As recall looms, California governor aims to galvanize Democrats
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[August 30, 2021]
By Sharon Bernstein
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (Reuters) - California
Governor Gavin Newsom and his supporters are stepping up their fight
against a Republican-backed recall with a barrage of door knocks, text
messages and outreach to communities of color as opinion polls show the
Democrat in danger of losing.
The group Voto Latino exclusively told Reuters it plans to spend about
$1 million ahead of the Sept. 14 recall vote to try to persuade 600,000
young Latinos to cast ballots for Newsom, highlighting his need to spur
more enthusiasm among Black and Latino voters.
Democrats outnumber Republicans in California more than two-to-one.
President Joe Biden won the state by nearly 30 percentage points last
year. Half of the state's registered voters and 91% of Democrats said in
a July 27 poll by the University of California, Berkeley, Institute for
Governmental Studies that they want to retain the first-term governor.
But a perfect storm of issues energizing Republicans - and complacency
among Democrats who think the governor has it in the bag - has the
recall election looking much closer than expected.
Like Democrats across the country, Newsom has taken heat throughout the
COVID-19 pandemic from opponents of public health shutdowns, mask
mandates and school closures. He also is grappling with a rise in cases
of homelessness and homicides, extreme drought and devastating
wildfires.
A successful recall would serve as a wake-up call for Democrats already
facing the threat of losing their majorities in Congress in the 2022
U.S. midterm elections, said Democratic strategist Steven Maviglio.
Maviglio served as press secretary for Democrat Gray Davis, ousted as
California's governor by Hollywood action star Arnold Schwarzenegger in
the state's last recall in 2003.
Maviglio said Democrats must take the election seriously to avoid the
same fate for Newsom, a former lieutenant governor and mayor of San
Francisco.
"Democrats need a slap in the face to get off the sofa and fill out that
form," he said.
TURNOUT KEY
The Patriot Coalition, a group angered by Newsom's policies on
immigration and crime, spearheaded the effort to remove him. Their
campaign gained steam as frustration mounted over Newsom's pandemic
policies and a judge granted them extra time to get enough signatures to
put the recall on a ballot.
Voters will be asked to make two separate decisions - whether Newsom
should be removed, and who should replace him.
If Newsom is recalled, he will almost certainly be succeeded by a
Republican with comparatively little statewide support. The winner needs
only a plurality of votes to become governor, and just one little-known
Democrat is among the replacement choices.
Conservative talk show host Larry Elder leads recent polls, followed by
businessman John Cox and former San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer.
Newsom goes into the final weeks of the race with a war chest of more
than $51 million, campaign finance records show, compared to about $6
million for those seeking to unseat him.
Keenly aware that turnout could decide the special election, Newsom's
team is rolling out new daily messages predicting dire consequences for
Democratic priorities such as abortion rights, immigration and other
issues if he is removed from office.
A Friday rally with Vice President Kamala Harris, a former California
senator, was canceled after a deadly attack outside the Kabul airport
killed dozens of Afghans and 13 U.S. service members.
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California Governor Gavin Newsom attends a news conference to launch
a coronavirus disease (COVID-19) vaccination supersite in San Diego,
California, U.S. February 8, 2021. Sandy Huffaker/Pool via REUTERS.
"There are no swing voters in this election," said
Newsom adviser Nathan Click. "There's no one who's choosing between
yes and no. The 'swing voters' are all Democrats who are choosing
between voting and not voting."
Just 36% of registered voters told pollsters at the
University of California, Berkeley, last month that they favored
removing the governor, with 51% opposed.
But when researchers dug deeper, they found that very few Democrats
were planning to vote - making the race exceedingly close with 47%
of the most likely voters favoring the recall and 50% opposed.
"What we found was an astounding gap between likely and registered
voters," said Eric Schickler, co-director of the institute that
conducted the poll.
The state sent mail-in ballots to all Californians who are
registered to vote. Data released last week showed Democrats had
returned their ballots by a rate of two-to-one compared to
Republicans, buoying Democrats' hopes that their voters were
beginning to understand the stakes.
But analyst Paul Mitchell, whose firm Political Data studied the
returns, said the early results could reflect Republicans'
skepticism of voting by mail rather than heightened Democratic
interest in the recall.
Former President Donald Trump's repeated false accusations that
mail-in voting was rife with fraud caused a shift in voting
tendencies among Republicans that others in his party are now trying
to counter.
Political strategist Matt Shupe, the Republican Party chairman for
Contra Costa County in the San Francisco Bay Area, said he sent
35,000 text messages last week to members urging them to return
their ballots.
"They need to not be worried, and they need to go and mail in the
ballots," he said.
Most of the ballots cast so far came from white voters, Mitchell's
analysis found. Newsom also needs to persuade voters in communities
of color to turn out if he wants to keep his job.
Groups including the African American Voter Registration, Education
and Participation Project; Black Women for Wellness; the Chinese
Progressive Association Action Fund; and the immigrant rights group
CHIRLA are planning get-out-the-vote activities such as canvassing
and phone banks.
Voto Latino, which targets voters ages 18 to 34, has sent out text
messages and digital advertisements urging people to vote, said
Ameer Patel, vice president of programs.
In coming days, he said, the messages will take on a more urgent
tone, warning that voting rights, immigration and climate could be
impacted if Newsom is replaced by a Republican.
(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and
Daniel Wallis)
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