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How California’s Top Democrats Paved the Way for a Republican Governor This Fall

by Norman Solomon
Looking out for the 1 percent
Four weeks from now, a right-wing Republican could win the governor's office in California. Some polling indicates that Democrat Gavin Newsom is likely to lose his job via the recall election set for Sept. 14. When CBS News released a poll on Sunday, Gov. Newsom’s razor-thin edge among likely voters was within the margin of error. How this could be happening in a state where Republicans are only 24 percent of registered voters is largely a tale of corporate-friendly elitism and tone-deaf egotism at the top of the California Democratic Party.

Newsom has always been enmeshed with the power of big money. "Gavin Newsom wasn't born to wealth and privilege but as a youngster he was enveloped in it as the surrogate son of billionaire Gordon Getty,” longtime conservative California journalist Dan Walters has pointed out . “Later, Getty's personal trust fund -- managed by Newsom's father -- provided initial financing for business ventures that made Newsom wealthy enough to segue into a political career as a protégé of San Francisco's fabled political mastermind, Willie Brown." In 1996, as mayor, Brown appointed Newsom to the city’s Parking and Traffic Committee. Twenty-five years later, Newsom is chief executive of a state with the world’s fifth-largest economy .

Last November, Newsom dramatized his upper-crust arrogance of “Do as I say, not as I do.” Photos emerged that showed him having dinner with a corporate lobbyist friend among people from several households, all without masks, in a mostly enclosed dining room -- at an extremely expensive Napa Valley restaurant called The French Laundry -- at a time when Gov. Newsom was urging Californians to stay away from public gatherings and to wear masks. The governor’s self-inflicted political wound for hypocrisy badly damaged his image .

After deep-pocketed funders teamed up with the state’s Republican Party to circulate petitions forcing a recall election, initial liberal optimism gladly assumed that the GOP was overplaying its hand. But the recall effort kept gaining momentum. Now, there’s every indication that Republicans will vote at a significantly higher rate than Democrats -- a fact that speaks not only to conservative fervor but also to the chronic detachment of the state’s Democratic Party from its base.

Newsom’s most fervent boosters include corporate interests, mainline labor unions and the California Democratic Party. Just about every leader of the CDP, along with the vast majority of Democrats in the state legislature, is pleased to call themselves “progressive.” But the label is often a thin veneer for corporate business as usual.

For instance, the CDP’s platform has long been on record calling for a single-payer healthcare system in California. Such measures passed the legislature during the time when Republican Arnold Schwarzenegger was governor from 2003 to 2011, and he surprised no one by vetoing the bills . But the heavily-Democratic legislature has obliged the latest two Democratic governors, Jerry Brown and Newsom, by bottling up single-payer legislation; it’s been well understood that Brown and Newsom wanted to confine the state party’s support for single-payer to lip service.

In the same vein, the CDP’s current chair, Rusty Hicks, signed a pledge that the state party would not accept fossil-fuel money. But he went on to do exactly that to the tune of several hundred thousand dollars.

As an elected member of the California Democratic Party’s central committee during the last decade, I’ve often witnessed such top-down maneuvers. Frequently, the CDP’s most powerful leaders are in a groove of thwarting the progressive aspirations of the party’s bedrock supporters -- and blocking measures that would materially improve the lives of millions of Californians.

“This is what happens when the culture of high-priced consultants and cult of personality meets a corporate-controlled legislature and party,” said Karen Bernal, a Sacramento-based activist who chaired the CDP’s large Progressive Caucus for six years. She told me: “The campaign promises and vows of support for progressive policy are revealed to be nothing more than performative, while the hopes and dreams of the party’s progressive base are sent to die in committee and behind closed doors. The end result is a noticeable lack of fight when it’s most needed.”

Now, with the recall election barreling down on the state, the routinely aloof orientation of the state party’s structure is coming back to haunt it. Overall, the CDP’s actual connections to grassroots activists and core constituencies are tenuous at best, while Newsom comes across as more Hollywood and Wall Street than neighborhood and Main Street. No wonder Democrats statewide are less energized about voting on the recall than Republicans are.

If Newsom loses the recall, his successor as governor will be determined by who gets the most votes on “part 2” of the same ballot. In that case, you might logically ask, isn’t the “part 2” winner a safe bet to be a Democrat in such a heavily Democratic state? Actually, no.

On the theory that having any prominent Democrat in contention would harm his chances of surviving the yes/no recall vote on the ballot’s “part 1,” Newsom and party operatives conveyed to all of the state’s prominent Democrats: Don’t even think about it.

The intimidation was successful. Not a single Democrat with substantial name recognition is on “part 2” of the ballot, so no reasonable safety net contender exists if the recall wins. As a result, Newsom’s replacement looks as likely to be an ultra-right Republican as a Democrat. And if the replacement is a Democrat, it would almost certainly be a highly problematic fellow -- a financial adviser and YouTube star named Kevin Paffrath, whose grab bag of ideas includes a few that appeal to Democrats (like marriage equality, higher teacher pay and promotion of solar and wind farms) but features a lot of pseudo-populist notions that would do tremendous damage if implemented.

Paffrath’s proposals, as described by the Southern California News Group, seek “to make all coronavirus safety measures optional, to ditch income tax for anyone making less than $250,000, to use the National Guard to get all unhoused Californians off the streets and to give trained gun owners more rights.” As a clue to the inclusivity of the “centrist solutions” that Paffrath says he’s yearning for, he introduced himself to voters with a video that “features clips from Fox News and from conservative media host Ben Shapiro.” Recent polling shows the 29-year-old Paffrath neck and neck with the frontrunning Republican on the ballot -- bombastic Trumpist talk-show host Larry Elder .

Whether Newsom will remain governor past mid-autumn now looks like a coin flip. And what’s at stake in the recall goes far beyond California -- in fact, all the way to the nation’s capital.

California’s 88-year-old senior senator, Dianne Feinstein, is widely understood to be in poor health and suffering from cognitive decline as she -- with increasing difficulty -- navigates the U.S. Senate, now evenly split between the two parties. Under state law, if she dies or otherwise leaves her seat vacant, the governor gets to appoint the replacement. In a worst-case scenario, a Republican becomes governor when the recall election results are certified in October and thus for at least 14 months would have the power to select Feinstein’s replacement, thereby making Mitch McConnell the Senate majority leader.

Given the looming political dangers, Sen. Feinstein should resign so that Gov. Newsom could appoint a Democratic replacement. But such a selfless move by Feinstein is highly unlikely. Despite all the talk about loyalty to their party and determination to defeat the extremism of the Republican Party, corporate Democrats like Newsom and Feinstein routinely look out for number one. That’s how we got into this ominous recall mess in the first place.

____________________________

Norman Solomon is the national director of RootsAction.org and the author of many books including War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death . He was a Bernie Sanders delegate from California to the 2016 and 2020 Democratic National Conventions. Solomon is the founder and executive director of the Institute for Public Accuracy.

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by Save our State
Shame on Norman Solomon for this stupid campaign piece that is obviously for the Republican Recall.

Millionaire lawyer and radio talk show host, age 69, Fascist Republican Larry Elder has 20% of the vote according to the polls. See
https://www.liberationnews.org/psl-statement-on-california-recall-election/
8/12/21
Here are his reactionary statements:
Minimum wage: “The correct minimum wage oughtta be zero.”

Taxes: “We need to eliminate corporate taxes.”

COVID-19: “I would certainly repeal any mandates on masks and on vaccines that remain in place.”

Racism: “It is bullshit that racism remains a major problem in America.”

Sexism: “Women know less than men about political issues, economics, and current events.”

Abortion: “I believe abortion is murder.” Calls for prosecuting women who have an abortion.

Environment: “One of the first things I would do as governor is overturn CEQA” (California Environmental Quality Act), to open the way for unlimited corporate development.

Police killings: “Police are more reluctant to pull the trigger on Black people than on whites.”

Public schools: Condemns teacher unions and calls for public funding of private schools.

Mass Incarceration: Opposes early release programs and reduction of 73,000 felony convictions.

Death penalty: Moratorium declared by Newsom in 2019 would likely be ended and over 730 people on California’s death row would be facing execution.

Immigration: Insists that undocumented workers, who do virtually all field work in the country’s leading food producing state, and many of the other hardest jobs, must be labeled “illegal aliens.” Newsom’s issuing of $500 in assistance to those essential workers was a key element in propelling the recall campaign.

And here are his reactionary positions:
He proudly announced the support of an arrested January 6, 2021 seditious insurrectionist, Brandon Straka. See
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/california-recall-larry-elder-brandon-straka_n_6112bffde4b09fba0e6a686c
8/10/21

He is an anti-vaxxer and relies on quack doctors for his position. See https://www.huffpost.com/entry/california-recall-larry-elder-vaccine_n_610d8baae4b0cc1278bc0550
8/6/21

ANY REPUBLICAN GOVERNOR MEANS THE END OF THE LABOR CODE AND THE PROMOTION OF THE DEATH CULT WE NOW SEE IN TEXAS AND FLORIDA. That is why no Republican must be allowed to win anything. The Democrats have their problems, but the recall is not the answer.

LABOR UNIONS ARE PHONE BANKING TO STOP THE RECALL as that is how all elections are won: with phone banking and precinct walking. That is how Pres. Biden won, with labor unions walking precincts for him. The phone bankers are learning that most Americans hardly know what day it is, much less how a recall works. They need the personal touch to tell them why they must vote and vote no on the recall.

REPUBLICANS VOTE IN EVERY ELECTION AND 6 MILLION VOTED FOR NAZI TRUMP IN 2020.

Democrats are not reliable voters and the 11 million who voted for Biden in 2020 are now being mobilized with phone banking to vote and vote no on the recall.

This is happening because Trump is a sore loser and the Republican Party is trying the back door way, the recall, to retake the US Senate with a possible Republican appointment to the US Senate to replace Senator Feinstein, since they know that recall elections are usually low voter turnout elections, unless there is a serious campaign to defeat the recall with phone banking and precinct walking.

WE ARE VOTING NO ON THE RECALL BECAUSE OUR LIVES ARE ON THE LINE. Join the 35,000 out of 511,000 vote by mail recipients who have returned their ballots in San Francisco by Voting No on the Recall, put your ballot in the envelope, seal, sign and complete the envelope and mail it today. For daily updates on San Francisco's ballot return, see https://www.sfelections.org/tools/election_data/vbm_turnout.php

Who has the power?
We have the power!
What kind of power?
Voting Power!
by confetti
The state’s Democratic Party is chronically detached from its base because it is, like the Republican Party, a capitalist party that will always put profits ahead of human needs.

Solomon, who is no fool (and certainly does NOT want a Republican governor), is mobilized, along with the reported $46 million dollars being spent to defend Newsom, to bolster a structure that is corrupt and rotten through and through.

Solomon, Bernie Sanders, AOC and the squad, and others who promote illusions that the Democratic Party can be reformed may make careers for themselves over decades, while working class people get sicker, poorer, more war weary, or dead.

Inevitably these reformists (or pragmatists) always fall in line and sit down when called upon to do so-- to the real detriment of all of us.

Have no illusions about the fascist effort to recall Newsom, but take heed of Solomon's insider's description about how clueless his party increasingly becomes.
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