logo

California House race tightens as election nears

image
Created: 30 October, 2010
Updated: 21 November, 2022
2 min read

Here's an interesting statistic: at the University of California, a journalism project called the California News Service performed an analysis of the past 10 U.S. Congressional elections in California and determined that incumbents have won 97% of their races.

That's one reason why earlier this year, despite strong numbers for the GOP in House elections nationwide, and consistent predictions of upheaval by the Republican Party, The San Francisco Chronicle reported as late as July that only 2 California House races were even competitive, and one of them was for the seat of a Republican incumbent.

The Chronicle wrote:

      Three months before the Nov. 2 election, only two of the state's 53 House members - Reps. Jerry McNerney, D-Pleasanton, and Dan Lungren, R-Gold River (Sacramento County) - face credible threats to their re-election bids, according to party insiders and independent analysts.

But, as the election nears and money pours in from the RNC and conservative interest groups all over the country, many of California's U.S. House races are heating up, even as its two statewide elections- for Governor and U.S. Senate- show the Republican candidates lagging behind their Democratic opponents.

Take Andy Vidak. Six months ago, the cherry farmer from Hanford was traveling California's 20th Congressional District alone in his truck in a long shot bid to unseat Democratic incumbent Jim Costa.

But in the past few weeks, all of that has changed. According to the Center for Responsive Politics, two conservative groups alone (the Center for Individual Freedom and Americans for Limited Government) have poured over $300,000 into the race, fueling attack ads that tie Jim Costa to the Pelosi-Obama agenda in Washington.

Meanwhile, Democratic gubernatorial candidate Jerry Brown isn't the only one making some politically regretful gaffes. Ever since Democratic incumbent Loretta Sanchez made some racially charged remarks in a televised interview, her Republican challenger has closed in to a statistical tie for her House seat in the midterm election.

More Choice for San Diego

Van Tran, the Republicans' Vietnamese candidate for the district (one of many notable South Asian "rising stars" in the Republican party it would seem), has successfully seized upon and directed sharp criticism toward Sanchez's statement that "the Vietnamese" are trying to take this house seat from "us" -implying Latinos.

While only Tuesday's election will tell who takes which seats, it certainly looks like Republicans are going into California's U.S. House elections much stronger than they were six or even three months ago.

Latest articles

A wide shot of an Alaska city.
In a True Nail-Biter, Alaska Voters Reject Repeal of Top 4 Primary and Ranked Choice Voting
Two weeks after Election Day, Alaska voters finally know the fate of their election system. The choice before them was keep the nonpartisan Top 4 primary system with ranked choice voting in the general election or go back to partisan control over elections....
21 November, 2024
-
5 min read
Coin with Trump's face on it.
How Will the New Government Affect Independent Voters' Finances?
My rates! What happened to my rates? Partisan and independent voters ranked the economy the most important issue in the 2024 election....
20 November, 2024
-
9 min read
An elephant and donkey facing each other on a red bar.
Understanding The ‘Other Side’ Is More Important Than Ever
For some of us, just reading the title of this piece may be irritating — even maddening. If you’re scared about Trump’s election, being asked to understand the “other side” can seem a distant concern compared to your fears of what might happen during his presidency....
20 November, 2024
-
4 min read