CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 2025, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“REDUCED VOTING SHOWS DISILLUSION WITH GOVERNMENT”
When Gov. Gavin Newsom
looks out over the state Legislature while giving his still unscheduled state
of the state speech sometime in the next few weeks, he will see slightly
reduced Democratic majorities in both the Senate and Assembly.
He may wonder why. The
answer is much the same as it was in years like 2002 and 2012, when Democrats
voted in far lower numbers than previous elections because many were
disillusioned, maybe even uninterested, by state government.
Under Newsom, voters have
authorized spending more than $15 billion in state and local taxes to solve the
problem of homelessness. But California today has about 10,000 more homeless
than a year ago, and possibly as many as 30,000 more than four years ago, when
the total stood at about 150,000 and was already a crisis.
Under Newsom, the state
went from sumptuous budget surpluses to vast deficits, much of it papered over
by borrowing from the future.
Under Newsom, several
major corporations, including Chevron and Toyota USA and Tesla have moved their
headquarters out of state, even while leaving much of their California
operations intact.
All this seeming decline
has not toppled the state from its status as the world’s fifth leading economy.
But it left ordinary citizens far less than impressed with government.
Many reacted just as past
voters have. In a fiercely fought 2024 election, onetime voters in
unprecedented numbers simply didn’t bother. Back in 2020, more than 17.12
million voters turned out or sent in their choices, giving Joe Biden a record 5
million vote margin in California. Just four years later, with population
almost exactly at the same level, only 15.72 million voters cast ballots, 8
percent fewer. Donald Trump’s vote totals in California didn’t change much,
steady at just above 6 million. This was far less a Republican surge than a
Democratic plunge.
Democrat Kamala Harris won
California in the presidential vote, but with 9.6 million votes, about 1.6
million fewer than Joe Biden rang up four years earlier.
Newsom was not on the
ballot this year, so no one could directly express displeasure with his
performance. Instead, well over a million Democrats made their point by not
voting.
Just as California gave
Democrats the margin needed to create national popular vote victories over
Trump for both Biden and Hillary Clinton, this time their absence allowed Trump
his first-ever national popular vote win, which he claims as a mandate for his
entire agenda.
The last time California
saw something similar came in 2002, when then-Gov. Gray Davis drew 1 million
fewer votes than four years earlier, but still won. The voters’ clear
displeasure set up the 2003 recall election that made muscleman actor Arnold Schwarzenegger
governor for the next seven years.
Schwarzenegger remains the
only California Republican since 1998 to win statewide office. Democratic
margins are so strong here that even with 1.6 million of their previous voters
staying out, their presidential candidate still carried the state by about 3.5
million votes.
Similarly, there has been
a lot of talk, and reams of newspaper and Internet coverage, about Latinos
supposedly turning more Republican. That’s not exactly what happened. The raw
numbers suggest droves of Latinos who voted against Trump in 2000 (no one knows
the precise number) did not bother last year, wanting neither candidate.
Just as Democrats needed a
strong Latino voter turnout to stage their anti-Trump comeback during the 2018
mid-term elections that gave them congressional majorities, they now must draw
back the Latino no-shows of 2024.
This may not be easy; once
voters begin behaving a certain way, it can be difficult to get them to do
something different.
But by 2026, at least in
California, there will be fresh faces and names on the midterm ballot; some of
them are bound to be Latinos. It’s highly possible a Latino like former state
Attorney General Xavier Becerra, a proven California vote-getter who was
Biden’s secretary of Health and Human Services through four scandal-free years,
might be one of the two November finalists for governor.
That may be what it takes
for Democrats to draw many 2024 non-voters back to the polls and mailboxes.
-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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