Sunday Commentary: Is Dan Carson in Trouble?

Dan Carson
Dan Carson

By David M. Greenwald
Executive Editor

Davis, CA – Even in a place like Davis, it’s difficult to defeat incumbents.  But to illustrate that point, the Vanguard has been around since 2006.  In that time, there were only two incumbents—both in the same year—that were defeated running for reelection: Sue Greenwald and Stephen Souza in 2012.

If you go further back, there was a third incumbent this century that lost—Michael Harrington in 2004.  As we noted in previous columns, each of those defeats have interesting stories but, then again, so does Dan Carson.

Carson, who emerged from a crowded field in 2018 to win alongside Gloria Partida, is now facing a real fight for his seat.  There are reasons to believe he might not survive this, but there are also reasons why he might prevail.

Carson, as most of you reading this are aware of, made a series of mistakes this past spring on the DiSC campaign.  We can debate on the wisdom of his filing the challenge to the ballot language—personally, I think the language was problematic.  But the optics of a sitting councilmember doing that struck many as wrong.  Filing for attorney fees, however, seemed an unmitigated disaster.

This was all the more magnified by the fact that two of the most vocal people for Measure H—Carson and Gloria Partida—were going to be on the ballot in the fall.

There were angry voices in June about Carson, but would a strong challenger emerge?  Would Carson actually face a tough campaign?

What first caught my attention was the photo of Bapu Vaitla with Robb Davis, Lucas Frerichs, and Josh Chapman.  Hey, Frerichs and Chapman are current colleagues of Carson and both of them are largely not the type to make waves.  Both of them have duo-endorsements, meaning they are endorsing Bapu and Dan Carson—but even going that far was a strong message to Carson, given that these are single-member districts.

This week, Bob Schneider, a long time and well-respected Davis resident, submitted a letter to the Vanguard supporting Vaitla. I was not particularly surprised.

What did get my attention was the second part of Bob’s letter: “We are greatly disappointed and strongly oppose Dan Carson. Please DO NOT support him. We feel that he demonstrated strong disregard for democratic principles and acted unethically when he worked for the DISC developer and then sued the Measure H public opposition using developer funds.”

So, one is tempted to believe that Dan Carson is in trouble?

But there is a catch: there is a third candidate in the race—Kelsey Fortune.  As it turns out, while many people are angry at Dan Carson, the anti-Carson vote, if you will, is split.  The slow growth contingent is backing Fortune, the only candidate in the race who actually opposed Measure H.

For that crew, Bapu is not “progressive” or “slow growth” enough.

As one letter demonstrated, “Dan Carson and Bapu Vaitla supported the Davis Innovation Sustainability Campus, Measure H.”  Further, Vaitla has been criticized for saying “he would consider overturning the City’s phase-out of glyphosate, which is the primary ingredient in Roundup, an herbicide made by Monsanto and now Bayer.”

As one person pointed out to me this week, this race looks a lot like the 2020 race in District 2 where Will Arnold faced Dillan Horton and Colin Walsh.

In that race, Arnold failed to crack 50 percent of the vote.  But because he had two opponents, he ended up winning easily.  Horton was the progressive, moderate-growth guy whereas Walsh was the progressive, slow-growth guy.  Horton received 28.6 percent of the vote and Walsh 21.8 percent of the vote, so neither came close to Arnold’s 49.6 percent.

Analyzing those numbers, you can clearly see a path for Carson’s survival.  Vaitla and Fortune simply split the anti-Carson vote and Carson prevails like Will Arnold did.

But there is another way to look at this.  Will Arnold has deep deep roots in this community.  His family is an institution.  For the most part, Arnold is well liked in the community.  He certainly had no missteps on the scale of Dan Carson and, if he could be held under 50 percent with a solid track record, Dan Carson figures to be in that much more hot water.

The problem that we face right now is that those who support Kelsey Fortune, seem to taking on both Dan Carson and Bapu Vaitla.

For example, a recent letter notes that both Carson and Vaitla supported DiSC.  The letter writer argues, “Davis citizens disapproved this project 64% to 36%, which political scientists define as a landside defeat. Carson was the honorary chair of the Measure H campaign which had lawn signs that implausibly read ‘combat climate change’ – for a project that predicted 12,000 daily vehicle trips. What do these facts tell us? Carson and Vaitla are out of touch with the Davis electorate.”

It’s hard to defeat an incumbent based on that kind of split.  It’s one thing if you have a primary like in the Board of Supervisors, where two people can take on the incumbent, hold the incumbent under 50 percent, and face a runoff in November.  Here, you have to outright defeat the incumbent.

This problem was anticipated.  The Vanguard learned earlier of a Zoom meeting where supporters of Vaitla and Fortune met, but no agreement was reached.

To put this problem into math terms—if you have a two-person race, all you have to do is hold the incumbent under 50 percent.  If you have a three-person race, you likely have to hold them under 30 percent to win.  It’s not impossible, but it is far more difficult.

Author

  • David Greenwald

    Greenwald is the founder, editor, and executive director of the Davis Vanguard. He founded the Vanguard in 2006. David Greenwald moved to Davis in 1996 to attend Graduate School at UC Davis in Political Science. He lives in South Davis with his wife Cecilia Escamilla Greenwald and three children.

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7 comments

  1. “Filing for attorney fees however, seemed an unmitigated disaster.”

    You have made this point several times and you might be correct on the politics but you have never bothered to view this from the Yes on H perspective. Filing a counter claim saved Yes on H thousands of dollars. Like you I’m not a lawyer  but my guess is that this is standard operating procedure in cases where claims for legal fees are made. Its too bad you never seemed to have asked for a legal opinion on the procedural process and only focused on the election dynamics.

        1. I don’t think David even has the politics right let alone the facts. The biggest mistake and unforced error was filing a petition on the ballot language with the court and having  a sitting council member front the suit. The petition for attorney fees was after the main debacle. If you didn’t know H was going down to defeat by the time Carson asked for attorney fees you weren’t paying attention.

  2. Ron and I agree – the Vanguard has made the point about incumbency more than once.  Point made. How about focusing on the merit of the candidates or (in the case of Carson) lack thereof.

    1. How about focusing on the merit of the candidates or (in the case of Carson) lack thereof.

      Wow…

      First part I agree with…

      … focusing on the merit of the candidates…

      Second part,..

      … merit of the candidates or (in the case of Carson) lack thereof.

      Direct slam, IMNSHO, negative politicking, and a good indication of the mindset/ethics/values of the poster, Mr Steward…

      Since I’m not a resident/voter in District 1, I’ll not go further on this post… but the ABC folk are getting on my XYZ nerves…

      I say, yet again… focus on what candidates can do for the ENTIRE community… experience, merits, commitment to SERVING the interests of their district, AND the ENTIRE community… yeah, I know, “good luck with that”… ’nuff said..

  3. BTW… no candidate is “in trouble” despite the ‘headline’, if they are focused on serving the community, rather than future political “visions” (and or egos)… there is a candidate who lost in one district, moved to another (to take advantage of ‘the next opportunity’ to run?  If they fail, will they move again, and run again in 2 years in Districts 2, 3, or 5?  Why not… Tom Campbell did that… worked for him)…

    What we need are folk who want to serve their community… not themselves, nor their aspirations, nor their egos…  we have 5 who PURPORT to do that… there will be no ‘losers’ if I am correct… there will be no ‘winners’ if I am not…

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