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GOP dodges bullet, but faces tough future
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GOP dodges bullet, but faces tough future
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The California Republican Party, which has become virtually irrelevant in recent years, had a great opportunity last weekend to commit self-annihilation by electing an unrepentant, Donald Trump-loving right-winger as party chairperson.
However, sanity – or reality – prevailed and delegates opted for Jessica Patterson, who has lengthy experience in bread-and-butter politics and promised a “California Republican comeback.”
She ducked reporters after her election but sent out a celebratory email pledging, “Together we will take the fight to the Democrats and build a foundation upon which we will compete and win elections. That is our focus, and the road to 2020 starts right now.”
The GOP’s spectacular decline in California stems, in large measure, from the alienation of four large voter blocs – women, non-whites, suburbanites and those not yet middle-aged. So elevating a Latina millennial from suburban Ventura County into the party’s top position makes for better optics.
“I think we did dodge a bullet,” Yucca Valley Assemblyman Chad Mayes, a former GOP leader of the state Assembly who was ousted for being too moderate, told Calmatters after Patterson’s win.
That’s true, but while Patterson’s election over two right-wing rivals may have averted the calamity Mayes and others feared, that’s a long way from re-establishing the GOP as a significant force in California politics.
In fact, it may not yet have hit bottom, despite Patterson’s brave talk about rebounding in 2020.
Going into the 2018 elections, Republicans held a relatively paltry 14 of California’s 53 congressional seats, and voters cut that contingent in half, while expanding Democrats’ already massive majorities in both houses of the Legislature.
Democrats pounded on Trump’s unpopularity in the state and poured big money into a massive get-out-the-vote campaign that took full advantage of a new state law authorizing “ballot harvesting” by party workers. They captured seats that had been held by Republicans for decades.
That calamity befell Republicans in a non-presidential election year, and while voter turnout was relatively high for an off-year (64.5 percent) thanks to the Democratic drive, 2020 looms as an even more perilous situation for the GOP, especially if Trump is running for re-election.
Voter turnout in 2020 will be at least 10 percentage points higher, which will favor Democrats, and they may target other GOP congressional members, such as Devin Nunes of Tulare and Ken Calvert of Corona. Both won re-election by less-than-overwhelming margins in districts with relatively weak Republican voter registration.
With Republican voter registration now just 24 percent statewide, there’s probably little that a Patterson-led party can do to increase it substantially in less than two years and even improving turnout will not be enough.
If Republicans have any chance of stopping the hemorrhage of voters and officeholders, it lies in repudiating Trump on California-centric issues such as immigration and his vainglorious demand for building a new wall along the U.S.-Mexico border, and appealing to the state’s ever-growing number of “no party preference” voters.
California may be a blue state, but Democrats can claim just 43.5 percent of the state’s registered voters and Californians are still leery about taxes they would have to pay.
The left-leaning Berniecrat wing of the state Democratic Party is in ascendancy and wants a lavish expansion of government-provided services, such as single-payer health care and universal pre-school education, that would require big tax increases to finance.
Democrats could overreach, such as advocating repeal of Proposition 13, the 1978 ballot measure that limits property taxes. It’s very popular with the state’s voters, including most Democrats, and may open the door to a GOP resurgence.
Dan WaltersOpinion Columnist
Dan Walters is one of most decorated and widely syndicated columnists in California history, authoring a column four times a week that offers his view and analysis of the state’s political, economic,... More by Dan Walters