Democrat Inches Ahead In Ongoing Battle For California House Seat

In this Jan. 5, 2018 photo, T.J. Cox, a candidate for the 21st U.S. Congressional District, speaks at a Democratic Party debate at the Gallo Center for the Arts in Modesto. Cox has edged ahead of Republican David Valadao in a U.S. House race in California's farm belt, where votes continue to be counted. Cox has trailed since election night but pulled ahead by 438 votes Monday, Nov. 26, 2018, according to tallies in the 21st District that cuts through four Central Valley counties. The Associated Press had declared Valadao the winner, but votes that have been counted since Nov. 6 narrowed the race and the AP retracted its race call on Monday. (Andy Alfaro/Modesto Bee via AP)
In this Jan. 5, 2018 photo, T.J. Cox, a candidate for the 21st U.S. Congressional District, speaks at a Democratic Party debate at the Gallo Center for the Arts in Modesto. Cox has edged ahead of Republican David Val... In this Jan. 5, 2018 photo, T.J. Cox, a candidate for the 21st U.S. Congressional District, speaks at a Democratic Party debate at the Gallo Center for the Arts in Modesto. Cox has edged ahead of Republican David Valadao in a U.S. House race in California's farm belt, where votes continue to be counted. Cox has trailed since election night but pulled ahead by 438 votes Monday, Nov. 26, 2018, according to tallies in the 21st District that cuts through four Central Valley counties. The Associated Press had declared Valadao the winner, but votes that have been counted since Nov. 6 narrowed the race and the AP retracted its race call on Monday. (Andy Alfaro/Modesto Bee via AP) MORE LESS
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LOS ANGELES (AP) — Democrat T.J. Cox edged ahead of Republican U.S. Rep. David Valadao following an updated vote count Monday in a House race in California’s Central Valley, with more votes still to be counted.

Cox, who trailed since election night, pulled ahead by 438 votes in the 21st Congressional District that cuts through four counties in the state’s interior farm belt.

The Associated Press had declared Valadao the winner but votes that have been counted since Nov. 6 steadily narrowed the race, and the AP retracted its race call after Cox took the lead.

It’s unclear how many votes remain to be counted. Counties have until Dec. 7 to complete their tallies.

Democrats already have seized six GOP-held House seats in California, delivering another blow to California’s long-struggling Republican Party. If Cox prevails, Democrats will hold a 46-7 advantage in the state’s largest-in-the-nation congressional delegation.

Valadao’s seat and the other six already won by Democrats are districts Hillary Clinton carried in the 2016 presidential contest. Four of them are partially or wholly in Orange County, once a Republican stronghold in Southern California.

Valadao carried his district by a wide margin in 2016, even though registration numbers favor Democrats.

Cox made the race a referendum on Valadao’s support for President Donald Trump.

Valadao, in a tip to the district’s heavy Hispanic population, had touted his support for a way to keep in the country people who were brought to the U.S. illegally when they were children.

In a statement after taking the lead, Cox said: “Here in the Central Valley, we are often underestimated and counted out.”

Valadao’s campaign could not immediately be reached for comment.

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Notable Replies

  1. That makes 40 and he did not sign the anti-Pelosi letter. How’s that dump Pelosi campaign going, guys? Maybe you will be up to be primaried in 2020 by, oh, I don’t know, a woman.

  2. Avatar for nemo nemo says:

    I love our Blue zombie candidates who just keep walking slowly, slowly to the victory line and never die.

  3. This doesn’t seem like a wave so much as a slow leak in the basement. The result is the same. A flood.

  4. Dear Texas GOP:

    You keep doing what you’re doing. Don’t bother listening to the people. They’ll love you no matter what.

    Regards,
    The Ghost of the California GOP.

  5. I dream of a day when everyone is allowed to vote, when voting is made easy for all people, and when every vote is counted before any winners are declared. I actually thought that was the country I was in when I was 12 - I was shaken to learn as a teenager about Jim Crow and all of the other devious machinations depriving people across the country of their basic rights. Fifty-five years later, this country still has never even been close to that simple democratic standard.

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