Kashkari Will Lose, but He Gives GOP a Respectable Face

Thomas D. EliasOP-ED

No candidate campaigned harder this spring than Neel Kashkari, the former federal Treasury Dept. official and ex-Goldman Sachs executive who just become the first Asian-American ever nominated for governor of California.
 
He was someplace every day. His campaign issued a non-stop barrage of press releases. He willingly met with political reporters, who took him seriously even when he was at 2 percent in the polls.
 
Mr. Kashkari also won the endorsements of every prominent Republican who took sides in yesterday’s primary election. These included ex-Gov. Pete Wilson, former presidential nominee Mitt Romney (now a La Jolla resident), possible GOP presidential candidate Jeb Bush and Rep. Darrell Issa of northern San Diego County, chairman of the House Governmental Oversight Committee. Ex-President George W. Bush made fund-raising calls for him. There are no bigger GOP guns.   

The ‘Yes, But’ Portion

But Mr. Kashkari’s campaign was so cash-starved that during the month before the vote, the candidate who once said he couldn’t fund his own campaign because his net worth was “only” about $5 million felt he had to put up $2 million of his own cash (by his reckoning, about 40 percent of all his resources).
 
This was still barely enough to put Mr. Kashkari into the November runoff election, beating out primary opponent Tim Donnelly, an assemblyman from the High Desert town of Twin Peaks best known for attempting to carry a handgun onto a Southwest Airlines flight at Ontario International Airport two years ago. Before that, the Tea Party favorite’s main claim to fame was being a co-founder of the Minutemen group battling illegal immigration. Imagine what that might have done to the Latino vote.
 
Mr. Donnelly’s campaign manager, Jennifer Kerns, quit in mid-March, amid reports the candidate consistently refused to take her advice. He compared President Obama to Adolf Hitler and groundlessly accused Mr. Kashkari of promoting Islamic Sharia law. Yet, somehow, Mr. Donnelly almost managed to make the runoff, primarily because much of the Republican Party’s California base believed he was the only purely anti-government candidate available.

Establishment Prevails
 
Mr. Kashkari’s win meant that the Republican establishment beat back the grass roots GOP right this spring. In a contest that drew very few Democratic voters, Mr. Kashkari’s last-minute spending inspired just enough moderate Republican voters to back him. Many apparently feared having Mr. Donnelly top their ticket would drag down dozens of other Republicans in swing districts, while Mr. Kashkari might be a neutral factor.
 
As of early May, just over two weeks before the first absentee ballots went to voters, Mr. Kashkari had barely run any commercials. He was undefined to most voters before his last-week ad campaign, even as Mr. Donnelly tried to tag him a purely establishment hack.

At least Mr. Kashkari is a real candidate. While Mr. Donnelly railed vaguely against big government, Mr. Kashkari issued detailed position papers on job creation and education.
 
Mr. Kashkari’s primary win over Mr. Donnelly at least indicates the GOP does not have a total death wish, as it avoided nominating a candidate who could alienate even more voters than the California GOP already has. In a very lightly-voted election, with Democrats having little at stake in most places, Gov. Brown still managed to win a large majority over both Republicans combined.
 
It’s possible Mr. Kashkari will make inroads into that cushion by the fall, for he’s promised that if elected, he will frequently compromise with Democrats who dominate the Legislature.
 
The vote also might indicate GOP feelings against illegal immigration have eased a bit, as the party nominated the son of immigrants while rejecting a leader of the vigilante-like Minutemen.
 
The bottom line is that after flirting with a potentially deep electoral disaster, just enough GOP voters realized that their party would be a dead duck on many levels if it sent Mr. Donnelly against Gov. Brown, whose job approval ratings in polls this spring were well over 50 percent.
 
All of which probably means Mr. Brown, sitting on a campaign war chest of more than $21 million, will still have a clear path this fall, but the GOP likely will at least avoid a Democratic clean sweep of every competitive race in the state, which Mr. Donnelly could have made a distinct possibility.
   
Mr. Elias may be contacted at
tdelias@aol.com. His book, “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It,” is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net