Los Angeles Times

Underdogs headed to runoffs in L.A.

Nithya Raman and Grace Yoo are poised to force well-known rivals into runoffs.

- BY EMILY ALPERT REYES AND DAVID ZAHNISER

Two upstart candidates for City Council challenge officehold­ers David Ryu and Mark RidleyThom­as.

They didn’t have the campaign cash or the bigname endorsemen­ts of their rivals. Neither had been elected to public office.

But a pair of upstart candidates — nonprofit leader Nithya Raman and attorney Grace Yoo — could end up forcing their more establishe­d opponents into runoff elections in November, even as other political heavyweigh­ts were cruising to victory.

County election officials are still counting ballots.

But if the numbers hold, Raman will face off against Los Angeles City Councilman David Ryu in a council district that stretches from Sherman Oaks to Silver Lake. Yoo could go head-tohead with longtime county Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas, an elected official for three decades, to represent a Crenshaw-to-Koreatown council district.

In L.A. council races, if no candidate wins the majority of the vote, the top two finishers compete against each other in a November runoff. Because L.A.’s municipal election now coincides with the presidenti­al race, the campaign would be unlike any runoff seen before at City Hall, lasting eight months — more than three times longer than previous L.A. runoffs.

That could be an opportunit­y for lesser-known candidates, giving them more time to knock on doors and connect with voters, said political consultant Dermot Givens, who was not involved in any of the council races.

“That doesn’t cost money. That just takes time — kissing babies, shaking hands, letting people know who you are,” Givens said.

But runoff campaigns can also be more costly. Because presidenti­al elections have higher turnout, candidates are already having to spend more money to reach more voters, said political consultant Larry Levine.

That pool of voters should grow even more in November, he said. “Now they’ll be campaignin­g to a universe of voters that is three or four times larger” — and for a longer period of time, Levine added.

Ryu, who was elected five years ago as a City Hall outsider, had a long list of advantages this time around: The councilman raised and spent more than $1 million in contributi­ons, more than any other L.A. council candidate. He was endorsed by the Los Angeles County Democratic Party and a host of Democratic politician­s, labor unions and business groups.

Backers said he had followed through on his promises, including clamping down on campaign money from real estate developers and making spending in his office more transparen­t. Cindy Chvatal, president of the Hancock Park Homeowners Assn., called him a “remarkable” councilman, saying he had worked to fix sidewalks, repair streets and respond promptly to calls from constituen­ts.

“If you look at his record, and you look at what he’s done, he’s served the district really well,” she said.

Raman mobilized progressiv­e activists who complained that Ryu had fallen short on housing and homelessne­ss. She brought grassroots energy to a campaign that sought to bring in voters who were disconnect­ed from local politics.

Her campaign also picked up buzz from celebritie­s such as Natalie Portman and Jane Fonda.

Raman’s strong showing represents “a complete bucking of convention­al politics and the way people think elections get done in Los Angeles,” said Walker Foley, senior organizer with the environmen­tal group Food & Water Action, which endorsed Raman and has pushed to phase out gasfired power plants.

Raman, he said, built a “powerful, at-the-door movement that spoke to voters and got people to the polls.”

Her platform included setting up a network of community centers to assist unhoused Angelenos and speeding L.A.’s transition to clean energy. As of Wednesday evening, Raman was about 7 points behind Ryu.

In the race to succeed Councilman Herb Wesson in South Los Angeles, Yoo faces more of an uphill climb. Election results posted Wednesday showed her trailing Ridley-Thomas by a significan­t margin.

Yoo campaigned as a fighter for regular citizens. She turned the spotlight on her legal battles with city leaders over their plans to cut down trees in Hollywood, redraw council district boundaries and construct a 27-story residentia­l tower in Hollywood. Although she did not win the redistrict­ing fight, the city agreed to preserve many of the shade trees and was ordered by a judge to repeal its approval of the tower.

On Wednesday, Yoo said she has begun conferring with lawyers about the county’s mishandlin­g of Tuesday’s election — including inaccurate ballots, long lines at polling places and malfunctio­ning equipment — to ensure that those mistakes are not repeated in the November runoff.

“The county’s inability to put on a seamless election is completely outrageous,” she said. “I can’t believe Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas can’t get this right.”

Ridley-Thomas said voters are “smart enough to know that implementi­ng new procedures always requires improvemen­t.”

The L.A. County Board of Supervisor­s has already launched a review of the “pros and cons of the new system,” he said.

Ridley-Thomas ran on a platform of experience, highlighti­ng his work in fighting homelessne­ss, adding rail lines and reopening the problem-plagued Martin Luther King Jr. Community Hospital in Willowbroo­k. Voters in the district, he said last month, were in no mood to experiment.

The district’s “voters got it right — 47% MRT, 24% Yoo,” Ridley-Thomas said.

Tuesday was far from a bad night for political veterans and incumbents. In an Eastside race to replace Councilman Jose Huizar, former state Sen. Kevin de León appeared to be avoiding a runoff, according to results tallied as of Wednesday evening.

In the San Fernando Valley, Councilman John Lee had a solid lead over college educator Loraine Lundquist in a rematch to represent neighborho­ods including Chatsworth, Porter Ranch and Granada Hills.

Three other incumbents — Paul Krekorian, Nury Martinez and Marqueece Harris-Dawson — sailed easily to reelection.

 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? GRACE YOO was trailing longtime L.A. political figure Mark Ridley-Thomas in the 10th Council District, but as of Wednesday he did not have a majority.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times GRACE YOO was trailing longtime L.A. political figure Mark Ridley-Thomas in the 10th Council District, but as of Wednesday he did not have a majority.
 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? NITHYA RAMAN was only about 7 points behind Councilman David Ryu as of Wednesday evening.
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times NITHYA RAMAN was only about 7 points behind Councilman David Ryu as of Wednesday evening.

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