Los Angeles Times

Karen Bass is sworn in as mayor of Los Angeles

First woman to hold the office says she’ll get straight to work Monday on homelessne­ss

- By Julia Wick, Benjamin Oreskes and Dakota Smith

After 241 years, the nation’s second-largest city has its first female mayor.

The mood was jubilant Sunday afternoon as thousands of Angelenos danced to a surprise Stevie Wonder performanc­e and cheered while Karen Bass was sworn in by Vice President Kamala Harris as Los Angeles’ 43rd mayor.

The crowds inside downtown’s Microsoft Theater exploded into applause after Harris said the words “Madam mayor” and remained on their feet as Bass walked to the podium.

Bass used her historymak­ing moment to emphasize her place within a constellat­ion of barrier-breaking California women.

The first Black woman elected mayor of Los Angeles was joined by the first female vice president, the first woman to lead the California Senate and California’s first female lieutenant governor.

Harris is the first Black or Asian American vice president, and Senate President Pro Tempore Toni G. Atkins is the first openly LGBTQ person to lead the statehouse’s upper chamber.

Bass honored Harris, Atkins and Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis as she began her remarks, saying, “Making history with each of you today is a monumental moment in my life and in Los Angeles. The four of us — California­ns, leaders, women.

“And let’s not forget our all-female county Board of Supervisor­s! We are all going to make so much history together,” Bass said.

Bass’ remarks described the moment as an “inflection point” in the history of a city battered by the COVID-19 pandemic, a rapidly changing economy and high cost of living, climate

‘I call on our city to not just dream of the L.A. we want but to participat­e in making the dream come true.’

— MAYOR KAREN BASS

change and the homelessne­ss crisis. But, she said, “L.A. magic is still here.”

She spoke to the deep difficulti­es faced by working families on the margins and urged Angelenos “to welcome housing in every neighborho­od.”

“I call on our city to not just dream of the L.A. we want but to participat­e in making the dream come true,” Bass said — one of several calls to action during her remarks.

The inaugurati­on of L.A.’s second Black mayor was also a celebratio­n of Black artists, with a lineup that included gospel duo Mary Mary, singer Chloe Bailey and poet Amanda Gorman, as well as Wonder, who performed “Keep Our Love Alive” and “Living for the City.”

The mayor’s oath of office was preceded by musical performanc­es, remarks from Atkins and UCLA Labor Center Director Kent Wong, and two poetry recitation­s.

A voice in the back of the theater joyfully hollered, “East Los in the building!” as the Chicano band Las Cafeteras — another surprise addition to the program — sang “La Bamba.” The chamber choir from Bass’ alma mater, Hamilton High School, performed a soul-stirring rendition of Sam Cooke’s “A Change Is Gonna Come.”

Gorman, who made history in 2021 as the youngest poet to write and recite a piece at a presidenti­al inaugurati­on, read an original work, as did fellow Los Angeles poet Sophie Szew.

The event was ceremonial: Bass was privately sworn in Saturday by Los Angeles City Clerk Holly Wolcott and didn’t officially succeed Mayor Eric Garcetti until 12:01 a.m. Monday.

Sunday’s ceremony was originally scheduled for the steps of City Hall, but a storm scuttled those plans, necessitat­ing the move indoors. Bass, City Council members and other dignitarie­s sat in rows on the theater’s stage, with a screen displaying the exterior of City Hall behind them.

The event began with interfaith invocation­s from Bass’ pastor, the Rev. Norman Johnson of First New Christian Fellowship Baptist Church; Rabbi Sharon Brous of IKAR; IMAN Cultural Center Executive Director Dr. Sadegh Namazikhah; and Iglesia Restauraci­ón Executive Pastor Rene Molina.

Incoming Councilmem­bers Eunisses Hernandez, Katy Young Yaroslavsk­y, Traci Park, Hugo SotoMartín­ez and Tim McOsker also took oaths of office onstage, as did incoming City Controller Kenneth Mejia and incoming City Atty. Hydee Feldstein Soto.

Attendees swarmed around Gov. Gavin Newsom and First Partner Jennifer Siebel Newsom, seeking selfies as the pair weaved through the crowd before the ceremony. The governor told The Times that “optimism, dual opportunit­y and partnershi­p” were behind his decision to attend Bass’ inaugurati­on.

“At the end of the day, it’s pretty clear the magnitude of some of the challenges we face require us working at another level of collaborat­ion and cooperatio­n,” Newsom said. “So it’s in that spirit that brings me down.”

Developer Rick Caruso outspent Bass more than 11 to 1 during the nationally watched race that preceded her mayoral victory, but the six-term congresswo­man triumphed with a nearly 10percenta­ge-point lead.

She takes control of a city in crisis, where tens of thousands of residents lack permanent shelter, and confidence in local government is at a nadir.

Less than 48 hours before the inaugurati­on, embattled Councilmem­ber Kevin de León drew national headlines for a physical altercatio­n with an activist during a holiday celebratio­n for children.

The melee followed months of tension at City Hall, where business was upended in early October after The Times reported on a leaked audio recording of De León and other city leaders making racist and derogatory comments about a host of groups. The scandal only deepened mistrust in a municipal system beset by a string of corruption indictment­s in recent years.

Bass has long promised to declare a state of emergency on homelessne­ss — the central issue during a long season of campaignin­g. In her remarks, she said that move will come Monday, as she begins her day at the city’s Emergency Operations Center.

The goal of the emergency order will be to speed up and centralize the process of deploying resources to get money appropriat­ed and redirected to addressing the homelessne­ss crisis.

The former congresswo­man spoke repeatedly about how government at all levels could “focus on solutions rather than jurisdicti­on, on linking arms rather than pointing fingers.”

“Vice President Harris, Gov. Newsom — my colleagues in Congress here today — look for me on your caller ID,” Bass said.

Bass’ speech was briefly interrupte­d by a protester who ran onto a side stage and began shouting about Twitter, the FBI and other topics — only to be quickly shouted down by the crowd and removed by security.

The event was paid for with private funds raised by the Bass campaign, administer­ed through the Mayor’s Fund for Los Angeles, a nonprofit started by Garcetti that pays for civic programs and raises money from corporatio­ns, foundation­s and individual­s. No preexistin­g Mayor’s Fund dollars were used for the event, according to Bass spokespers­on Zach Seidl.

Bass’ team has yet to disclose any of the donors for the event or the estimated cost.

Walking out after the inaugurati­on, former Mayor Antonio Villaraigo­sa said he couldn’t be more proud of his friend of 50 years and believes her emergency declaratio­n on homelessne­ss will send a message to Angelenos that she’s taking the crisis seriously.

“I’m going to give her a big hug and say, ‘Now the work starts,’ ” Villaraigo­sa said.

 ?? Jason Armond Los Angeles Times ?? “L.A. MAGIC is still here,” Mayor Karen Bass said during her inaugural address Sunday at downtown’s Microsoft Theater. The mood was jubilant as she was sworn in by Vice President Kamala Harris, below.
Jason Armond Los Angeles Times “L.A. MAGIC is still here,” Mayor Karen Bass said during her inaugural address Sunday at downtown’s Microsoft Theater. The mood was jubilant as she was sworn in by Vice President Kamala Harris, below.
 ?? Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ??
Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times
 ?? Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ?? HER FIRST official duty, Mayor Karen Bass said during her inaugural speech Sunday at Microsoft Theater, will be to declare a state of emergency on homelessne­ss — the central issue during a long campaign season.
Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times HER FIRST official duty, Mayor Karen Bass said during her inaugural speech Sunday at Microsoft Theater, will be to declare a state of emergency on homelessne­ss — the central issue during a long campaign season.

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