"California has become less typical of the country,'' said Michael Barone, author of the Almanac of American Politics. "With the high immigrant population, the big 'left' coast vote ... the people who have been generated in California for higher office have become less suited to be national candidates.''
California's Democratic leanings have made it more difficult for Republicans to emerge from the state, which now accounts for more than one- fifth of the electoral votes needed to win the presidency. Yet it was the Republicans who relied so heavily on the state for candidates.
Republicans had a Californian on every winning presidential ticket from Herbert Hoover's election in 1928 though Reagan's re-election 56 years later. Meanwhile, while several California Democrats have aggressively sought the presidency, including former Gov. Jerry Brown and former Sen. Alan Cranston, none has ever made it onto the ticket.
"We had an incredibly dry streak of anti-charismatic, not just non- charismatic, but anti-charismatic, people in the governor's office,'' said Bruce Cain, director of the Institute of Governmental Studies at UC Berkeley, offering another explanation for the lack of Californians on the national scene.
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