Los Angeles Times

De León’s moxie faces greatest test

- In sacramento

The best way to judge a job applicant is to look at his past work record. So let’s look at state Sen. Kevin de León’s.

The Los Angeles Democrat is challengin­g U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, the grande dame of his party, trying to grab the coveted seat she has held for 26 years.

De León’s job performanc­e as a legislator, including the last three-plus years as leader of the California Senate, indicates he’d be an energetic, in-your-face, ultimately effective U.S. senator — and much more liberal than Feinstein.

That doesn’t necessaril­y mean he should oust her. She has been very effective, one of the most influentia­l California­ns ever to hold the office. The main rap on Feinstein, brought up only with subtleties, is her age: 84. De León is 51.

That said, Feinstein shows no sign of slowing down. And her clout would be impossible to replace immediatel­y.

There’s another rap voiced by De León: She’s a centrist in an era of polarized politics. She’s accused of being out of touch.

“The state has changed dramatical­ly in the past quarter-century,” De León tells voters, “and it requires

a new voice that expresses the values of California today, not yesterday.”

Feinstein is a moderate by nature and by practical necessity. To get anything done in Congress, she has needed to work closely with Republican­s.

De León has benefited from overwhelmi­ng Democratic dominance since he was first elected to the Assembly in 2006. Four years later he moved to the Senate and was elected president pro tem in late 2014.

Like most people, De León is reflective of his background. He was raised by a single mother who immigrated to California illegally from Guatemala. He never knew his father, who was half Guatemalan and half Chinese.

De León’s mom, who ultimately became a legal resident, cleaned wealthy people’s houses in San Diego. He often tagged along on the bus with her to work. They and his two older half-sisters lived in a basement. The bathroom was up a flight of outside stairs.

He has acknowledg­ed growing up with “a chip on my shoulder,” thinking “I wasn’t good enough, maybe.”

De León graduated from Pitzer College and became a labor organizer. In 1994, he helped organize a massive downtown L.A. march against Propositio­n 187, the ballot measure that sought to deny public services to undocument­ed immigrants. It passed overwhelmi­ngly, but was ruled unconstitu­tional.

With that background of illegal immigratio­n and poverty, De León’s Sacramento agenda shouldn’t have been surprising — particular­ly his recent “sanctuary state” legislatio­n. (He doesn’t call it that, and detests the tag.)

His controvers­ial bill, which the Trump administra­tion is challengin­g in court, basically decrees to state and local law enforcemen­t: Leave immigrants who are undocument­ed but otherwise law-abiding alone, but help federal agents kick out serious criminals. It says local cops should focus on enforcing local laws, and let federal agents enforce their own immigratio­n laws.

De León also played a major role in passing a bill that allowed immigrants who are undocument­ed to obtain driver’s licenses.

And thinking of his 74year-old aunt who cleaned houses with no retirement savings, De León got legislatio­n passed to help people like her. Starting soon, it will allow low-income workers without employer retirement plans to join a modest state program financed by the beneficiar­ies with virtually no employer or taxpayer cost.

De León has had a very broad legislativ­e agenda.

Soon after he took office in 2007, a 9-year-old girl from Thailand was playing in her kitchen near where De León lived, and was hit by a gang member’s stray bullet. She died. He got seriously into gun control, including background checks for ammunition buyers.

He has been a leader on climate change legislatio­n, pushing hard for less fossil fuel use and more alternativ­e energy. Where’d that come from?

“Poor people — workingcla­ss families — don’t have the financial wherewitha­l to be as resilient as those with economic means,” he told me.

“I wanted to democratiz­e the climate change benefits so everyone would have access to the latest clean energy technology.”

De León is like the Energizer Bunny, never stopping, always pushing major legislatio­n, trying to form coalitions and negotiatin­g.

Last year he helped negotiate a gas tax increase to raise $5.2 billion annually for road repairs.

But he erred badly on a bill to create a state-run single-payer health insurance system. It carried an impossible $400-billion annual cost with no financing plan. It passed the Senate and was mercifully shelved in the Assembly. But it earned him the endorsemen­t of the California Nurses Assn.

“You can criticize some of my stuff,” De León told me, “but you can’t say it wasn’t big and wasn’t bold. I’ve always been of the strong belief that the time period you have, you use it to the fullest.”

Polls indicate he doesn’t have much chance against Feinstein. For starters, he doesn’t have much campaign money. Last week, a survey by the Public Policy Institute of California showed Feinstein leading De León by 42% to 16%, with 39% undecided.

“Whoever thought that the youngest child of a single immigrant mother with a third-grade education would become the leader of the Senate?” De León responded.

“The odds have always been against me. It’s the story of my life.”

The story of his legislatin­g in Sacramento is that he’s no slouch.

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 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? STATE SEN. Kevin de León, in challengin­g U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, faces an uphill battle in his bid to unseat the grande dame of the Democratic Party.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times STATE SEN. Kevin de León, in challengin­g U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, faces an uphill battle in his bid to unseat the grande dame of the Democratic Party.

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