Why Isn't There A Democrat Running Against Republican California Senator Abel Maldonado?

[courtesy of California Progress Report]

Robert-Cruickshank.gifBy Robert Cruickshank

Abel Maldonado is one of the most vulnerable of the Senate Republicans facing reelection this year. Democrats hold a 40-37 edge in registrations in SD-15 and the district was given a D+7.8 rating in cali_girl_in_texas' latest rankings. And he has a long, conservative voting record - including a 20% lifetime rating from the California Labor Federation (as of 2006). Maldonado's moderate reputation should be put to its strictest test yet in 2008, with a very Democratic turnout in November and a Republican Party having to defend a record of economic crisis and budgetary disaster.

So why is it that NO Democrat filed to run for the SD-15 seat?! Is Maldonado being given a free pass?

When the filing deadline came and went on March 7, I was curious to see who was going to be the Democratic opponent in SD-15. As I called the registrar's offices in the five counties that make up this long district (Santa Clara, Santa Cruz, Monterey, San Luis Obispo, and Santa Barbara) I discovered that apparently nobody had filed. The CDP's online organizers helped investigate, and ultimately concluded that there was no Democratic candidate, as the candidate filing status at the Secretary of State's website confirms. Although former Assemblywoman Rebecca Cohn (who had represented AD-24, Santa Clara County, from 2000 to 2006) had expressed interest in a campaign for the SD-15 seat, no actual candidacy materialized.

As one of the most winnable Senate seats on this year's ballot, not having a candidate is a pretty big failure. And it obviously begs the question why this failure happened. Since it is the leader of the chamber that is responsible for candidate recruitment - in this case, Don Perata - this quote from last summer, from an August 2007 George Skelton column (now in the LA Times pay-only archives), is worth remembering:

"If the Senate's top Democrat -- President Pro Tem Don Perata of Oakland -- has anything to do with it, Maldonado will survive. "I'd be happy to go down to Santa Maria any time and knock on doors and say what a solid guy he is," Perata says. "I just admire him. I was just blown away by what he did, by his courageous stand on principle.""

This refers to Maldonado's break with the Senate Republicans - including Jeff Denham - and voting for the Democratic budget during last summer's standoff. As I explained at the time, however, this vote should not have been construed as overriding his long right-wing voting record. Maldonado voted against AB 32, and supported the Democratic budget only after Arnold promised to line-item $700 million in health care spending out of the final budget.