(Some good analysis – promoted by SFBrianCL)
To go along with my Senate and Assembly final predictions, here’s my rundown of the state offices in Tuesday’s primary. I am basing my predictions not just on polls, but on assumptions of turnout – for example, liberal Democrats are much more likely to be voting on Tuesday than independents or moderates who lean Democratic, etc. Also, Hispanic turnout is expected to be low (as usual), and Northern California typically turns out at a higher percentage than Southern California, especially in primaries.
So, here goes. Go below the fold…
Governor – Common sense would indicate the Democratic primary here is a tossup between Treasurer Phil Angelides and Controller Steve Westly, but I really believe that moderates and independents are unlikely to vote. Liberals will tip it toward Angelides, possibly by a larger-than-expected margin.
Lieutenant Governor – Total tossup. Insurance Commissioner John Garamendi had the edge for a while with his huge name recognition, but the latest Field Poll shows State Senator Jackie Speier of San Francisco with a 5-point lead. Garamendi leads among men, Speier among women (no surprise there), with Northern Californians more likely to back Speier and Southern Californians more likely to back Garamendi (likely due to name recognition since none of the Lt. Gov. candidates are Southern Californians). So, the real question is, as always, who turns out? If the Bay Area is hot to vote, Speier wins it. If nobody’s really motivated, Garamendi wins.
Secretary of State – Another hard-to-predict one. State Senator Deborah Ortiz of Sacramento has a 6-point lead over fellow Senator Debra Bowen of Redondo Beach in the latest Field Poll. Ortiz’s Sacramento and Bay Area base appears to be helping her, and because of Ortiz being Hispanic, that is probably helping her eat away at Bowen’s advantage in the south. But Bowen has been more active and noticeable in the political community, so tossup.
Controller – Republicans seem more sure about who they’re voting for than Democrats, with 75% of Republican primary voters set on a candidate, but just 37% of Democrats. On the GOP side, I think former State Assemblyman Tony Strickland of Moorpark will defeat State Senator Abel Maldonado of Santa Maria – the poll showed Strickland leading 43-32. This is good as Maldonado was the more popular, possibly electable candidate; Strickland is your typical wealthy, white, far-right California Republican man (think David Dreier, Dana Rohrabacher, or Tom McClintock). On the Dem side, it’s basically a tie between Board of Equalization Member John Chiang and State Senator Joe Dunn of Garden Grove; both have run a very positive campaign. If North turns out more than South, as I expect (which will help both Speier and Ortiz over Garamendi and Bowen), Chiang will beat Dunn, as the two are each dominating the two regions.
Treasurer – Attorney General Bill Lockyer wins the Dem nod; Repubs are split between moderate State Assemblyman Keith Richman of Northridge and conservative Board of Equalization Member Claude Parrish. If GOP anti-immigration, anti-tax activists dominate on Tuesday, Parrish wins. If it’s based more on name recognition, I think Richman wins. Either will lose to Lockyer though in November.
Attorney General – Democrats will overwhelmingly back Oakland Mayor and former Governor Jerry Brown, with L.A. City Attorney Rocky Delgadillo getting few votes outside of L.A. and heavily Hispanic areas. Republicans nominate State Senator Chuck Poochigian of Fresno.
Insurance Commissioner – It’s Lieutenant Gov. Cruz Bustamante for the Dems, and businessman Steve Poizner for the GOP, beginning a dirty and competitive campaign for November.