The epoch times

Can California revive two-party competition?

Commentary

California desperately needs a two-party ⁢system. A‍ one-party system, like North Korea’s under ⁤Kim Jong Un, or China’s under Xi Jinping, just isn’t our way. It’s not us. Currently, Republicans hold fewer than one-third of the seats in the California Assembly and Senate, and are lucky if they can scratch up more than 40 percent of the ⁣vote in statewide races.

Just ⁤by the⁤ numbers, the GOP has to attract many more ​non-whites, who are a minority now in the state; and a large portion of whites are hard-core leftist Democrats like‌ Reps. Nancy Pelosi,⁢ Adam​ Schiff, and Katie Porter. The latter⁤ two, along with Rep.‌ Barbara Lee, who is ‍black, are vying to replace retiring nonagenarian Sen. Dianne ⁤Feinstein.

⁤ I was ​born in ‍Detroit in ⁢1955 and grew up in the nearby suburb of Wayne. A large number of immigrants came there, largely from Europe, to work in the factories‍ and enjoy the prosperity of the auto industry. ⁢The general pattern was they would vote Democrat because the party was allied with labor unions, and‌ advanced such reforms as Social⁣ Security, Medicare, and the National Labor Relations Act. Later, when ⁤the immigrants became prosperous, and often started new businesses, they⁤ revolted against the high taxes ‍and regulations and⁤ switch ⁣to⁣ Republican.

That seems to be​ happening now with the latest immigrants. Vivek Ramaswamy, an‌ entrepreneur from Cleveland, made a big splash at ⁣the first ‌GOP debate two weeks ago. Former South Carolina ⁢Gov. Nikki Haley of South Carolina, also of Indian background, ‍did fairly well from a different perspective. Sen. Tim Scott of⁢ the Palmetto State, who is ⁢black, made some good points on taxes, but ⁣fell flat. Perhaps next time.

In California, Republican state Chairwoman Jessica​ Millan Patterson is Hispanic. Harmeet​ Kaur⁣ Dhillon was born ​in India. A brilliant lawyer, she is the former chair of the San ‍Francisco Republican Party ⁣(yes, there are Republicans there) and vice-chair of the⁢ state GOP. In January, she came up short in seeking to replace Ronna McDaniel as chair of the national GOP.

‌ In the ‌U.S. ⁣House, Republican Reps. Michelle Steel and Young Kim, both ⁤Korean-Americans, have made impressive⁣ careers in a short time, also fending off Democrat challenges. Likewise ‍with Rep. Mike Garcia,⁢ who was targeted heavily by Democrats in⁣ 2022. ​Rep. David Valadao voted ⁣to​ impeach Trump over the‍ Jan. 6 mostly​ peaceful protest. But for some reason, Trump laid off opposing him the way he did Rep. Liz Cheney of Wyoming. Mr. Valadao won reelection last November, 52 percent to 48 percent over the Democrat challenger, Democrat‌ State Assemblyman Rudy Salas.
‌ ⁤ ​

Why Aren’t Republicans Gaining?

So, Republicans are putting up good people.⁤ What’s the problem? Why ⁢aren’t they gaining? Primarily, there are‍ three reasons.

​ First, there’s the legacy of Proposition 187 from ​1994, which would have​ cut off state benefits to illegal aliens. It passed, but then was thrown out of court. I wrote the Orange County Register’s articles opposing⁣ it, not because it cut benefits, but because ‍it turned nurses and teachers into snoops. It was a lesson on the importance of⁢ writing initiatives carefully.

⁢ ⁣ Some still ⁢are obsessed with it. ⁢Los⁣ Angeles Times columnist Gustavo Arellano headlined, “Prop. 187 forced a generation to put fear⁣ aside and fight. It transformed California, and me.” But the vote was 29 years ago. And the immigration debate now is national and concerns President‌ Joe Biden opening the borders to anybody ⁣to come⁣ in.

Even liberal Democrats are ⁣becoming upset. Just on Sept. ⁢6, New York City Mayor Eric Adams warned at a Manhattan⁢ town hall, “Let me tell you something, New Yorkers. Never in my life have I had a problem that I did not see an ending to—I don’t see‍ an ending to this. This issue will destroy⁢ New York City.”

Then there’s Communist China “very likely” slipping “military personnel” into ​America through the porous Southern‌ border, according to Mark Green, Republican chair of the House Homeland Security ​Committee.

And fentanyl. Vanda Felbab-Brown is the director ⁢of the Initiative on‍ Nonstate Armed Actors ‌at the liberal Brookings Institution. She‍ submitted testimony to the House of Representatives Subcommittee on National Security, Illicit Finance, and International Financial Institutions on March 23, 2023, for the “Follow ⁣the Money: The CCP’s Business Model ​Fueling the Fentanyl Crisis” hearing.

She said, “Three U.S. presidential administrations—those⁢ of Barack Obama, Donald Trump, and Joe Biden—have devoted ⁢diplomatic focus to induce and impel China to tighten its regulations vis-à-vis ​fentanyl-class drugs and their precursor chemicals ‌and ⁢to more⁤ diligently enforce these regulations. China, however, sees ⁢its counternarcotics enforcement, and more broadly its international law enforcement cooperation, as strategic tools that it can instrumentalize to achieve other objectives. …

“Since 2020, China’s cooperation with U.S. counternarcotics efforts,⁤ never high, declined ⁣substantially. In August 2022, China officially announced that it suspended all counternarcotics and law enforcement cooperation⁤ with the United States.”

The issue now ​is tipping toward Republicans—if‌ they can take advantage of it. People⁤ are OK with​ immigration—if it’s controlled, legal, and the​ immigrants aren’t being ⁣used as “mules” to sneak in fentanyl.

Former CNN reporter Steve Cortes describes himself ​on⁣ X as, “Patriotic‍ Populist. Bad Hombre. Born for a Storm. Ron DeSantis ⁤PAC National Spokesman.” ⁣On Sept. 7 ⁢he put ⁢up a new article on ⁣American Greatness, “Biden’s Border ⁤Chaos Damages America’s Schools.” He wrote how “schools across the country—not just in border areas—grapple to deal with an illegal influx that prioritizes⁤ foreign migrants above our own American ​children.”

⁣ Mr. Cortes tweeted the same day, “We cannot​ save​ America without ‌regaining control over our border and migration. Suspend massively-abused asylum ​programs, deport illegals, build ⁣the wall, and then reduce even legal⁤ immigration. Do we have the will to defeat the globalists and reclaim our sovereignty?”

That’s the issue today, not musty nostalgia for fighting Prop. 187.

Schwarzenegger​ and Trump

Second, Arnold Schwarzenegger’s ‍disastrous governorship went ⁤far toward “terminating” the state GOP. As ‍I detailed in The Epoch Times on⁤ Aug. 10 in, “The Media I


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