Democrats have a chance for a steal
I seem to be swimming against the political current when it comes to
the strength of Jim Gilchrist’s campaign in the 48th Congressional
District special election.
“I think the most surprising result is the level of Gilchrist’s
support,” UC Irvine political scientist Louis DeSipio told the Pilot
following last week’s primary results.
That was a popular reading of the vote.
In that vote, Republican state Sen. John Campbell received 45.5%
of the vote; Gilchrist, who helped found the anti-illegal-immigration
Minuteman Project and ran as an American Independent, received 14.8%;
Democrat Steve Young got 8.7%; Green Party member Bea Tiritilli got
0.9%; and Libertarian Bruce Cohen got 0.8%.
Second place in the race went to Republican Marilyn Brewer, who
received 17.1% of the vote but doesn’t make the general election.
Now, nearly everyone has given the next vote to Campbell, but
there’s a not-so-quiet buzz that Gilchrist could make the race
interesting.
I wish it were true. Really. A tight race might mean issues get
discussed and certainly would give us more to report.
But I just don’t see it happening.
And I still think it’s because the low voter turnout was
especially pronounced among Democrats. (There was wildly low turnout
across the board, of course.) Gilchrist simply didn’t make that big a
charge; it just looked like it relative to the low turnout among one
of the parties. His 13,423 votes weren’t all that much more than
Cohen received in 2004, when he got 8,343, or 2.9% of the vote.
Now, I’ve heard -- and a few people have written to me -- that the
low Democratic totals I cited last week (In the 2004 general
election, more people voted for the Democratic candidate than voted
in this month’s special election, a total of 32.2%.) was caused by
some Democrats voting for Brewer.
It’s true she targeted moderate voters, including Democrats. And
it’s true that if all of her votes came from Democrats, the total
between her and the Democrats this time around equaled 33.5%. And
that would be pretty much a wash.
But there’s no way that all of Brewer’s votes came from Democrats,
which still leaves Democratic turnout particularly low and
Gilchrist’s percentage of the vote artificially high.
We even can approach the numbers a different way. Much as Brewer
ran to the left of Campbell, Gilchrist ran to his right. If you
figure that mainly what Brewer and Gilchrist managed to do was leach
away GOP votes, you can add all three candidates’ totals together to
reach a 77.4% GOP turnout, plus an additional 4.6% for the rest of
the Republican candidates.
That puts GOP-likely voters at 82% of the vote, nearly 20% above
what former Rep. Chris Cox received in 2004. That difference has to
come from somewhere, and that somewhere is in the lack of voting by
Democrats.
Even if you agree that some of Brewer’s votes came from Democrats,
it still leaves ample evidence that Democrats saw no reason to show
up for this vote. (As an aside, the Democratic Party should be
ashamed of itself for allowing that to happen. Not only has it failed
to support candidates here, but it isn’t even working to excite its
own voters. What’s a party for, exactly?)
There is, of course, a compelling reason for Democrats to come out
and vote: If the apathy shown already continues, Young could actually
steal this election.
Keep in mind, there were more Democratic voters in the 2004
general election than voters in this month’s race. If even half of
the Democrats who voted in 2004 show up on Dec. 6, and the rest of
the district doesn’t get more engaged, then one of the most
Republican congressional districts in the country will be represented
by a Democrat.
That couldn’t happen, right? But it seems more likely than
Gilchrist suddenly finding 30,000 or so more votes by December.
* S.J. CAHN is the managing editor. He may be reached at (714)
966-4607 or by e-mail at [email protected].
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.