
Roughly 300 people showed up at Fremont City Hall Saturday night to see Rep. Mike Honda face off with the candidates vying to unseat him. As they lined up to get inside, Ro Khanna supporters wearing orange and green face paint waved signs bearing his name, and yelled “We want Ro!”
The event, put on by the League of Women Voters of San Jose/Santa Clara, was the first, and possibly only, opportunity to see Honda and Khanna in the same room. Khanna (and local papers) have called repeatedly for debates, but Honda’s campaign has refused, following a fairly traditional political strategy for long-term incumbents. Why take a chance on making a public gaffe or showing up poorly against a rival trailing in the polls?
Honda did seem uncomfortable, sometimes fumbling over his phrasing and running up repeatedly against the time limits in the forum, tightly moderated by Gloria Chun Hoo, president of the local LWV. But if audience members were unaware, walking in, of Honda’s 14-year tenure as a progressive liberal in Congress, they would have known a lot about Honda walking out.
“I’ve had results,” he said, “and the results I’ve brought to this valley, was for everybody and not for a few.”
Advocating for the “voiceless” was a theme Honda hit on throughout the evening. He has championed human rights and civil rights during his time in Washington, and he’s also been known as a reliable ally of the valley’s technology interests. But now that the 17th District has been redrawn to hug Silicon Valley more tightly, simply being pro-tech may not be enough for voters.