Rent control and health care: Liberals fight for the soul of the California Democratic Party
As her primetime speech at the
"Yeah! Your time is up," supporters of her primary challengers, state
Housing activists marched and protested on the floors of the convention hall, urging candidates to back a proposal to strengthen
And at one point, angry over Assembly Speaker
"Free the bill," the crowd shouted following the outburst.
The party establishment says the Bernie Sanders wing and more traditional
"I don't think it's fringe to be against oil money or support single-payer," said
Democratic delegates who participate in party conventions traditionally are more active, more liberal and more outspoken than the typical Democratic or left-leaning independent voter.
The most well-received speaker of the weekend was Rep.
Waters, of
While it does not represent the views held by everyone in the party, activists open to that message are putting pressure on candidates and officeholders in new ways that are gaining traction. No candidate running for
Experts say it reflects a party that is becoming more liberal, as young people and Latinos comprise a greater share of the electorate in
"There is no question that the Democratic base has moved considerably to the left -- I don't mean just in the last 10 or 20 years. I mean just in the past few years," Democratic strategist Garry South said. "And this isn't just the base that's moved to the left. It is the governing mechanism of the state Democratic Party that has moved considerably left, too. There's been a very substantial shift."
Pro-rent control advocates staged protests and interrupted candidate gatherings throughout the weekend to urge support for the repeal of the Costa-Hawkins Rental Housing Act, which limits rent control in cities.
"It's been my dream ever since I worked on housing work in
Before courting delegates from the party's
"They all signed it," said RL Miller, the caucus chairwoman. And while a couple dozen
"What we're seeing now is this idea that some money is better than other money. Part of it is attributable to the Bernie Sanders campaign, where he showed that money is OK as long as it comes
Latino activists pushing to protect immigrants from deportation are also speaking up.
De León, author of the
"We haven't seen her in 25 years,"
Rendon, the Assembly speaker, is also feeling pressure from the liberal wing of his party.
He shelved Senate Bill 562, the single-payer health care proposal, last year citing its lack of a financing plan. Since then, the
While most other prominent party leaders in
In an interview before the convention, Rendon said he's felt a "constant tug" between ideological factions of the party since he was elected to the Legislature in 2012, but the issues change.
"The energy's great and exciting. As a fellow progressive, it's where I want to see the party go," he said.
But as the leader of a caucus that until recently held a two-thirds supermajority in the Assembly, he also makes decisions to protect targeted Democratic members in moderate districts that sometimes infuriate the party's most liberal constituencies. He said each issue is a "balancing act" between alienating the left and pushing voters too much to the right.
Not all of the liberal tactics are working.
Half a dozen legislative and congressional incumbents, including Rendon and Pelosi, were targeted last month by local activists, who tried to block their endorsement by the party because they took positions that the activists felt were at odds with Democratic values. None of them were successful.
"It's an indication that, overall, folks in our party are happy with what we've done," Rendon said.
And the rent control advocates have not persuaded key party forces to back repeal restrictions in the Costa-Hawkins law.
Lt. Gov.
Former
Despite criticism of her at this convention, Feinstein is leading de León in fundraising and public opinion polling.
"Democratic Party delegates are much more progressive, and they're willing to take action. But the party is changing," Kapolczynski said. "Some of the issues you see at the Democratic convention end up emerging years later as mainstream issues. Bail reform was a secondary issue at many past conventions. Now it's very visible. Twenty years ago, marriage equality wasn't mainstream and now it's widely accepted as law of the land."
"People may lose an election here. They may lose a platform amendment, but that doesn't mean they've lost in the long-term," she said. "You can lose the battle and years later, win the war."
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