Democrats liken Newsom recall effort - a legal option in California - to extremist ‘coup’
Volunteers with the Recall Newsom 2020 campaign hold a petition signing event at SaveMart in Sacramento on Jan. 5, 2020. Photo by Anne Wernikoff for CalMatters. | |
Unlike a coup, which is an illegal seizure of power, a recall campaign is a democratic mechanism written into the California constitution that allows voters to remove an elected official by popular vote. The campaign to remove Newsom from office backed by the California Republican Party and other conservative groups — largely over complaints that he has mismanaged the state’s pandemic response and overstepped his authority — has reached 1 million of the 1.5 million signatures needed to trigger a special election, according to campaign organizers.
Randy Economy, a senior advisor and spokesperson for the recall effort with a history of working as a political consultant for southern California Republicans, lambasted the “farcical and bizarre press conference,” which he called a sign of political desperation.
He also rejected as “horrendous” the claims that the campaign is tied to white supremecist groups or other extremists.
“Our recall effort is tied to all Californians,” he said. “Jesus Christ, they’re going to go there? That’s how bad the Democratic Party is in California.”
As Politico reported, Orrin Heatlie, the lead organizer of the campaign, has posted extreme views on social media, including one post in which he suggested that undocumented Californians be “microchipped.”
The recall effort has been buoyed in recent weeks by the endorsements of high-profile Republicans including former San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer, who is flirting with the idea of running for governor, along with former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee.
Wednesday marked the first time the California Democratic Party has publicly contended with the recall effort. If the petition drive succeeds, voters will be presented with two ballots: one up-or-down vote on whether to remove Newsom and a second to choose his replacement. That format would require state Democrats to make a difficult choice between renouncing the entire campaign or fielding a Democrat to compete on the second ballot — an insurance policy in case voters give Newsom the axe, but potentially undermining their message to vote against doing exactly that.
Though recall attempts are a perennial often-fringy feature of California politics, the only successful effort was the ouster of Democratic Gov. Gray Davis in 2003. The Democratic establishment opposed the effort, which was motivated by a boosted vehicle fee and by Davis’ handling of the state’s electricity crisis. But Democrats did run to replace him, including the state’s lieutenant governor, Cruz Bustamante. Instead, voters booted Davis and picked the iconoclastic movie star Arnold Schwarzenegger as his replacement.
Asked what the party’s game plan is this year, Hicks demurred.
“Anything and everything is on the table,” he said. “But today we want to ensure that signers, endorsers and funders understand exactly who is seeking to further this effort.”
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