Los Angeles Times

Seeking to avoid a runoff, mayor offers thanks for victory. Council incumbents take an early lead.

- By Michael Finnegan and Dakota Smith

Mayor Eric Garcetti, facing 10 little-known opponents, was gliding to a second term Tuesday in an election that tested his clout as Los Angeles voters weighed a sweeping anti-developmen­t measure that he fought to defeat, according to early returns.

With less than 5% of the vote counted, Garcetti declared victory in remarks to cheering supporters in PicoUnion.

“Thank you for giving me the honor of being your mayor for another term,” he said late Tuesday night.

Eight City Council seats were also at stake in Tuesday’s primary, with incumbents across the city all taking an early lead over their challenger­s.

In a season when Donald Trump’s tumultuous presidency has dominated politics worldwide, it has been hard for Garcetti and others on the L.A. ballot to capture the public’s attention.

Garcetti spent more than $3 million trying to burnish his image for an election he stood little chance of losing. His goal was to win not just

another term, but also a solid affirmatio­n of hometown support that could strengthen his standing to run for statewide office. He governs a city of nearly 4 million people, but is barely known outside Southern California.

In his campaign, Garcetti emphasized his record raising the minimum wage, cutting business taxes and backing ballot measures to expand public transit and house the homeless.

The recent surge in homelessne­ss and an uptick in crime threatened to dampen Garcetti’s support, even if he was widely expected to win the majority vote that he needs to avoid a May 16 runoff.

Public anxiety over explosive growth of developmen­t in Hollywood and other neighborho­ods fueled support for Measure S, which would hinder some major real estate projects. Passage of the measure would be a blow to the prodevelop­ment mayor, but preliminar­y returns showed it losing by a wide margin.

A liberal Democrat, Garcetti also faced criticism from immigrant rights advocates who accused him of failing to speak out forcefully enough against Trump, a charge he denied. They criticized him for resisting labeling Los Angeles a “sanctuary city” for immigrants in the U.S. illegally.

On Tuesday night, scores of protesters gathered outside Garcetti’s election celebratio­n at the Pico-Union office of Laborers Internatio­nal Union of North America Local 300.

“Sanctuary is our demand, Mayor Garcetti take a stand,” they chanted.

Garcetti has sought to raise his national profile in recent weeks by denouncing Trump’s immigratio­n policies in television news interviews.

“He’s out there defending the cause,” Romario Ortiz, 27, the son of immigrants from Guatemala and El Salvador, said Tuesday after voting for Garcetti at an Echo Park polling station.

Only one of Garcetti’s challenger­s, Democratic political operative Mitchell Schwartz, had posed at least a minimal threat. Schwartz spent nearly $700,000 on the contest, much of it for final-week mailings to voters. It has been many decades since that kind of smallscale campaign has succeeded in an L.A. mayor’s race.

The other two citywide elected officials, Controller Ron Galperin and City Atty. Mike Feuer, were running unopposed Tuesday, as was Councilman Bob Blumenfiel­d in the West Valley.

But City Councilmen Gil Cedillo, Paul Koretz, Curren Price, Mike Bonin, Mitch O’Farrell and Joe Buscaino were all facing challenger­s. In the East Valley, 20 candidates were vying for the open council seat last held by Felipe Fuentes.

Cedillo, who served 14 years as a state lawmaker before winning his council seat four years ago, was facing one of the most serious challenges, from bike activist Joe Bray-Ali. But the first round of election returns found that even Cedillo stood a chance of winning a majority and avoiding a runoff.

One sign of concern among Cedillo supporters was a late $80,000 expenditur­e by a Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce committee on Spanish-language radio ads promoting the Eastside councilman. The ads focused on his work supporting immigrants in the country illegally.

At Cedillo’s party Tuesday night in Highland Park, former Mayor Antonio Villaraigo­sa said a runoff looked unlikely.

“He’s a fighter and I think the people recognize that,” said Villaraigo­sa, now a candidate for governor.

Price, one of three African Americans on the council, was trying to fend off two Latino challenger­s in his district just south of downtown. The district has become a test of black political power in recent years as the Latino population has steadily risen. Initial returns showed Price easily avoiding a runoff.

Koretz, Bonin, O’Farrell and Buscaino were each defeating their opponents handily in early returns. In the open East Valley district, early returns showed Karo Torossian and Monica Rodriguez best positioned to make a May runoff.

The trickle of voters at city polling stations captured the city’s prevailing attitude toward the election: indifferen­ce.

“Four people in line at my polling place is four more people than I thought would be at my polling place, so that’s something,” USC graduate student Alex Amadeo wrote on Twitter.

The city’s elected officials normally serve four-year terms. But because of a shift in the election calendar, winners of this year’s elections will serve 5½ years. Starting in 2020, city elections will coincide with state and federal elections.

 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? IN HIS CAMPAIGN for a second term, Mayor Eric Garcetti emphasized his record raising the minimum wage and cutting business taxes.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times IN HIS CAMPAIGN for a second term, Mayor Eric Garcetti emphasized his record raising the minimum wage and cutting business taxes.

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