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Grove, Gundy to face off for shot at 12th District

May 12—The race for the 12th District seat in the state Senate is setting up a partisan dichotomy for voters.

The Democratic challenger faces an uphill battle to unseat a Republican senator who won her spot in a similar district by about 28 percentage points in 2018. Numbers from the most recent report from the California Secretary of State don't seem to portend a drastic shift: The registration breakdown is 28.39 percent Democratic and 45.10 percent Republican.

Regardless of the outcome June 7, thanks to California's top-two primary system, voters are virtually guaranteed to get another chance to decide between the two in November.

State Sen. Shannon Grove, R-Bakersfield, is a small-business owner who currently represents the 16th District — which includes a number of the communities that are in the 12th after a recent redistricting — and Susanne Gundy is a retired public health program manager and longtime Democrat who lives in Visalia. (The new 12th District includes parts of Bakersfield, as well as the Kern River Valley, Ridgecrest, Taft, Tehachapi and parts of Fresno and Tulare counties.)

Grove, 57, campaigns on her experience as a legislator who understands first-hand the impacts regulations can have on businesses. Gundy, 80, who worked mostly in education outreach programs and whose business experience includes managing over a dozen properties she owns — a number of which are part of subsidized housing programs — would be a newcomer to political office.

Grove can lean on a lengthy track record of service to Kern voters, as the first female veteran in the Legislature when she was elected 12 years ago.

And while she's an experienced lawmaker — Grove served three terms in the Assembly for the 34th District from 2010 to 2016 before joining the Senate in 2018 — she frequently expresses frustration with how her advocacy on behalf of other small-business owners puts her at odds with many of her colleagues.

"That perspective, signing the front side of a check and not just the back side, puts a degree of responsibility and knowledge of economics that should be some of the skill set that legislators should have," Grove said in a candidate statement to The Californian. "Unfortunately, that is not the case in Sacramento."

Gundy has lived in the San Joaquin Valley since 1977 and, before retiring, spent 21 years administering various program in Tulare County's public health department, working her way up to program manager. She said she supervised staff, millions of dollars in budgets and a number of outreach efforts, everything from promoting dental health for children to HIV/Aids awareness.