Coachella Valley Republicans fear being divided after Tuesday’s election

Palm Desert – Joy Miedercke, who runs the largest Republican club in the Coachella Valley, gave scores of “No to Prop. 50” signs to Thorn before election day.
But on Tuesday morning, he also knew the ballot measure would fail.
Proposition 50, Gov. Gavin Newlom’s Plan to challenge President Trump, passed easily last week. The polling measure, designed to increase the playing field with Republican Gerrymandering Efforts in Texas and other GOP states, has been pushed back by the states of California, trying to bring back the US Housems next year Midterms.
As a result, ChaoLella Valley Republicans will soon be represented by Anti-Trump Democrats in Washington.
The California Republicans, far from those on the left, for some years have felt neglected in the state where the Democrats are in power, and the role of proposing only 50 adds to the sense of political hope.
“Democrats are finding each other because we don’t have enough people,” said Miedecke, of his party in California.
Hemmed in by the San Jacinto and Santa Rosa Mountains, the desert basin has long been a magnet for conservative retirees and vacationers, including Republican presidents.
A cluster of palm trees illuminates the evening landscape on Frank Sininatra Drive in Rancho Mirage.
(Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times)
The local hospital is named after President Eisenhower. President Ford enjoyed many Emerald Golf courses in his later years with his wife, his ex-wife, his first wife Betty Ford, who established his reputation as a legal practitioner in the desert valley.
Voters in Indian Springs, parts of La Quinta and Cahuilla Hills returned Trump in the 2024 Presidential election. Under Prop. 50, some of those areas will go to the DRMATATAL RREALY ROUL district, an emergency doctor raised in the village of professionals, or join the left of San Diego County in a new level district by getting a democratic election.
Joy Miedecke of Indio is the president of the East Valley Republican Women Patriots. He blames the California Republican Party for failing to fund the opposition adequately. 50.
“The team is at the bottom,” said Miedeckeke, 80. “It’s at the end. We have nowhere to go.”
Sitting in his hometown grocery store on Wednesday, Mireckecke blamed the California Republican Party and its allies, saying they failed to raise enough money for the blackout.
A life-sized cardboard cutout of the California Republican Repubratorial Tentlentative and Riverside County Sheriff Bianco stood next to stacks of red maga hats and “alligator alcatraz” T-shirts. A President Reagan Cardboard Cutout also greeted guests.
Chris Mahr checks the petition signatures of the East Valley Republican Women Patriots on November 6 in Palm Desert. Republicans are afraid to print. Exceeding 50 will weaken the representation in the professional village.
Republican voters in the Coachella Valley spent days on November 4 in a special election that criticized the Democratic leadership and California. In Facebook chat groups, across bars and in the neighborhood, locals are weighing in on the new district lines and the proxy battle between Trump and Newsloom.
On Wednesday, licoln navigatorotors and cadillac estalades startled dragging the main, neat and tidy lawn before disappearing into the residential communities hidden behind the hidden colored gates.
Kay Hillery, 89, who lives in Indian fields in a neighborhood known for its critical conditions in today’s business, endures more bad news.
He expects the GOP nominees to have a hard time raising money because new districts put down new districts and destroy Republicans.
“I’m ashamed of Republicans for not saying anything,” said Hillary, who moved to the desert from Arcadia in 1989.
1. A ceramic statue of Trump is on display at the East Valley Republican Women Patriots store in Palm Desert. 2. The Trump Key Chain Dangles above the great god bless America button that hangs next to the hair dryer and the Bible 3. Inside the “Just Marylou” salon is decorated with Republican posters and slogans.
Voters who support the props. 50, however, were returned.
“It’s important to take a position when we need to, and we needed to take a position as a state,” said Linda blankly, President of Indian Health.
Indian Springs is well known for its triereenist tennis tournament, top golf courses and palm tree-lined fairways. Eisenhower, who lived partly in Nills Wells, is commemorated with a statue outside city hall.
The city has been strongly Republican for many years thanks to the State Republican Party Convention and returning donors organized by Bingertarians Davide and Charles Koch. (David Koch died in 2019.)
After Tuesday’s election, Indian Springs will lose its Republican representative, Ken Calvert, and become part of a newly drawn district in San Diego County.
That area is represented by Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Bonsall), but the Democrats are trying to oust him by transferring his district to the Bluer areas.
Michael Ford, left, Sonny Bono, center, and John Gardner Ford, right of Bono, attend the third day of the 1976 Republican National Convention at Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Missouri.
(Guy Delort/Penske Media via Getty Images)
Much of the Riverside County Desert Record Region was once represented by rep. Sonny Bono, singer, who was controversial. After being killed in a skiing accident in 1998, his wife, Mariya Bono, also a Republican, ran for his seat and served in Congress until 2013.
The Coachella Valley is now a political activity, home also to the Democratic seats of Palm Springs and Cathedral City and divided cities and ranch towns.
Today, the district is divided into the districts of Conmert, Republican Corona, and Democrat Ruiz.
Calvert announced last week that he will run for a new district in Orange and Riverside counties. The good news about Calvert is that it is a heavily Republican county. The bad news is the republican rep. ngy kim of the hills of Anaheim also works in that region.
Callert, in a statement sent by e-mail, approached with bleandlom for dislow republanching republicans throughout California – 5.7 respondents out of 22.9 million voters in the state.
“Conservatives must make their voices heard, they can drown out partisans who are pushing to advance a single-blame political agenda,” Calvert said. His office did not respond when asked about the Congressman’s views on Texas’ recovery efforts.
Indian City Mayor Bruce Whitman said Calvert was working on directing millions of dollars to the bath project to help the development.
US flags decorate the shopping district on November 6 in Palm Desert. Republicans fear their influence in the grassroots will be weakened by the prop. 50.
On the edge of the nearby palm tree, city leaders passed a pro-immigrant resolution and celebrated the All-LGBTQ + City Council in 2017.
India’s political leadership is always on point, Whitman said.
“National issues like the decisions of the city of The Current, or the decisions in favor of the Israelis or the Palestinians – it is not our thing,” he said.
In the nest line at the Indian springs, visitors from Canada and Oregon on Wednesday night met with silver-haired places.
As Michael Jackson’s “Bilie Jean” played, 60 – Something constructive John – who refused to give his last name- predicted the wars that he suspected would end as a “wash” between California and Texas.
“It’s just a game,” he said, sounding chatty.
Sandra Schulz of Palm Desert, Executive President of the East Valley Republican Women Patriots, stands in front of a wall covered in Trump photos and drawings on November 6.
Dan Schnur, who teaches political communication at USC and UC Berkeley, sees another effect. Removing the representation of DRMESIAL from the group’s final storage systems leaves this group relevant, he said.
The California Republican Party isn’t doing any meaningful climate work since then-gov. The office of Arnold Schwarzenegger left, said Schnur.
“They decided many years ago that they would no longer be involved in state politics,” Schnur said. “If you’re a California Republican, you’re focused on national politics and working for local companies.”
Visitors look at Republican items in the store window at the East Valley Republican Women Patriots store on Nov. 6 in Palm Desert.
In 2007, then-gov. Schwarzenegger spoke at the GOP State Caucus in Indian media and warned other Republicans that they need to reach the political center and attract more voters.
Schwarzenegger drew parallels to the film industry, telling the rally crowd: “We’re dying at the box office. We’re not filling the seats.”
The former governor opposed the proposal. 50, but reduced his involvement with Republicans in the campaign to defeat the measure.
Indian Wells Resident Peter Rammer, 69, a retired technology executive, described himself as a Republican who didn’t always vote along party lines. He is frustrated with the Democrats’ treatment of California’s homelessness.
He voted for Prop. 50, but he predicted that Democratic victories in New Jersey and Virginia would force the Republican party to pay more attention to regional issues.
“I’m just not happy with how everything is going in the country right now,” Rammer said, standing outside India’s City Hall. “There’s so much chaos, it’s crazy. But Trump — the guy who voted for me — is causing a lot.”
American flags adorn a shopping mall on El Paseo in Palm Desert, a staunchly Republican neighborhood but perhaps weak on props. 50.
Back in Palm Desert, CiblicKan Club President Miedeckecke was focused on the next campaign: Getting the name on the ballot measure by Asseblort Carl Demaio (R-San Diego).
It would require voter ID and proof of citizenship in California elections — another polarizing issue.



