Los Angeles Times

Goodbye, Mayor

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Re “Big spending fails to lift Villaraigo­sa’s campaign,” June 7

Antonio Villaraigo­sa lost because the Latinos realized he was a political sham. A power grabber who could easily have outpaced Gavin Newsom if Latinos had trusted him and come out to vote.

John Cox may have been little known in Los Angeles and San Francisco liberal circles, but in San Diego and south Orange County he was a respected businessma­n who spent millions of his dollars to help fund USO operations for our veterans.

If both Newsom and Villaraigo­sa were on the ballot, there would be no democracy, would there? What would be the choice? Liberal vs. liberal. There would be no challenge to the unfair gas tax. There would be no challenge to the outlandish and money-wasting bullet train. There would be no pushback on the state’s “sanctuary city” position.

So what happened? Conservati­ves came out to vote. Liberals did not support Villaraigo­sa.

Denis Montenaro

Laguna Niguel

It appears we are finally saying goodbye to Villaraigo­sa on the California political scene. His hairline receding, his posturing as a man of the downtrodde­n, the working class, the Latino underclass, unconvinci­ng from a man who made millions off Herbalife.

Perhaps too many also remembered he wasn’t quite the family man he liked to portray himself as. Understand­ably, Villaraigo­sa could never integrate the life and lifestyle of an entitled aristocrat with a message of working-class hero.

Mitch Paradise

Los Angeles

Gavin Newsom projected an air of strength and leadership, while Villaraigo­sa looked old and tired, touted immigratio­n in his speech, and seemed to take for granted he would be the runner-up going into November.

William Winkler

Burbank

The Times’ article on Villaraigo­sa’s defeat omitted two important causal factors.

Villaraigo­sa, since leaving the mayor’s office, earned big money as a consultant for Herbalife and Cadiz, among other companies.

Herbalife has been said to entice poor Latinos, among others, into a trap within which they purchase goods from Herbalife which they then struggle to sell to their friends and neighbors.

Cadiz is a company that wants to drain a desert aquifer in order to sell the water. This could prove to be devastatin­g to the plant and animal life of the desert.

I worked as a volunteer for Villaraigo­sa when he ran for mayor, walking precincts and manning phone banks. He betrayed my trust in him, and I voted for Newsom.

Bob Lentz

Sylmar

 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? ANTONIO VILLARAIGO­SA gives his concession speech in downtown Los Angeles on Tuesday night.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ANTONIO VILLARAIGO­SA gives his concession speech in downtown Los Angeles on Tuesday night.

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