Money, Republican malaise and Tom Steyer: These are the things to watch for in California's 2018 statewide elections - Los Angeles Times
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Money, Republican malaise and Tom Steyer: These are the things to watch for in California’s 2018 statewide elections

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Get ready, California. What had been a behind-the-scenes dash for cash closely watched by few other than political observers is about to burst into public view.

Voters this year will decide who will succeed Democrat Jerry Brown as the next governor and whether they will send U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein back to Washington.

Before the June 5 primary, candidates will ramp up their campaigns with messages on television and stuffed into mailboxes. Here’s a primer on the state’s two marquee races.

The money

Candidates spent the final days of 2017 dialing for dollars before the year-end fundraising deadline. Their hauls for the last six months of the year will be closely scrutinized once financial disclosure reports become public this month. These are the dollars that will fund the television ads, mailers, campaign offices and field staff that could prove crucial in determining which two candidates advance to the general election.

In the governor’s race, Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom has dominated fundraising to date, in part because he entered the contest nearly three years ago. State Treasurer John Chiang and former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa have raised millions too and are hoping to reduce Newsom’s gaping financial advantage. Former state schools chief Delaine Eastin, Assemblyman Travis Allen and businessman John Cox’s reports will also be scrutinized to determine whether they have raised enough money to fund a statewide campaign.


In the Senate race, it’s crucial for state Senate leader Kevin de León to demonstrate he can raise enough money if he wants his campaign against Feinstein to be taken seriously.

She had nearly $4 million in the bank as of Sept. 30, before he announced his candidacy.

Feinstein, first elected in 1992, has the support of the party’s most powerful and moneyed interests, along with her own wealth to self-fund a campaign if necessary.

Among the obstacles De León faces is whether he can convince donors to risk angering the veteran senator by contributing to his campaign.

The financial disclosure reports will provide the first clear window into their financial standings.


The field

Both contests are uncertain until the field is set. And that means people are waiting for billionaire environmental activist Tom Steyer to make a decision. His entrance in either race would be an immediate game-changer because of his willingness and ability to self-fund a campaign.

Steyer has flirted with running for statewide office multiple times but has always taken a pass and instead spent tens of millions of dollars on contests across the country.

He has recently been preoccupied with a $20 million campaign calling for the impeachment of President Trump, an effort that helped him collect contact information on nearly 4 million people and that sparked rumors that he is considering a White House bid in 2020. Steyer recently said in an interview with C-SPAN that he is still weighing a potential run for office.

Another question: Will a prominent Republican candidate enter either contest? The filing deadline is March 9.

Republican relevance

The statewide elections will also be another measure of the dwindling power of the California Republican Party. The political home of Ronald Reagan and Richard Nixon last saw a Republican elected statewide in 2006, and the party’s prospects going into 2018 are not promising.

Recent public polling in the governor’s race shows that the two main Republican candidates in the race — Cox and Allen — are splitting the GOP vote. If that happens, no Republican gubernatorial candidate will appear on the November ballot.

In the Senate contest, no notable Republican candidate is even running.

Given the state’s top-two primary system, that means there could be an echo of the 2016 contest between then-Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris and then-Rep. Loretta Sanchez to replace retiring Sen. Barbara Boxer.

San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer could be the GOP's best shot at statewide office.
(Gregory Bull / Associated Press)

A Republican on the general election ballot would be a longshot, no doubt. It’s the effects a GOP shutout might have on the rest of the races that the party is worried about.

A Democrat-versus-Democrat campaign could dampen Republican voter turnout, hurting the party’s chances of keeping control of the U.S. House of Representatives. Democrats are targeting several Republican members of Congress who represent California districts that voted for Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidential contest.

That’s one reason top Republicans including House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy courted San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer — widely viewed as the GOP’s best bet for statewide office — to run for governor. He declined, but some hope he’ll change his mind.

Democratic divisions

Democrats have overwhelming political power in the state, controlling every statewide office, strong majorities in both houses of the state Legislature and the majority of the congressional delegation.

But there are deepening schisms between the liberal and the establishment wings of the party, first highlighted by the 2016 presidential primary between Clinton and Bernie Sanders. This fracture was on full display at the state party convention, and resulted in a bitter chairperson’s race that still has nerves feeling frayed.

Gilbert Feliciano, center, and other delegates who supported Kimberly Ellis chant in frustration over the California Democratic Party chair election results.
(Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)

This divide could play a role in the gubernatorial and Senate contests. The winners of each will shape the party’s future direction in California and the nation.

There will be an early display of those divisions, as well as an early test of the campaigns’ organizing skills, as candidates seek the official Democratic endorsement at the state party convention February in San Diego.

Eric Bauman, the state party chairman, has asked the candidates not to seek the party’s endorsement to avoid causing tension and disunity. No one appears to be heeding his call, and campaigns to court individual delegates are well underway.

Republican candidates will scramble for their state party endorsement in May.

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