Maybe.  If Brulte can succeed in the 2014 elections, he may be a harbinger of 
what the future of the Republican party will look like.

http://www.sacbee.com/2012/12/07/5037477/dan-walters-has-california-republican.html#mi_rss=Dan%20Walters

Dan Walters: Has California Republican Party learned its lesson?

Have California's Republicans finally learned a lesson that some of their 
leaders have been trying to drive home for years – that they cannot prosper, or 
even survive, as a party of aging white men in the Western Hemisphere's most 
culturally complex society?

Perhaps so, since the state GOP is poised to make Jim Brulte, who has been 
issuing those warnings for years, its state chairman with a mandate to improve 
its fortunes.

Even the most anti-immigrant, anti-gay marriage, anti-tax, anti-abortion 
Republican activist must now recognize that with the party's wipeout in last 
month's elections, continuing down its recent path is a plunge into complete 
irrelevance.

Less than 30 percent of the state's registered voters call themselves 
Republicans. That was just about the party's share of the November electorate, 
and that's about its share of the California Legislature and of the state's 
congressional delegation.

But if Brulte, a veteran politician who engineered GOP gains in the Legislature 
in the 1990s, can shape up the party's infrastructure and finances, there may 
be an opportunity for it to make gains because of the growth of independent 
voters.

In fact, the expansion of independents has hurt Democratic voter registration 
even more than it has hurt Republican ranks.

When Jerry Brown was in his first governorship three-plus decades ago, 
Democrats commanded nearly 60 percent of voter registration, but have since 
dropped to less than 44 percent. Republicans, meanwhile, have rarely been above 
35 percent.

Despite inferior voter registration numbers, however, Republicans regularly won 
statewide contests in the 1980s because their mainstream candidates could 
appeal to independents and conservative Democrats. When Brulte was the 
Republican Assembly leader in 1994, before moving to the Senate, his party won 
a narrow Assembly majority.

There's been a huge sociological and cultural change in California since then, 
and the GOP ignored Brulte's warnings that it would become irrelevant if it 
failed to attract more women and nonwhite candidates and voters.

However, the soaring ranks of independents – now more than 20 percent – 
indicate that they are not wedded to the Democrats for one reason or another.

Therefore, they might be amenable to Republicans on issues – perhaps taxes, 
school reform or public pensions – where they consider Democrats to be 
wrongheaded.

Education would appear to be a particularly fertile field for Republicans 
because of a division between Democratic politicians who are joined at the hip 
to school unions and parents – especially Latino parents – who clamor for 
reform.

California's GOP is on life support. Whether it dies is up to the party's more 
realistic leaders, such as Brulte.

© Copyright The Sacramento Bee. All rights reserved.

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Call The Bee's Dan Walters, (916) 321-1195. Back columns, www.sacbee.com/ 
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