Rudy Salas & Gavin Newsom playing hide-and-seek

October 23, 2024

“Newsom’s downballot drag:” Rudy Salas has played hide-and-seek with toxic Gavin Newsom, a new report highlighted.

Reminder: Salas said “I’m thankful” for Newsom, claimed “he’s done a lot of good things. I’m saying nothing but great things about you,” and called Newsom a “champion” who will “help us control the U.S. House of Representatives.”

“Self-serving Sacramento politician Rudy Salas hopes folks will simply forget he worked with Newsom to make the Valley unaffordable. But voters can see Newsom and Salas are best buds.” – NRCC Spokesperson Ben Petersen

In case you missed it…

Why Gavin Newsom is not campaigning with Central Valley Democrats in tossup House races
Sacramento Bee
Gillian Brassil

Gov. Gavin Newsom hit the campaign trail across the country to help Vice President Kamala Harris in her presidential race last week, but he hasn’t been seen campaigning with the Democrats in crucial Central Valley House races since March.

The last time Newsom campaigned side-by-side with former Assemblyman Rudy Salas, D-Bakersfield, in California’s 22nd Congressional District was before the March primary. Newsom has not campaigned with former Assemblyman Adam Gray, D-Merced, in California’s 13th Congressional District this year at all.

California could be key to control of the House of Representatives. Five Republican incumbents face tossup races for their seats. Two are in the Central Valley.

Why not constantly campaign these final weeks in Central Valley congressional districts within a day’s drive of Sacramento?

Because Newsom wouldn’t help them, experts said.

The Democratic governor has a higher disapproval rating in the Central Valley than in other parts of the state. Many voters in California’s agricultural center lack trust in the state government. Holding hands with the challengers might be better fodder for Republican attack ads than as encouragement for Democrats to turn out.

[…]

Among California regions, trust in Sacramento and Washington D.C. was lowest in the Central Valley in last month’s Public Policy Institute of California poll — 36% of respondents expressed trust always or most of the time in the state government and 25% did of the federal government.

About half of respondents approved of Newsom’s job performance statewide in the PPIC’s September poll, the highest his overall approval rating has been in 2024.

But 57% of Central Valley respondents disapproved of Newsom.

Campaign spokespeople for Newsom did not respond to requests for comment.

Salas’ campaign confirmed the last time he stumped with Newsom in the 22nd was before the March primary. Gray’s confirmed Newsom did not come to campaign with him the 13th this election cycle.

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Newsom has headlined emails asking for donations to tough California congressional races, including in an Oct. 16 email asking Democrats to chip in because “control of the House runs through these four California House races,” referring to California’s 3rd, 13th, 22nd and 41st Congressional Districts. The email claimed that Trump might win and Republicans might take control of the Senate, making House control imperative.

“So think of it as Trump Protection,” the email continued. “Or think of it as giving Kamala Harris the House she needs to pass her agenda.”

Newsom popped down to help Salas emerge from what experts thought could be a competitive March primary, where he faced an in-party challenge from state Sen. Melissa Hurtado, D-Bakersfield. And messages then with Newsom’s name asked voters to donate to Salas for fear of a Democratic lockout.

Newsom too visited Gray’s UC Merced class on Monday, Nov. 7, 2022 — the day before the 2022 midterms.

Newsom’s downballot drag

The San Joaquin Valley has two of the most competitive House races in the nation.

Freshman Rep. John Duarte, R-Modesto, faces Gray in California’s 13th. Rep. David Valadao, R-Hanford, and Salas vie in California’s 22nd. Both are rematches from 2022 when the Democrats narrowly lost.

Experts cite several reasons for those defeats. One was Newsom.

Republican gubernatorial candidate state Sen. Brian Dahle, R-Bieber, beat Newsom by more than 8 percentage points in the 13th in 2022. Duarte carried the district by four-tenths of a percentage point that year.

Valadao defeated Salas by 3 percentage points in 2022. Dahle beat Newsom in the 22nd by a little over 4 percentage points.

“I think obviously in 2022, Newsom was a drag at the top of the ticket on Democrats running down ballot,” in the Central Valley, said Erin Covey, a House analyst and editor of The Cook Political Report. “But I don’t think you can attribute the success Republicans had to Newsom exclusively, just like you can’t blame (Gov. Kathy) Hochul entirely for Democrats’ problems in New York.”

[…]

The Congressional Leadership Fund, a super PAC that works to get Republican House candidates elected, has an ad with a photo of Gray shaking hands with Newsom. Super PACs, which can raise and spend funds in unlimited amounts, cannot coordinate with candidates. Valadao invoked Salas’ service in the Legislature with Newsom as governor at their debate this month.

Going after Newsom might be a good strategy for Duarte and Valadao. The pair maintain moderate profiles to prevail in these districts that have more registered Democrats than Republicans and a growing no-party-preference bloc. 

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Read more here.