinge on a few seats won by
narrow margins last year by candidates in California.
For
example, the GOP scored key wins in two Central Valley districts that some
expected to go Democratic. Without those victories by John Duarte of Modesto
and David Valadao of Hanford, today’s GOP margin would be far slimmer.
Both those
Republican wins were mild surprises, as the two districts involved, the 13th
and 22nd, feature pluralities of Latino voters. Their failure to
turn out in numbers comparable to 2018, when Democrats easily won the House,
was one key to today’s Republican majority.
In the 13th,
Duarte won by just 600 votes out of 133,000, far less than 1 percent. He will
again face former Democratic Assemblyman Adam Gray of Merced, who will try to
make up those 600 votes not only among Latinos, but from students at the
burgeoning UC Merced campus.
Just down
Highway 99, Valadao won in the 22nd district by 3 percent over
another former Democratic state legislator, Rudy Salas. Like the 13th,
this district voted for Biden, but here too, the Latino turnout cost the Democrats.
Elsewhere,
some count Democrat Dave Min, an Orange County state senator under fire since
his May arrest for drunk driving, as a sure loser. Min, a labor union ally in
the Legislature, admitted to his violation. Said Min, “... To my family,
constituents and supporters, I am so deeply sorry. (But) I will not let
this…distract from our work…”
It’s
unknown whether voters in the very tight 47th District, won in the
last three elections by Democrat Katie Porter, will forgive Min. Porter,
running for the seat long held by the late Democrat Diane Feinstein in the U.S.
Senate, has not withdrawn her endorsement of Min.
If Min
wins the primary, he will likely face Scott Baugh, 61, who once represented a
coastal Orange County Assembly district. This could be one of California’s
tightest races.
The
difference in outcomes in the Central Valley districts and the 47th
demonstrates why Democrats must turn out Latino voters. Porter did this in
2022; Gray and Salas did not.
Another
threatened Democrat is Josh Harder of Tracy, challenged by Stockton Mayor Kevin
Lincoln. But Harder has beaten opponents seemingly stronger than Lincoln.
Some have
expressed doubts about the political survival of first-termer Kevin Kiley in
the 3rd District and two-termer Mike Garcia in the 27th.
But
Kiley, who won by more than 6 percent last time after running poorly as a
potential replacement candidate in the 2021 recall election against Gov. Gavin
Newsom, now looks safe in this district centered on the GOP stronghold of
Placer County. Garcia, meanwhile, easily beat a challenge from former
Democratic Assemblywoman Christy Smith last time out. But voter registration in
his 27th district, centered on Santa Clarita, grows steadily more
Democratic.
Republicans,
as usual, think they can beat three-term Democrat Mike Levin in the 49th
District, mainly in north San Diego County. But the GOP has run
stronger-seeming candidates against Levin in other years than those now
opposing him.
If all
goes according to form elsewhere, it could take just one or two Democratic
takeaways here to swing the House back to their side. But nothing is certain in
any of these swing districts.
-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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