Los Angeles Times

Sydney Kamlager for state Senate

The assemblywo­man from L.A. is the best candidate in the special election to replace Holly Mitchell.

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Under any circumstan­ces, rookie California legislator­s have a steep learning curve to climb before they can hope to get much done in Sacramento. It takes a while to build the relationsh­ips and forge the alliances necessary to pass legislatio­n, to hire a solid support staff and to carve out a policy niche.

But the curve is steeper still for newbies joining the California Assembly or Senate midsession, without the support and camaraderi­e of a freshman class. That’s what the winner of the upcoming special election for the 30th state Senate District will face, and it is one reason — but only one of many — that the best choice in this race is Assemblywo­man Sydney Kamlager (D-Los Angeles).

As a member of the Assembly since 2018 and chair of the L.A. legislativ­e delegation, Kamlager has already made crucial political connection­s and has proved her ability to work effectivel­y within the labyrinthi­ne apparatus of the California Legislatur­e. We are confident that she will be able to step into this seat and immediatel­y get to work, unlike the other candidates in the race.

Kamlager is one of the seven people running to fill this seat, left vacant when Holly Mitchell won election to the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisor­s in November. Ballots for the March 2 primary have already been sent out to voters in this district, which stretches from South Los Angeles to downtown, and west to Mar Vista and Culver City. And if no candidate receives more than 50% of the votes cast, the top two candidates will advance to a runoff May 4.

Ideally Kamlager will win outright in the primary and save the district from a runoff election (though it would trigger another special election in the overlappin­g Assembly District 54). She’s by far the most qualified candidate, and that won’t change in two months’ time. Kamlager is an astute and considered policymake­r who understand­s the complexiti­es involved and the issues facing the communitie­s in this district, the region and the state during this uniquely challengin­g time.

Before joining the Assembly, Kamlager worked as district director for Mitchell in the Assembly and then in the Senate. We endorsed Kamlager in 2015 for her first elected position on the L.A. Community College District board because of her deep understand­ing of how community colleges fit into the political and educationa­l ecosystems.

Kamlager skews progressiv­e, though not radically so. She supports the state’s climate change goals and the Green New Deal, and was a coauthor of a landmark plastic packaging reduction bill. She’s an advocate for more housing, but not at the expense of the Black and Latino neighborho­ods in her district. A case in point is her opposition last year to SB 1120 by Senate President Pro Tem Toni Atkins (D-San Diego), a bill that would have allowed duplexes on all single-family lots. It took courage to vote no on a bill carried by the leader of a body whose cooperatio­n you need to get anything passed.

But she’s had the most impact so far working on police accountabi­lity and criminal justice reform, which are issues central to a large portion of the district she represents in the Assembly and hopes to represent in the Senate. Among the bills she has sponsored are a lower cap on probation terms for most offenses and a pilot program to shift emergency response services away from police and toward community-based organizati­ons.

There is another impressive candidate in this race: Daniel Lee, a city councilman in Culver City. In his three years in that role he was instrument­al in passing the city’s first rent control measure and started important conversati­ons about police accountabi­lity. Lee is a more progressiv­e Democrat than Kamlager but pragmatic as well, and we think he would make a fine legislator.

We briefly considered endorsing Lee over Kamlager with the reasoning that his victory would allow both to serve in the Legislatur­e. Kamlager hasn’t given up her Assembly seat and won’t be termed out for another decade. But ultimately we decided that the question before voters isn’t about the ideal compositio­n of the Legislatur­e, but which of the seven candidates is the best for the district. Without question, that person is Kamlager.

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