Commentary The nation has seen three major gubernatorial recalls of note in the last two decades—two of them in California and one in Wisconsin. In Wisconsin, the public employee unions went after Gov. Scott Walker and failed to remove him from office. In 2003, Californians had their fill of Gov. Gray Davis and the unions failed to protect him. By their very nature, recalls have a massive randomness to them. When Arnold Schwarzenegger jumped into the race to replace Davis, it probably sealed the sitting governor’s fate and Davis became one of only two governors to be recalled in our country’s history. This was big news. Walker winning was also big news. Newsom winning is not big news. Sacramento’s public employee unions have become much more powerful and have amassed egregious amounts of money from dues to make sure their friends get into and stay in office. They can take …