Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Two Statewide Races to Watch This Year
By admin
Published 3 years ago on
January 30, 2022

Share

 

We can pretty much assume that Gavin Newsom will be re-elected this year to a second term as California’s governor.

Given that near-certainty, 2022’s most significant statewide race will be Attorney General Rob Bonta’s bid for a full term amidst rising public angst about crime. Newsom appointed Bonta last year after Xavier Becerra resigned to become secretary of Health and Human Services in President Joe Biden’s cabinet.

Ideological Battle for Attorney General

Bonta is strongly identified with the criminal justice reform movement that critics say is at least partially responsible for the uptick in property and violent crimes by reducing punishment for lawbreakers and putting more of them back on the street rather than behind bars.

Dan Walters

CalMatters

Opinion

A leading critic, Sacramento District Attorney Anne Marie Schubert, is not Bonta’s only would-be challenger, but probably would be the one with the greatest chance of unseating him. It’s a test of whether California voters see crime as a game-changing issue.

However it would play out, a Bonta-Schubert duel would be a straightforward contest between two ideological foes.

A more complex and therefore more interesting political match is emerging for the lesser office of state insurance commissioner, with Democratic incumbent Ricardo Lara facing Democratic Assemblyman Marc Levine.

Intra-Party Contest for State Insurance Post

Lara, a former legislator from Los Angeles, and Levine, who represents Marin County, may not be ideological twins, but both are more or less conventional liberals who generally pay homage to the Democratic Party’s established list of do’s and don’ts.

Their contest is becoming a case study in what happens when one party is utterly dominant. It fragments into internal factions — in essence, quasi-parties — defined by personality, ethnicity, gender or minute ideological differences that vie for influence.

One sees it in the perpetual infighting among Democrats in party strongholds such as San Francisco and among Republicans in the few places where the GOP prevails, such as Kern County. Nature abhors a vacuum and in the absence of two-party competition, it becomes internalized.

Accordingly, Lara and Levine are assembling coalitions of Democratic Party factions. Lara, who is Latino and gay, is counting on support from organizations that represent those two groups, for instance. Levine, meanwhile, has picked up major backing from the California Nurses Association.

Incumbent Accused of Coziness With Industry

Are there any real issues separating the two? Levine, whose district has been wracked by wildfire, basically accuses Lara of being too cozy with the insurance industry he regulates.

From the onset of Lara’s term three years ago, he’s taken fire from Consumer Watchdog, which sponsored the 1988 ballot measure that, among other things, converted the insurance commissioner from an appointee of the governor into an elected position.

Lara, however, has depicted himself as a stern and effective regulator while dealing with an insurance crisis ignited by the spate of wildfires.

Insurers have paid out billions of dollars to compensate victims of recent wildfires and some have threatened to refuse to cover property in fire-prone areas and/or abandon California altogether. Lara has intervened with a series of orders to insurers that they continue coverage in areas hit by fire, invoking a power from legislation he sponsored as a state senator.

The orders he says, “help give people the breathing room they desperately need as they recover.” He’s also ordered the Fair Plan, the state’s insurer of last resort, to offer more comprehensive coverage and proposed other insurance reforms.

It’s unclear, whether insurers will help Lara fend off Levine’s challenge. Were they to jump in with big campaign checks, it might hand Levine a weapon to persuade voters that Lara is their protector, rather than their regulator.

About the Author

Dan Walters has been a journalist for nearly 60 years, spending all but a few of those years working for California newspapers. He began his professional career in 1960, at age 16, at the Humboldt Times. For more columns by Walters, go to calmatters.org/commentary.

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

Facing Setbacks and Desertions at the Front, Ukraine Detains Commanders

DON'T MISS

Ohio State’s Ryan Day Earns Vindication With Buckeyes’ First National Title Since 2014

DON'T MISS

Trump Signed an Order to End Birthright Citizenship. What Is It and What Does That Mean?

DON'T MISS

Migrants Stranded When Thousands of Appointments to Enter the US Are Canceled

DON'T MISS

Valley Crime Stoppers’ Most Wanted Person of the Day: Trent Tresean Williams

DON'T MISS

Palestinians Confront a Landscape of Destruction in Gaza’s ‘Ghost Towns’

DON'T MISS

Could Patrick Mahomes’ Actions Lead to NFL Flopping Crackdown?

DON'T MISS

Stock Market Today: Wall Street Begins Trump’s Second Term with a Drift Higher

DON'T MISS

Billionaires, Tech Titans, Presidents: A Guide to Who Stood Where at Trump’s Inauguration

DON'T MISS

Dangerous Winds Return to Southern California as New Wildfires Break Out

UP NEXT

Voices for Justice: Diverse Figures Unite in Support of Palestine

UP NEXT

California Housing Crisis Will Get Worse as LA Fires Destroy Homes

UP NEXT

Gov. Newsom, Mayor Bass Targeted in Wildfire Witch Hunt

UP NEXT

As Crazy as It Sounds, Trump’s Approach to Foreign Policy Could Work

UP NEXT

The Biden Presidency: Four Illusions, Four Deceptions

UP NEXT

Can Democrats Be the Party of the Future Again?

UP NEXT

California’s Battle Over Taxing Multinational Corporations Heats Up Again

UP NEXT

Promises to Cut CA’s High Living Costs Clash With Progressive Policies

UP NEXT

If CA Wants to Lead on AI, It Can’t Let 3 Companies Hog the Infrastructure

UP NEXT

Even MAGA Needs Immigrants, It Seems

Migrants Stranded When Thousands of Appointments to Enter the US Are Canceled

34 minutes ago

Valley Crime Stoppers’ Most Wanted Person of the Day: Trent Tresean Williams

42 minutes ago

Palestinians Confront a Landscape of Destruction in Gaza’s ‘Ghost Towns’

53 minutes ago

Could Patrick Mahomes’ Actions Lead to NFL Flopping Crackdown?

59 minutes ago

Stock Market Today: Wall Street Begins Trump’s Second Term with a Drift Higher

60 minutes ago

Billionaires, Tech Titans, Presidents: A Guide to Who Stood Where at Trump’s Inauguration

1 hour ago

Dangerous Winds Return to Southern California as New Wildfires Break Out

1 hour ago

Oath Keepers’ Rhodes and Proud Boys’ Tarrio Released from Prison After Trump Jan. 6 Clemency

2 hours ago

What Melania Trump Wore to the Inauguration — Including the Hat

2 hours ago

Trump’s Executive Orders: Reversing Biden’s Policies

2 hours ago

Facing Setbacks and Desertions at the Front, Ukraine Detains Commanders

KYIV, Ukraine — Facing growing public pressure to address concerns over military leadership on the front as Ukrainian forces lose ground dai...

1 minute ago

Destroyed artillery on a road near the town of Vovchansk, in the northeastern Kharkiv region of Ukraine, on Tuesday, May 21, 2024. Kyiv has been slowly losing areas it reclaimed last year as its troops are stretched thin by a new Russian offensive in the north. (Finbarr O’Reilly/The New York Times)
1 minute ago

Facing Setbacks and Desertions at the Front, Ukraine Detains Commanders

Ohio State's Will Howard and Ryan Day
12 minutes ago

Ohio State’s Ryan Day Earns Vindication With Buckeyes’ First National Title Since 2014

President Donald Trump signs an executive order on birthright citizenship in the Oval Office of the White House, Monday, Jan. 20, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
16 minutes ago

Trump Signed an Order to End Birthright Citizenship. What Is It and What Does That Mean?

34 minutes ago

Migrants Stranded When Thousands of Appointments to Enter the US Are Canceled

Trent Tresean Williams, 25, is wanted on a felony, no-bail warrant of domestic violence. (Valley Crime Stoppers)
42 minutes ago

Valley Crime Stoppers’ Most Wanted Person of the Day: Trent Tresean Williams

Palestinians walk through the destruction caused by the Israeli air and ground offensive in Jabaliya, a day after the ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas came into effect, Monday, Jan. 20, 2025. (AP/Abed Hajjar)
53 minutes ago

Palestinians Confront a Landscape of Destruction in Gaza’s ‘Ghost Towns’

59 minutes ago

Could Patrick Mahomes’ Actions Lead to NFL Flopping Crackdown?

60 minutes ago

Stock Market Today: Wall Street Begins Trump’s Second Term with a Drift Higher

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend