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Opinion

Reminding voters of what Feinstein said 24 years ago having an impact

Kevin de León, running for U.S. Senate, meets with people for breakfast at McCoy’s Coffee Shop in Sanger.
Kevin de León, running for U.S. Senate, meets with people for breakfast at McCoy’s Coffee Shop in Sanger. ezamora@fresnobee.com

U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein took a lot of heat from the left wing of her Democratic Party by adopting a conciliatory attitude toward Donald Trump during the first year of his presidency.

As she launched a re-election campaign, her rival, Democratic state Sen. Kevin de León, depicted her as too soft on Trump and won the party’s official endorsement.

Even so, Feinstein had appeared to be on track to win her fifth term, with nearly twice as much support as de León in a July poll by the Public Policy Institute of California. Since then, however, Feinstein has seen her standing decline as de León’s has risen. A new PPIC poll shows it could be a real race after all.

Feinstein’s lead among likely voters dropped from 46-22 percent in July to 40-29 in the latest survey, indicating de León now has at least an outside chance.

While Feinstein still has a 2-1 lead among Democrats, her margin among independents is slight and Republicans actually seem to prefer the more liberal de León.

Feinstein, stung by her party’s rejection, ramped up her opposition to Trump this year, most recently by taking the lead in opposing Brett Kavanaugh’s nomination for the U.S. Supreme Court by releasing allegations of sexual misconduct.

Meanwhile, de León is trying to gain more traction with a lavishly produced Internet video that depicts Feinstein as unfriendly to immigrants.

With actors portraying him and his mother, the video evokes the emotional trauma had she been hauled away by immigration agents, and recalled Feinstein’s long-ago support for harsher treatment of undocumented immigrants.

As she sought her first full Senate term in 1994, voters were also approving Proposition 187, which, if it had not been voided by the courts, would have cut off all public aid to undocumented immigrants. In that campaign, Feinstein aired an ad that accused rival Michael Huffington of being soft on illegal immigration.

“While Congressman Huffington voted against new border guards, Dianne Feinstein led the fight to stop illegal immigration,” the ad declared. Feinstein boasted of seeking more border guards, lighting and fencing.

The de León video contains two heavily edited snippets of Feinstein.

One, from 1994, has her saying, “The illegal immigrants who come here and commit felonies, that’s not what this nation,” and then abruptly ends. The second, from 1993, includes her saying, “I say return them to their own country ...” then segues to a clip of Trump referring to immigrants as rapists.

Asked about the video by the Los Angeles Times, de León said he wants voters to know Feinstein has not made protection of immigrants a priority.

When she made opposition to illegal immigration a tenet of her 1994 campaign, Feinstein was aligning herself with the mood of California voters. But that attitude has changed dramatically since, and especially since Trump has made immigration a hot-button issue.

Feinstein is going with the current flow on immigration, but de León is reminding voters of her political pirouette.

Dan Walters writes on matters of statewide significance for CALmatters. Email: dan@calmatters.org.

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