Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
In Vote Today, Californians Will Have Their Say On Newsom's Covid Policies
Californians are heading to the polls Tuesday to decide whether or not to remove Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom from office, or at least those voters who haven鈥檛 already cast a ballot by mail. California's unusual recall election, triggered when anti-Newsom organizers collected the roughly 1.5 million signatures needed to put him on the ballot again, will ask voters to decide if Newsom should be fired and, if so, to pick a replacement governor from a list of 46 hopefuls alternatives, with firebrand conservative radio host Larry Elder leading in polls. (Seitz-Wald, 9/14)
President Joe Biden put Democrats鈥 approach to the coronavirus pandemic on the line Monday, casting the California recall that could remove Gov. Gavin Newsom from office as an opportunity for voters to show the nation that 鈥渓eadership matters, science matters.鈥 鈥淭he eyes of the nation are on California because the decision you鈥檙e going to make isn鈥檛 just going to have a huge impact on California, it鈥檚 going to reverberate around the nation, and quite frankly, not a joke, around the world,鈥 the Democratic president said at a rally in the Southern California city of Long Beach. (Ronayne and Blood, 9/14)
The closely watched California gubernatorial recall election on Tuesday is poised to send precisely the opposite political message that its proponents initially intended. It was a strong gust of discontent in the state's most conservative regions last year over Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom's stringent measures to fight the Covid-19 pandemic that allowed the recall to qualify for the ballot at all. But now a swell of support in the broader statewide electorate for the more recent steps Newsom has taken to combat the Delta variant outbreak -- particularly the vaccine mandates he's imposed for educators, health care workers and state employees -- has positioned him for a potentially resounding victory, according to the latest polls. (Brownstein, 9/14)
The verdict could have national implications for both Democrats and Republicans heading into the 2022 midterm elections. 鈥淣o Republican running for governor could possibly have defeated Gavin Newsom in the recall election, but COVID could have,鈥 Dan Schnur, a former spokesman for Republican former California Gov. Pete Wilson and the late GOP Sen. John McCain who teaches politics at several leading California universities, recently said on Yahoo News鈥 "Skullduggery" podcast. 鈥淭he reason it鈥檚 not is because voters here have come to conclude that he is doing a much better job on it than they鈥檇 thought last spring and last winter.鈥 (Romano, 9/13)