CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 2025 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“WHO COULD
SOLIDIFY REEP VOTES IF RUN FOR GUV BECOMES A 2024 REPLAY?”
Almost a year and
a half before the June 2026 primary election, California’s ongoing campaign for
governor has begun taking on some overtones of last year’s Senate race.
Remember the
early days of that one, when frequent candidate Eric Early, a Los Angeles
lawyer and failed congressional hopeful, was the only Republican in a race
involving three Democratic members of Congress? Those included eventual winner
Adam Schiff, Orange County’s Katie Porter and Barbara Lee of Oakland.
The three
Democrats assumed they were contesting for two slots on the November runoff
election ballot, but were frustrated when former baseball great Steve Garvey
entered as a Republican. Early, despite his quick entry, never had a shot at
galvanizing virtually all Republican primary voters behind him. Star quality
meant Garvey did, frustrating Porter and Lee, who gave up their congressional
seats to run. Both now cool their heels in California while Congress votes on
vital issues.
Similarly, the
large corps of Democratic candidates for governor clearly now believes they are
contesting for two runoff slots. They include the indecisive (but poll-leading)
former Vice President Kamala Harris, former state Attorney General Xavier Becerra,
ex-Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, ex-state Senate President Toni
Atkins, state Schools Supt. Tony Thurmond, Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis, plus
Porter.
Their common
presumption is that Democrats will finish first and second in the primary. But
the entry of Republican Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco could toss one
2024-style monkey wrench into their vision of the primary. Bianco lacks the
name recognition Garvey used to beat out Porter as the No. 2 Senate primary
finisher, but he starts with plenty of public awareness among voters likely to
support him.
It almost seems
like Bianco seeks trouble for its own sake. In 2014, he briefly joined the Oath
Keepers, a far-right militia group. He later disavowed the group's violent
actions, particularly those related to the January 6 Capitol riot.
During the
pandemic, Bianco refused both to enforce state health mandates in his county
and to get vaccinated, drawing criticism for undermining public health efforts.
Plus, under his
leadership, Riverside County jails experienced a spike in inmate deaths,
leading to civil lawsuits and investigations of alleged unconstitutional
policing practices. And, Bianco has said the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests
“always turned to riots” — while one study found 93% were peaceful.
In some ways,
that background makes him almost the perfect GOP primary candidate. Rebellious
GOP voters faced with having to choose a Democrat or almost no one might love
voting for such an outspoken rebel.
If he ended up
the only Republican on the ballot and performed credibly in debates during
Spring 2026, there’s a chance he could pull a Garvey and win enough GOP support
to beat out almost all Democrats running.
Loose cannon
Bianco might turn into the “bad boy” of the spring 2026 debates, saying things
no Democrat would dare and thus becoming a darling of Donald Trump voting
devotees.
A potential GOP
rival is Ric Grenell of San Diego, a Donald Trump favorite just different
enough to appeal to many Trump backers during the primary.
Grenell briefly
served as acting Director of National Intelligence in Trump’s first
administration, becoming the first openly gay person to hold a U.S.
Cabinet-level position.
Trump also named
him interim head of the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., despite a lack of
obvious qualifications. And he carries
out diplomatic missions for Trump as a special envoy. His Trump connection just
might make him more formidable than Bianco at consolidating the GOP primary
vote.
Grenell lacks
major political experience in California. But both Schwarzenegger and Garvey
clearly showed that experience is not a requirement to run for high office in
this state.
This might be
especially true if California Republicans are tired of seeing no one but
establishment Democrats running their state.
All this gives
the current muddled run for governor the potential for pulling a 2024 and
turning into a simple Republican vs. Democrat matchup in November 2026. But so
far, neither Bianco nor Grenell has emerged as a GOP solidifier. Of course,
that didn’t happen for Garvey, either, until last year’s primary was almost
upon him.
-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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