CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2024, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D.
ELIAS
“TOP OF TICKET CHANGES SHARPEN FOCUS ON
CONGRESS RUNS”
As Labor Day approaches, bringing the
semi-official start of this completely unprecedented presidential election
season, the vastly altered scene makes the outcomes of several heavily
contested California congressional races even more important than usual.
The last four years have showed that
even the narrowest of majorities in the House of Representatives can make huge
differences on issues vitally important to millions of Americans.
And it is six California districts that
almost always are tightly contested which now provide Republicans with the tiny
margins they’ve lately enjoyed and exploited.
But if the GOP also wins the presidency
and the Senate this fall, there will be fresh evidence of how vital the House
outcome can be.
The stakes over the next two years may
include votes on a national abortion ban, whether to get rid of no-fault
divorce nationally and go back to finger-pointing and open scandal in divorce
courts, and whether same-sex marriages continue to be legal.
A narrow majority for either party could
also decide national policy on other vital issues, but those are among the most
prominent.
The same six California races remain
key. All are taking place almost 3,000 miles from the Capitol, but their
outcomes will have a huge bearing on what happens soon in that legendary
structure.
California, says the often-accurate and
non-partisan Cook Political Report, “is, along with New York, one of the two
most important paths to potential Democratic control of the House.”
If the Democrats win, they would be in
position to harry a renewed Donald Trump presidency from its first day, when
Trump has said he intends to be a dictator.
If they lose, Trump is likely to have a
completely free hand to do whatever he likes, legal or not, under the Supreme
Court’s presidential immunity ruling.
He could, for one example, send Army or
Marine Corps units to enforce his wishes everywhere without serious dispute,
disregarding the longtime American tradition that the military stays out of
domestic quarrels.
Five of the six seats most likely to be
decided by very thin margins this fall are now in Republican hands, enabling
the GOP’s current thin House majority.
In the 27th district around
Santa Clarita, incumbent Republican Mike Garcia has kept winning lately by
puzzlingly large margins despite a Democratic registration advantage. This
time, he faces Democrat George Whiteside, former head of the space tourism
company Virgin Galactic. It’s rated a tossup.
In Orange County’s open 47th
district, currently held by failed Senate candidate Katie Porter, Democrat Dave
Min, a state senator, faces 2022’s losing Republican Scott Baugh. This time
Baugh might be a thin favorite, as Min’s DUI conviction of last spring hurts
him.
In another hot Orange County race,
incumbent Republican Michelle Steel seems likely to beat back Derek Tran, the
son of Vietnamese refugees, despite her ready approval of almost everything
Trump does. After a heated Democratic primary last March, Tran still lacks
needed name recognition.
In a 41st district rematch of
their close 2022 race, longtime Republican incumbent Ken Calvert faces former
federal prosecutor Will Rollins in a test of whether the large gay vote in Palm
Springs will turn out in sufficient numbers to overcome Calvert’s advantage in
other, more conservative parts of Riverside County.
Another rematch, in a Central Valley
district taking in all of Merced County and much of Madera, Stanislaus and San
Joaquin counties, pits Republican Rep. John Duarte of Modesto against Democrat
Adam Gray, a former Assemblyman whose onetime legislative district forms almost
a complete overlay of today’s contested turf. Duarte won in 2022 in the
nation’s tightest race, decided by less than 600 votes.
Yet another rematch pits former
Democratic state legislator Rudy Salas against Republican Rep. David Valadao,
who keeps fending off Salas as the Latino vote never yet has turned out
sufficiently to help Salas. Will it this time?
Close races also threaten other
incumbents like Democrats Mike Levin in north San Diego County and Josh Harder
of Turlock. But Republicans Young Kim of Orange County and Kevin Kiley of
Rocklin, sometimes seeming threatened, will only lose in the unlikely event of
a Democratic landslide.
No one expects that.
-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.
No comments:
Post a Comment