Los Angeles Times

Moving L.A. elections paid off

- Ive years ago,

FLos Angeles voters decided overwhelmi­ngly to move city elections from odd-numbered to even-numbered years to coincide with presidenti­al and gubernator­ial elections. The hope was that, by aligning local elections with higher-profile, higher-turnout races, the city’s anemic voter participat­ion rates would be increased.

Last month’s primary was the first test of the city’s new election schedule. And guess what — it worked! Far more Angelenos voted in City Council and school board elections than in the past. In some council races, the number of votes cast tripled or quadrupled compared with the last election.

In 11 City Council and school board races, 33% of registered voters cast a vote, on average. That doesn’t sound particular­ly robust, except when compared to recent local elections when just 10% to 20% of voters cast ballots. It’s all the more impressive because there has been a surge in voter registrati­on since 2016, thanks to voter registrati­on drives and state programs like the revised “motor voter” law that automatica­lly registers people to vote when they visit the Department of Motor Vehicles.

The big increase in voter participat­ion should be no surprise. Research has shown that when local elections are reschedule­d to coincide with state and federal elections, voter turnout typically increases by 15 points. It just makes sense to capture the voters who show up in greater numbers for higher-profile state and federal elections.

Skeptics of moving L.A.’s election worried that local races would be overshadow­ed by national and state contests. That could make it harder for grass-roots candidates to raise money and get their message out.

But in several races, grass-roots candidates with less money neverthele­ss managed to force more establishe­d and wellfunded candidates into runoffs. Incumbent Councilman David Ryu will face nonprofit leader Nithya Raman. Longtime politician Mark Ridley-Thomas will face attorney Grace Yoo.

There was also concern that voters would show up for the high-profile state and federal races and “drop off ” for local races. That didn’t happen either. Between 80% and 90% of voters who cast ballots in the primary voted in their council race. It probably helped that local elections were placed at the top of the ballot in Los Angeles County, thanks to a 2018 bill by Sen. Anthony Portantino (D-La Cañada Flintridge).

It wasn’t easy to shift L.A.’s massive election infrastruc­ture to a new date, but the effort appears to have paid off. Democracy is stronger when more voters participat­e in local elections.

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