Skip to content

Ratings Change: Open Seat Shifts California Race to Toss-Up

Rep. Ed Royce’s retirement gives Democrats a shot

California Rep. Ed Royce announced Monday he would not run for re-election. That gives Democrats an opportunity take over a seat without having to defeat an incumbent, Nathan L. Gonzales writes. (Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call file photo)
California Rep. Ed Royce announced Monday he would not run for re-election. That gives Democrats an opportunity take over a seat without having to defeat an incumbent, Nathan L. Gonzales writes. (Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call file photo)

Democrats have been targeting California’s 39th District ever since Hillary Clinton carried it over Donald Trump in the last presidential race. But Republican Rep. Ed Royce’s retirement announcement Monday gives them an opportunity to take over a seat without having to defeat an entrenched incumbent who had $3.5 million in his campaign account at the end of September.

The scope of the Democratic opportunity in Southern California depends on whether Clinton’s performance is the new normal (she carried the district 52 percent to 43 percent) or whether 2016 was an aberration. The 39th District could still be fundamentally Republican, considering 2012, when Mitt Romney carried it 51 percent to 47 percent and Republican Elizabeth Emken outperformed Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein 51 percent to 49 percent, even though she lost statewide by 25 points.

It’s possible that the upscale Republicans in Orange County still want to vote Republican (they re-elected Royce in 2016 with 57 percent) but couldn’t vote for Trump. It’s also possible that those anti-Trump Republicans could use 2018 to send a check-and-balance message to the White House.

Watch: 14 Ratings Shift Favor Toward Democrats in 2018

[jwp-video n=”1″]

Under normal conditions, Republicans may even have an edge to hold the open seat. But with a staggering deficit in the national generic ballot (Democrats have a 48 percent to 37 percent lead, according to the RealClearPolitics average), it’s tough to give the GOP any sort of edge in this political environment.

Democrats also have multiple credible candidates running including self-funders Gil Cisneros (who won the lottery) and Andy Thorburn (an insurance executive). Wall Street analyst-turned pediatrician Mai-Khanh Tran, former Obama appointee Sam Jammal, and former Cal State Fullerton chemistry professor Phil Janowicz are also running.

There is some risk Democrats get locked out of the general election if the crowd of candidates divides the vote evenly enough in the June 5 primary to allow two Republicans to finish in the top two. But that would require the GOP field to be limited to a couple of candidates, which may not be known for a few weeks. The filing deadline is March 9.

Some initial names mentioned include former Orange County Republican Party Chairman Scott Baugh, Orange County Supervisor Michelle Park Steel, former Royce staffer and Orange County supervisor candidate Young Kim, former state Senate Minority Leader Bob Huff, Assemblyman Phillip Chen, and former Assemblywoman Ling Ling Chang, according to GOP sources. But some of those candidates have their eye on the 48th District in case Republican Rep. Dana Rohrabacher leaves or loses.

We’re changing the Inside Elections rating of the race for California’s 39th District from Leans Republican to Toss-Up. If Republicans don’t get a good candidate, the rating will shift further toward Democrats. And this is the type of seat and race Democrats have to win in order to win the majority.

Recent Stories

Trump announces plan to replace FBI director with Kash Patel

Trump’s USDA pick could focus on foreign investments in agricultural land

Angling for open Appropriations seats set to ratchet up

Trump names pick for NIH director

Countries criticize Trump tariff plans, which could flout trade pacts

Trump and recess appointments: A procedural and legal quagmire