Tuesday, October 8, 2024

Vote no and take the dough

Inside the Golden State political arena
Oct 08, 2024 View in browser
 
POLITICO California Playbook Newsletter Header

By Lara Korte, Melanie Mason and Dustin Gardiner

Rep. David Valadao (R-Calif.).

Rep. David Valadao (R-Calif.). | Rich Pedroncelli/AP Photo

DRIVING THE DAY — Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz is up in NorCal today, stopping to talk to the press at the Sacramento International Airport before heading to a fundraiser with Gov. Gavin Newsom this afternoon.

THE BUZZ: BACK PEDAL — To California Republicans, the bipartisan infrastructure law was “terrible,” “reckless” and “the last thing middle class families need.”

But once it opened a spigot of funding, they were eager to ask for the cash.

Four vulnerable House Republicans — Reps. Mike Garcia, Ken Calvert, David Valadao and Young Kim — all voted against the law in 2021, but subsequently lobbied the Department of Transportation for hundreds of millions of dollars for bus, road and other transit projects, according to letters obtained by Playbook.

The law, which passed with bipartisan support, is now seen as a signature legislative accomplishment of the Biden-Harris administration.

There’s a long tradition of squabbling over members who “vote no and take the dough." Democrats say such actions are the height of hypocrisy, while some Republicans say once a bill becomes law, it’s their duty as a representative to try to secure a piece of the pie. Nay-voters are often dinged for publicly celebrating projects funded by legislation they opposed. But the missives from these four California Republicans reveal how the lawmakers actively angled for funds.

Valadao, who is running against former Assemblymember Rudy Salas in the Central Valley’s CA-13, originally blasted the multi trillion-dollar package, saying it could become the “most expensive piece of legislation” in American history and one that could severely burden middle-class families.

He had much nicer things to say years later, when he wrote letters to Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg requesting grants for local projects, including a pedestrian bridge over a highway that bisected the city of Hanford.

“The project will boost commercial and business opportunities as it will provide a safe and convenient route to grocery stores, shopping centers, schools, healthcare, and recreational activities,” the congressmember wrote.

Valadao asked for at least $168 million in funding from the package in 2023 and 2024, according to the letters. It’s unclear how much of that was granted.

His campaign, as well as Garcia’s, didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Garcia kept up his public bashing of the legislation long after he cast his vote — and as the behind-the scenes jockeying for dollars was well underway. He appeared on Fox Business twice last year to say the spending was partially to blame for rising inflation.

At the time of those TV hits, however, Garcia had already boosted a number of grant applications from his district, including requests by the city of Santa Clarita to fund new zero-emission buses and a Los Angeles County ask for a hydrology and debris flow study for the community around Castaic Lake. (The latter ended up receiving $3.2 million from the Federal Highway Administration.)

Garcia, who is running against Democrat George Whitesides in one of the most fiercely-contested House races in the country, wrote or co-signed seven letters to Buttigieg backing at least $69 million in requests for funding from the infrastructure law.

The Santa Clarita Republican also knocked the law’s emphasis on equality and equity, telling one radio program “you don’t pay for equality through an infrastructure bill.” But this year he supported an application for a “Rebuilding American Infrastructure with Sustainability and Equity” grant, touting how the city of Lancaster’s proposed safety and connectivity project would serve disadvantaged communities.

Garcia also joined fellow targeted Republicans Calvert and Kim in supporting a $44 million request from Metrolink — SoCal’s regional passenger rail network — that sought to replace some of the system’s oldest and most polluting locomotives with new, cleaner trains.

Kim, who’s in a less-competitive race against Democrat Joe Kerr for her Orange County seat, said at the time of her vote that she could not “in good conscience” support the package, arguing it would raise prices and endanger the country’s economic recovery.

“Rep. Kim has never taken credit for something she voted against. She will always fight to secure resources for her district — that’s the duty of a member of Congress,” a Kim spokesperson said in a statement.

Calvert — now fending off a challenge from Democrat Will Rollins — went on a tirade against the law in a 2021 Facebook post, where he claimed it was “reckless spending” that would further inflame inflation. The final deal, he said, “erodes our individual liberties and freedoms.”

In the following years he would request at least $100 million in bipartisan infrastructure law funds for transportation projects in the district.

Calvert, in a statement, said he’s proud of his record bringing home money for Californians, and that it’s disingenuous to argue that members who vote against the bill should turn down money for projects that they did support just because they disagreed with other items in the package.

“The bill easily could have received more support from Republicans if it hadn’t been so recklessly overloaded [with] other wasteful programs,” he said.

GOOD MORNING. Happy Tuesday. Thanks for waking up with Playbook.

You can text us at ‪916-562-0685‬‪ — save it as “CA Playbook” in your contacts. Or drop us a line at lkorte@politico.com and dgardiner@politico.com, or on X — @DustinGardiner and @Lara_Korte.

WHERE’S GAVIN? Spending the afternoon with Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz.

CAMPAIGN YEAR

Rep. Mike Levin, D-Calif., speaks ahead of President Joe Biden at a campaign event in support Levin, Thursday, Nov. 3, 2022, in San Diego. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

Rep. Mike Levin, D-Calif., speaks ahead of President Joe Biden at a campaign event in support Levin, Thursday, Nov. 3, 2022, in San Diego. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky) | AP

MONEY MOVES — A sleeper House race on the border between Orange and San Diego counties is catching attention — and cash — from a behemoth Democratic super PAC.

The House Majority PAC late last week committed $1.56 million to ads defending Democratic Rep. Mike Levin against Republican challenger Matt Gunderson, according to tracking firm AdImpact. The ads are booked in the San Diego TV market as opposed to the more expensive Los Angeles market, which includes Orange County, but it’s still a sizable sum for a race rated “likely Democratic” by the independent Cook Political Report.

CJ Warnke, communications director for House Majority, told Playbook the investment intends to “correct the record” on the race’s defining issue: abortion.

Gunderson is pitching himself as “pro-choice,” and the wealthy auto dealership owner has spent just over a million dollars on ads to deliver that message to voters, according to AdImpact. His campaign sees the Democratic spending as proof Gunderson’s message is resonating with voters, leaving Levin without a potent advantage that’s boosted Democrats since the 2022 midterms.

“Now that voters know that Mike Levin and I are both pro-choice, they are focusing on the fact he’s not the moderate he claims to be,” Gunderson said in a statement to Playbook.

But Levin, who’s endorsed by Planned Parenthood, argues Gunderson’s abortion-rights record is flimsy. Gunderson himself has hedged on the subject, saying at a KOCT congressional candidate forum last week he’s “a states’ rights guy” and doesn’t support codifying Roe v. Wade through federal legislation.

An automated poll conducted for the San Diego Union-Tribune and KGTV-10 News, released Monday, found Levin leading Gunderson by double digits.

Adam Berkowitz, Levin’s campaign manager, said the team appreciates the help from House Majority to drive home their point. “Mike is being challenged by a self-funding multimillionaire Trump Republican, so we are happy to have a more level playing field," he said in a statement to Playbook. — Tyler Katzenberger

ON THE AGENDA

LEGACY OF A STATESWOMAN — Fine art, expensive jewelry and priceless political memorabilia are up for grabs today as the late Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s personal collection goes up for auction at 10 a.m. in Los Angeles.

Among the highlights: a signed photograph with President Joe Biden, a letter of encouragement from former President Jimmy Carter following her defeat in the 1990 governor’s race, and a mayoral desk plaque from her time leading the city of San Francisco.

CLIMATE AND ENERGY

DISAPPEARING NUMBERS — Gov. Gavin Newsom, in the midst of the great gas price debate, is pushing ahead with what could be a pretty expensive climate policy for drivers. His administration walked back an estimate that its new rules could raise gas prices as much as 47 cents next year, and consumer advocates are wondering where the replacement estimate is. Read more about the case of the missing 47 cents in last night's California Climate.

Top Talkers

AT THE GROWN-UPS TABLE — Silicon Valley’s tech titans are exploring new hobbies as their companies age. Not knitting or running marathons, but lobbying — and they’re spending a pretty penny to perfect their craft, The New Yorker reports.

JUMP FOR JOY — Great news, Elon Musk fans: you’re going to be seeing a lot more of the tech mogul on the campaign trail. POLITICO’s Alex Isenstadt reports the world’s richest man (and arguably its highest-profile online provocateur) will make visits to Pennsylvania to campaign for former President Donald Trump ahead of Election Day.

San Francisco Interim Mayor Mark Farrell speaks to reporters after being sworn into office at City Hall.

San Francisco mayoral candidate Mark Farrell, shown in 2018. | Joel Angel Juarez/AP

WATER UNDER THE BRIDGE — San Francisco mayoral candidate Mark Farrell wants to be your number two. That is, if you’re casting your first vote for rival Daniel Lurie. Farrell in an X post Monday asked Lurie’s voters to rank him second on the city’s ranked-choice ballot for mayor, despite the duo’s tense relationship thus far in the campaign.

“He’s relentlessly attacking me with his inherited wealth, but I get it — it’s a campaign tactic,” Farrell wrote. “I don’t agree with his tactics or his lack of experience, but I also recognize that many of his voters want the same thing I do: real change.”

Farrell made a similar (and reciprocated) pact with Supervisor Ahsha Safaí last week. But don’t expect him to make more friends: He asked voters to leave incumbent Mayor London Breed and Supervisor Aaron Peskin off the ballot entirely.

VANDALISM IN SF — Manny’s, a Jewish-owned cafe and event space in San Francisco, was vandalized with anti-Israel graffiti Sunday during a pro-Palestinian rally, the San Francisco Standard reports. A video posted to X shows an individual wearing a keffiyeh spray-painting the cafe’s facade.

It’s not the first time the cafe, named for owner and prominent LGBTQ+ community leader Manny Yekutiel, has been targeted by anti-Israel vandalism. But a message graffitied Sunday explicitly targeted Yekutiel, calling him a [sic] “Zio murderer.”

Yekutiel said he was “deeply troubled and saddened to have our community attacked like this” a day before the one-year anniversary of the Oct. 7 Hamas attack on Israel.

AROUND THE STATE


— Majorities of Bay Area voters say Silicon Valley’s leading tech companies “have too much power and influence” and “have lost their moral compass.” (The Mercury News)

— Same-party House contests in California and Washington have campaigns drawing up atypical playbooks to best their compatriots. (Bloomberg)

— Three former San Francisco mayors — including political heavyweight Willie Brown — are accusing Mark Farrell of breaking campaign finance law, and they want Attorney General Rob Bonta to look into it. (San Francisco Chronicle)

— Inside the real head-to-head battle defining California’s U.S. Senate race: Adam Schiff vs. Trump. (Los Angeles Times)

PLAYBOOKERS

BIRTHDAYS — Blain Rethmeier … Lillie Belle (Viebranz) Renner … 

BELATED B-DAY WISHES: (was Monday): Bruce Bialosky

WANT A SHOUT-OUT FEATURED? — Send us a birthday, career move or another special occasion to include in POLITICO’s California Playbook. You can now submit a shout-out using this Google form.

CALIFORNIA POLICY IS ALWAYS CHANGING: Know your next move. From Sacramento to Silicon Valley, POLITICO California Pro provides policy professionals with the in-depth reporting and tools they need to get ahead of policy trends and political developments shaping the Golden State. To learn more about the exclusive insight and analysis this subscriber-only service offers, click here.

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