Backers of the push to oust Republican state Sen. Jeff Denham of Merced on Wednesday abandoned their recall campaign, though their effort will still appear on the June ballot.
Senate Pro Tem Don Perata, an Alameda Democrat, announced he would end the recall campaign to help lawmakers focus on the states budget deficit and other pressing issues.
This is my call and my best judgment about how to stop the long, slow slide into another long stalemate, Perata said in the statement, adding that his decision was not part of any agreement with state Republicans.
Kevin Spillane, a spokesman for the anti-recall campaign, said he welcomed Peratas declaration but wanted to see actions, not words.
Just this week, they increased their media buys, Spillane said.
We want the commercials to be canceled, to see the signs come down.
Commercials for both the pro-recall and anti-recall campaigns appeared on Sacramento television Wednesday evening.
Paul Hefner, a spokesman for the pro-recall campaign, said future commercials would be pulled and ad time cancelled. All other campaign activities will also cease, he said.
Spillane pointed out that Denham still faces a challenge to his seat because the recall question remains on the ballot. Monterey County Supervisor Simon Salinas also is on the ballot, and will take Denhams seat if enough people vote to recall him.
We still need to run a campaign, and we still need voters to say no, Spillane said.
Salinas did not return a call for comment. Hefner said Perata had told Salinas that the recall campaign would end.
Denham, who represents the 12th Senate District that includes a portion of Stanislaus County, is the subject of a recall vote because Perata was upset by Denhams refusal to vote for a state budget last summer.
At the time, Denham said the proposed budget was not balanced, but Perata and other Democrats said Denham was going back on campaign promises, and began collecting signatures for a recall.
But since the recall was certified for the ballot in March, local elected officials in both parties and media outlets statewide have decried the effort. Critics contended that Perata, who controls a political fund that contributed money toward the recall, wanted Denham out because replacing him with a Democrat would make it easier for Peratas party to pass legislation.
Fiscal matters such as the state budget need a two-thirds vote to pass. In the current state Senate, that requires at least two Republican state senators. Last week, Perata said Denhams recall would make it easier for the state to pass a budget that included new taxes for the new fiscal year.
The state budget, which by state law is supposed to be in place by July 1, faces a deficit of $13 billion to $20 billion that lawmakers must close.
Peratas statement said the recall kept coming up when he met with Senate Minority Leader Dave Cogdill, R-Modesto, to discuss the state budget. Cogdill said Perata was making the wise decision.
This eliminates an unnecessary distraction in an already contentious budget year, Cogdill said in a prepared statement.
This will allow us to focus on doing what voters expect from us: achieving a balanced, responsible budget. Merced County District Attorney Larry Morse, a Democrat whom Perata approached about challenging Denham, supported the senate leaders decision to dump the recall push for the same reasons as Cogdill.
It did not seem to have any legs and clearly did not have support in the district, which is where these things really must originate, Morse said.
Sen. Perata made the correct call, he said. With the yawning deficit of $15 to $20 billion, this was only poisoning relations. Gov. Schwarzenegger, who opposed the recall, also released a statement applauding Peratas decision.
Denhams district, which includes parts or all of Madera, Merced, Monterey, San Benito and Stanislaus counties, has a majority of registered Democrats.
Joan Clendenin, leader of the Republican Partys Stanislaus County chapter, was skeptical of Peratas decision to fold the campaign.
Its a case of them trying to have it both ways, and they must have some devastating polling, she said. Thats the only that makes any sense. Spillane, the anti-recall spokesman, agreed that organizers may have thought the recall would fail.
My guess is that Perata is cutting his losses and saving his campaign cash, Spillane said.
But Hefner, of the pro-recall campaign, disputed that thinking.
Were almost still a month away from the election, Hefner said.
Anyone who says they know the outcome of that isnt being very honest. Both Spillane and Hefner said it was too soon to say what might happen to thousands of dollars groups have donated on both sides of the recall.
Both parties and unaffiliated groups had donated a considerable amount of money to the pro-recall campaign, including $15,000 from the California Federation of Teachers that was reported Wednesday.
Denham, a farmer, was first elected to the state senate in 2002, and easily re-elected in 2006.
He is planning a run for state lieutenant governor in 2010, after he is termed out of the state Senate.