Opinion Could Larry Elder Really Replace California Gov. Gavin Newsom? - The conservative radio host leads all other candidates, but a majority will have to reject the incumbent first.

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Why shouldn’t a conservative Republican like Larry Elder be leading the race to recall California Gov. Gavin Newsom ?

Mr. Elder is an attorney, bestselling author, documentary filmmaker and successful talk-radio host who was born and raised in Los Angeles. True, he’s an amateur when it comes to electoral politics, but look at what the professionals like Mr. Newsom, a liberal Democrat, have done to the most populous state.

Crime has climbed in California’s largest cities, while left-wing district attorneys compete to determine who can prosecute the fewest miscreants. The state’s homelessness rate is third highest in the country after Hawaii and New York, and it’s rising, which might have something to do with heavy-handed zoning restrictions and environmental regulations that limit the construction of affordable housing. Californians pay energy bills that are significantly higher than the national average and well above what customers pay in neighboring states like Oregon. Yet millions of residents experienced rolling blackouts in 2019 when a state utility purposely cut off power to avoid wildfires caused by outdated electric lines. And that’s what life was like in this progressive Eden before the pandemic.

Mr. Elder told me in an interview this week that the state’s over-the-top Covid response and the governor’s aristocratic personal behavior probably did more than anything else to put his job in jeopardy. In a CNN interview last year, Mr. Newsom implied that his children, who attend private school, were still learning remotely. In reality, they had returned to in-person instruction months earlier, while the public schools remained closed in deference to the state’s powerful teachers unions.

Nor has Mr. Newsom been able to live down his infamous private dinner at a fancy French restaurant in defiance of his own Covid restrictions, Mr. Elder said. “People are angry that the state was shut down in such a severe way during the pandemic while this man was sitting in a restaurant with lobbyists and healthcare professionals—violating the very mandates they wrote.” It wasn’t the only example of the rules not applying to the governor, said Mr. Elder. Mr. Newsom’s own winery in Napa County remained open last year while he ordered other wineries and businesses across the state to close their indoor operations.

Mr. Newsom won a decisive victory in 2018 with 61.9% of the vote over Republican John Cox. But California happens to be one of 19 states that allows voters to change their mind and remove an elected official—for any reason—before his term ends. In July, California’s secretary of state certified that petitioners had met the signature threshold for triggering a recall election, and voters will head to the polls on Sept. 14.

The ballot will ask two questions: Should Mr. Newsom be recalled and, if so, who should replace him? For the recall to succeed, a majority of voters must support it, but any would-be successor to the governor needs only a plurality. When Californians recalled Democratic Gov. Gray Davis in 2003, they replaced him with Arnold Schwarzenegger, who won 48.6% of the vote.

This election doesn’t have that kind of star power, but it does have Mr. Elder, who says that he’s known well enough throughout the state to win support from people who don’t traditionally vote Republican. “I’ve been on the air 27 years,” he said. “I’m on in every major market, from Sacramento down to San Diego and everywhere in between. And people know me from talking about these issues and writing about these issues for decades.”

Californians are almost evenly split on replacing Mr. Newsom. A survey released Tuesday by the Los Angeles Times and the UC Berkeley Institute of Governmental Studies found that 47% of likely voters support recalling the governor, while 50% say he should stay, a difference that is almost within the poll’s margin of error. Last week, an Emerson College/Nexstar survey reported a similar result, with 43% of respondents saying they would recall Mr. Newsom, and 48% saying they would keep him in office.

In both polls, however, Mr. Elder is the leading choice among dozens of candidates vying to replace the governor. His support was at 18% in the Times poll and 16% in the Emerson survey. His closest rivals, who include Mr. Cox, former San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer, and former Olympian Caitlyn Jenner, are polling no better than 10%.

Still, Mr. Elder remains a long shot. No prominent Democrat is challenging Mr. Newsom. The governor has a sizable war chest, and registered Democrats in California outnumber Republicans by almost 2 to 1. Yet even if the governor does survive, his days in office may be numbered. “The Governor faces trouble ahead,” Emerson reports. “A clear majority (58%) of voters said regardless of the recall, they believe it is time to elect a new Governor in the 2022 election.”
 
I thought he wasn't allowed to run..
Good lawyers got him on the ballot in time. And to repeat the article, he's leading on the Republican side of things.

If, and only if, the recall vote is "YES" (petition was for everything else to occur; totally different affair), the special election is on.

There are no Dems running if a special election were to occur, so right now, it's literally just Governor Newsom trying to convince idiots to vote "NO" for him to not to be recalled, and not to have a special election to oust him with a new governor.
 
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Californians love to be miserable, don't they? They **could** kick Newsom to the curb, but I seriously doubt they will. They pull this recall stuff a lot and they have yet to actually ever replace a governor (to my knowledge).
Davis was replaced by Schwarzenegger. That's how he became governor in the first place.
 
Just FYI, there are commercials running in California that say the recall is a "Republican power grab" and they "abused" the system to get the recall (the quotes are actual quotes from the commercial). It's making me turn my back on the Democratic party even further.
 
Imagine not dropping out of the race when your opponent is a black man.
I'd be inclined to agree, but then I remember how hard those Blacks Trump endorsed in 2020 got crushed in their House races. Then again, they were all small-name lightweights that brought nothing other than pandering, going up "Machine district" Democrats.

At least the Orange said "What the hell do you have to lose?" and got something.
 
Davis was replaced by Schwarzenegger. That's how he became governor in the first place.
Schwarzenegger isn't Elder for many reasons, to say nothing that the electorate is pretty different from the early 2000's. If Elder comes out ahead for this recall, it'll be a historic upset, even if it's in the state that oh-so-coincidentally keeps having to recall their elected officials.
 
Davis was replaced by Schwarzenegger. That's how he became governor in the first place.
My bad. Didn't even think of Ah-nold. Point still being that they recall all the time. My 40+year friend from Cali poo-poo's the whole thing and said "It's California. If somebody's not pissed off enough to recall, then something is wrong." He has a point.
 
Yeah, but he'll likely lose Republican votes doing that. Best thing to do is get Newsom to start it and Larry might pull that off, I dunno. I doubt it would really be covered either way.
I don't think the race card will be as potent for Elder. He is perceived as an Oreo already.
 
iirc the big shot in his favor it's that he just needs to get more votes, he doesn't need a 51 minimum or face a runoff, it's just "do you want newsom out" "if newsom is out who do you want instead"
 
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