Michael Smolens: What the election may suggest about the fate of San Diego’s business-GOP alliance
Tuesday’s election could say a lot about the future of San Diego’s once-powerful Republican-business coalition. That faction ruled the region long ago but has been greatly diminished in the face of continued growth and influence of organized labor and the Democratic Party. Pivotal races for county supervisor and San Diego mayor, along with sales tax ballot measures for the city government and regional transportation system, may foretell whether the traditional GOP-business political partnership has much of a role anymore, especially within the city’s boundaries. Sweeping electoral tea-leaf reading always comes with caveats, and this one has many. Nevertheless, certain results could suggest new life for the GOP-business influence, or its continued downward spiral toward irrelevance. The downer GOP scenario: Democratic Supervisor Terra Lawson-Remer defeats Republican former Mayor Kevin Faulconer, Democratic Mayor Todd Gloria wins easily over independent Larry Turner (who has considerable business-GOP support) and the tax measures also win. The GOP happy-face version: The opposite of all that. Of course, split decisions on these elections would muddle the narrative. Business and Republican interests tend to oppose higher taxes, but don’t appear to have gone