Pages

Friday, September 21, 2018

California GOP House candidate Kim takes slight lead over Democrat Cisneros in crucial CA race

A fresh poll in a closely watched congressional race in Southern California shows Republican Young Kim with a slight lead despite having been outspent nearly 5 to 1 by her challenger, Democrat Gil Cisneros.

A former state lawmaker, Kim is competing against Navy veteran and philanthropist Cisneros to fill the seat being vacated by retiring Rep. Ed Royce, a 13-term Republican from California's 39th Congressional District.

Prior to serving one term in the state Assembly, Kim worked as a staffer for Royce, who is currently chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee. Royce has endorsed Kim as his successor.

The majority of the 39th district is in northern Orange County, which historically has been a stronghold for the GOP, but it also includes eastern Los Angeles County and southwestern San Bernardino County. Immigration is one of the hot-button issues in the district, which has a high Asian and Latino population.

A Monmouth University Poll of potential voters conducted Sept. 13-16 and released this week shows Kim is leading, 46 percent to 42 percent, among all potential voters, or those voters who have participated in an election since 2010 or are newly registered to vote. Another 12 percent are undecided, and Kim's lead falls within the margin of error for the random telephone poll of 402 potential voters.

"One thing I notice that's different in this race than in other races is that the Democratic candidate is significantly more negative (in terms of a favorability rating) than in other districts that we've polled," said Patrick Murray, director of the independent Monmouth University Polling Institute, which conducted its poll from Sept. 13-16 with 402 voters in the 39th district.

According to the university's poll, Kim is "better liked than Cisneros." It said Cisneros has a 23 percent favorable rating and 24 percent unfavorable, while Kim has a 32 percent favorable rating and 11 percent unfavorable.

The demographics in the mostly working-class district have been changing and Democrats believe they have a good chance to flip the House seat blue. More than 65 percent of the residents are people of color, with Latino and Asians making up the largest groups.

Democrat Hillary Clinton carried the district in 2016 by a margin of about 9 points although registered Republicans still outnumber Democrats in the Orange County portion of the district.

"The overriding issue in these races is Trump, and sometimes all politics isn't local," said Fred Smoller, a political science professor at Chapman University in Southern California.

Smoller believes the immigration issue should help pull in votes for Cisneros but he said the Asian community tends to vote "very strongly Republican on the issue on immigration" so that could ultimately boost numbers for Kim.

Kim, who emigrated from South Korea as a child and describes herself as a small business owner, has been supportive of Trump's call to beef up border security as a condition for comprehensive immigration reform and sided with the president in opposing California's so-called sanctuary state laws.

Kim declined a CNBC interview request to comment on key issues.

Cisneros, a multimillionaire who won a $266 million lottery jackpot in 2010 after getting laid off from Frito-Lay, has been vastly outspending his Republican challenger and money raised includes a $4.5 million loan from the candidate himself.

The money Kim received included donations from several prominent corporate PACs, including Koch Industries and Exxon Mobil.

Cisneros, who has been active in philanthropic causes in the Latino community, has been critical of the President Donald Trump's immigration policies and separation of families at the Mexico border.

He said in a recent interview with CNBC that Kim would be "nothing more than a rubber stamp of the Republican agenda and not hold the president accountable."

In contrast, Kim's advertisements have messaged that she's "independent" and "bipartisan." Her campaign was asked to comment on the new poll and repeated those same points in an email response.

"The poll reflects Young Kim's proven independent record achieving bipartisan results to protect domestic violence victims, homeless children and veterans — and helping local small businesses grow and add jobs," said Patrick Mocete, a Kim campaign spokesman.

With less than 50 days before the November election, Sabato's Crystal Ball at the University of Virginia and the Cook Political Report — two nonpartisan trackers of House races around the nation — list the 39th Congressional District contest as a "toss up."

Orange County Republican Party Chairman Fred Whitaker said he's "heartened" by the Monmouth poll results that show a slight lead for Kim, pointing out that Rep. Royce won reelection back in the 2016 by a 14-point margin "even in a very challenging cycle for Republicans."

Whitaker also called Kim "an excellent candidate that meets the demographics of the district. She's an excellent messenger for our message. And we've been working extraordinarily hard in that seat for really even a year — even before Congressman Royce decided to retire. We knew the Democrats were going to come after all these districts."

Meantime, Cisneros has been dogged by sexual harassment allegations and been the subject of attack ads by the Congressional Leadership Fund, a Republican super PAC that has also targeted other Democrats in tight races. One of the PAC's ads repeated the misconduct allegation against Cisneros.

Melissa Fazli, a fellow Democrat who lost a California state Assembly race in the June primary, accused Cisneros of asking her for sex in exchange for a campaign donation. Fazli alleged in a press release posted on Twitter in May that the "inappropriate encounter" stems from a conversation she had with Cisneros in front of elevators at a hotel in San Diego during the California Democratic Party Convention.

Cisneros denied the claims when they were first reported. Moreover, campaign spokesperson Daphne Sigala last month called out the use of "special interest and dark money connections to politicize a patently false allegation."

Nic Jordan, another Cisneros campaign official, on Thursday downplayed the Monmouth poll and cited its "small sample size" and added "our own polling finds Gil doing better with voters most engaged and interested in the election."

The Monmouth poll released Sept. 18 shows 47 percent of the district voters approve of the job Trump is doing while the same percent also disapprove. The Cisneros campaign official calls that finding a sign the New Jersey university's poll is "a real outlier."

An internal poll released last month by the Cisneros campaign of 600 likely voters showed the Democrat ahead by 11 percentage points. The poll was conducted Aug. 1-6 by San Francisco-based Tulchin Research and also showed 57 percent of the voters had an unfavorable view of Trump and 41 percent a favorable view.

Cisneros said his campaign has attracted not only Democrats but some Republicans and independents "that say it's time for a change. We need people in Washington that are going to hold the president accountable. But we also need individuals that have a commitment to the country that are willing to get the government working for people again."

Cisneros and his wife Jackie — a former producer at KNBC in Los Angeles — used a portion of their 2010 winnings from the California Mega Millions lottery to start a foundation to help kids go to college. KNBC and CNBC are owned by NBC Universal, a unit of Comcast Corp.

"Congress is nothing more than a continuation of the service that I've always done," said Cisneros, a former Navy lieutenant commander. He said the November election is "the best chance the Democrats here in the 39th District have ever had of getting a Democrat elected."

On Sept. 8, former President Barack Obama formally endorsed Cisneros and six other California Democratic congressional candidates during a campaign rally in Anaheim. The Monmouth poll was conducted shortly after the Obama endorsement was announced. It doesn't appear to show any immediate halo effect for Cisneros but could potentially increase voter turnout among Democrats in the district.

Speaking at the rally, Obama pointed out that Cisneros worked with former First Lady Michelle Obama on her higher education initiative known as "Reach Higher."

"We could not be prouder of Gil," the former president told the crowd. Obama added that Cisneros has "more Navy medals for his service than he has years in politics."

Yet despite getting Obama's endorsement, Cisneros said he voted for former GOP U.S. Sen. John McCain in the 2008 presidential election. "I've never really let the party title define me," Cisneros said. "I always voted for who I thought would do the best job. And that's how I am going forward."

Graphics by CNBC's John Schoen

Let's block ads! (Why?)

from Top News & Analysis https://ift.tt/2prtbz6

No comments:

Post a Comment