Outlook for the California State Legislature in 2008

Also posted on my blog, Calitics, Democracy for California, and DU.

Many in the California Democratic Party circles may not know this, but in 2008 there is a real possibility of gaining 2/3 majorities in the State Senate and State Assembly. The fact that a two-thirds vote in both houses is required to pass the annual budget and to override gubernatorial vetoes could serve as a compelling reason to vote against the term-limits initiative.

Using my extraordinary math, statistics, and HTML skills, below I included with each list of incumbents are the margins that each district voted in the 2002 Governor’s race (2002G: Davis vs. Simon), 2004 Presidential race (2004P: Kerry vs. Bush), 2004 Senate race (2004S: Boxer vs. Jones), and 2006 Senate race (2006S: Feinstein vs. Mountjoy) and the average of these and the registration margins, which I will call the Partisan Factor (PF).

Check out the discussion here.

Numbers are below the flip:

ASSEMBLY

23 Assemblymembers are term-limited in 2008, 12 Republicans and 11 Democrats. Here are the districts which will be open, the term-limited incumbent (for reference) and the registration statistics.

Republican-Held Seats (12)

District Incumbent DEM GOP Margin
2
Doug La Malfa
31.76%
47.44%
R+15.68
3
Rick Keene
33.41%
41.75%
R+8.34
10
Alan Nakanishi
37.80%
41.83%
R+3.97
15
Guy Houston
38.26%
39.51%
R+1.25
26
Greg Aghazarian
40.84%
41.99%
R+1.15
34
Bill Maze
32.89%
46.88%
R+13.99
36
Sharon Runner
36.16%
42.77%
R+6.61
64
John Benoit
33.49%
45.45%
R+7.94
71
Todd Spitzer
26.55%
52.07%
R+25.52
75
George Plescia
28.73%
43.15%
R+14.42
78
Shirley Horton
40.92%
33.99%
D+6.93
80
Bonnie Garcia
45.59%
36.97%
D+8.62

District 2002G
2004P
2004S 2006S PF
2
R+30.0
R+34.1
R+23.7
R+16.7
R+24.0
3
R+31.5
R+14.7
R+7.3
R+0.2
R+12.4
10
R+16.6
R+14.0
R+0.7
D+6.2
R+5.8
15
R+4.5
D+0.1
D+7.8
D+22.3
D+4.9
26
R+5.7
R+15.6
D+1.0
D+6.3
R+3.0
34
R+26.1
R+33.6
R+20.9
R+12.6
R+21.4
36
R+26.0
R+21.9
R+5.7
D+5.4
R+11.0
64
R+15.3
R+16.6
R+1.6
D+0.7
R+8.1
71
R+33.6
R+30.2
R+19.4
R+14.4
R+24.6
75
R+19.8
R+12.7
R+0.2
D+5.6
R+8.3
78
D+2.4
D+3.2
D+20.4
D+24.2
D+11.4
80
D+8.6
D+5.2
D+19.3
D+22.4
D+12.8

Democratic-Held Seats (11)

District Incumbent DEM GOP Margin
1
Patty Berg
44.52%
28.05%
D+16.27
8
Lois Wolk
45.52%
29.51%
D+16.01
13
Mark Leno
56.22%
9.31%
D+46.91
14
Loni Hancock
58.70%
15.04%
D+43.66
19
Gene Mullin
50.05%
22.57%
D+27.48
22
Sally Lieber
43.40%
24.25%
D+19.15
27
John Laird
48.12%
26.40%
D+21.68
30
Nicole Parra
46.45%
38.70%
D+7.75
40
Lloyd Levine
47.78%
28.12%
D+19.66
46
Fabian Núñez
63.37%
12.78%
D+50.59
52
Mervyn Dymally
67.90%
13.00%
D+54.90

District 2002G
2004P
2004S 2006S PF
1
D+10.3
D+22.4
D+26.5
D+32.5
D+21.6
8
D+8.8
D+12.5
D+22.8
D+28.8
D+17.8
13
D+53.3
D+72.2
D+73.5
D+72.9
D+63.8
14
D+43.9
D+62.8
D+61.7
D+65.6
D+55.5
19
D+28.4
D+39.8
D+44.8
D+54.4
D+39.0
22
D+26.4
D+36.1
D+40.7
D+48.5
D+34.2
27
D+20.4
D+35.0
D+36.0
D+43.8
D+31.4
30
R+2.6
R+14.7
D+3.8
D+12.9
D+1.4
40
D+11.6
D+21.9
D+35.3
D+33.7
D+24.3
46
D+60.8
D+62.7
D+72.3
D+72.3
D+63.7
52
D+70.0
D+73.5
D+79.4
D+79.9
D+71.5

SENATE

10 Senators are term-limited in 2008, 6 Democrats and 4 Republicans.

*Maldonado is not term-limited but may be vulnerable in his increasingly Democratic district.

Republican-Held Seats (5)

District Incumbent DEM GOP Margin
15
Abel Maldonado*
39.69%
37.14%
D+2.55
19
Tom McClintock
36.23%
40.36%
R+4.13
29
Bob Margett
32.14%
44.68%
R+12.54
33
Dick Ackerman
26.94%
50.75%
R+23.81
37
Jim Battin
34.57%
45.26%
R+10.69

District 2002G
2004P
2004S 2006S PF
15
R+2.4
D+6.4
D+11.3
D+20.6
D+7.7
19
R+7.0
R+2.0
D+7.6
D+10.6
D+1.0
29
R+19.9
R+15.2
R+1.7
R+2.2
R+10.3
33
R+31.4
R+27.2
R+14.9
R+11.6
R+21.8
37
R+13.4
R+16.6
R+0.9
D+2.2
R+7.9

Democratic-Held Seats (6)

District Incumbent DEM GOP Margin
5
Michael Machado
45.98%
32.41%
D+13.57
7
Tom Torlakson
46.81%
30.66%
D+16.15
9
Don Perata
58.98%
13.53%
D+45.45
21
Jack Scott
45.65%
28.56%
D+17.09
23
Sheila Kuehl
50.07%
25.26%
D+24.81
25
Edward Vincent
58.87%
20.97%
D+37.90

District 2002G
2004P
2004S 2006S PF
5
D+7.7
D+8.4
D+22.2
D+27.6
D+15.9
7
D+14.5
D+22.8
D+27.2
D+39.6
D+24.1
9
D+48.2
D+63.6
D+64.5
D+66.6
D+57.7
21
D+15.0
D+27.8
D+35.9
D+37.0
D+26.6
23
D+22.6
D+31.1
D+40.8
D+45.9
D+33.0
25
D+38.7
D+45.7
D+52.9
D+53.6
D+45.8

Now here is a list of the districts with the most competitive PF’s, ranked from highest to lowest priority.

Assembly

District PF
80
D+12.8
78
D+11.4
15
D+4.9
30
D+1.4
26
R+3.0
10
R+5.8
64
R+8.1
75
R+8.3

Senate

District PF
15
D+7.7
19
D+1.0


Overall, we should target Assembly Districts 10, 15, 26, 64, 75, 78, and 80 while defending District 30, and target Senate Districts 15 and 19. If we manage to win both Senate seats, we will have 27 Senate seats, enough for a 2/3 majority. If we win the most competitive Assembly districts (10, 15, 26, 78, 80) we will have 53, just one short of 2/3. We would have to win at least one of the lesser competitive districts (64, 75) to reach 2/3 there. We will also have to defend AD-30, which may not be hard if we find a candidate less divisive than Parra.

With 2/3 in both houses, we can finally pass decent budgets without significant bickering and with sufficient funding for things like mental health facilities and public transit including high-speed rail.

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