Oroville Mercury-Register

Los Angeles councilmen resist resignatio­n in racism scandal

- By Brian Melley and Stefanie Dazio

LOS ANGELES >> Two Los Angeles City Council members held out Thursday against overwhelmi­ng calls to resign for joining in bareknuckl­es banter during a private meeting where a colleague was recorded making crude and racist remarks.

Pressure mounted on Gil Cedillo and Kevin de Leon to follow the lead of former council President Nury Martinez, who stepped down Wednesday for comparing another colleague’s Black son to a monkey, belittling Mexicans from the state of Oaxaca and making crass comments about Armenians and Jews.

The council’s Friday meeting was canceled after acting council President Mitch O’Farrell said members couldn’t conduct business until the two step down. Raucous protesters shut down a meeting Wednesday.

“There’s too much pain, there’s too much deep injury to the soul, to the spirit of this city,” O’Farrell said.

Martinez, who in 2019 became the first Latina to hold the office of council president, announced her decision in a news release that didn’t refer to the leaked recording or offer an apology for what she said.

Martinez described herself on her website as “a glass-ceiling shattering leader who brings profound life experience as the proud daughter of working-class immigrants.” She is the daughter of Mexican immigrants and was born

and raised in the San Fernando Valley.

Cedillo, de Leon and Martinez were part of a discussion last year with a powerful Latino labor leader, who has since resigned, centered on protecting Latino political power while redrawing council district boundaries. The once-a-decade redistrict­ing process can pit one group against another to gain political advantage in elections.

Other council members weren’t informed of the meeting, O’Farrell said.

In the recorded conversati­on, Martinez called council member Mike Bonin a “little bitch.” She described the behavior of his Black son on a parade float when he was 2 as “parece changuito,” or “like a monkey,” the Los Angeles Times reported Sunday.

At another point in the hourlong recording, Martinez called Indigenous immigrants from the Mexican state of Oaxaca ugly, and made crass remarks about Jews and Armenians.

The revelation of the recordings this week sparked outrage and calls for the resignatio­ns of all three council members by their fellow Democrats, all the way up to President Joe Biden, who arrived in Los Angeles on Wednesday as part of a West Coast campaign visit.

In her resignatio­n statement, Martinez didn’t apologize for her comments, though in words directed at her daughter she said she had fallen short of expectatio­ns recently and added: “I vow to you that I will strive to be a better woman to make you proud.”

The panel can only request Cedillo and de Leon voluntaril­y step aside. It cannot expel members, only suspend them when criminal charges are pending. Members can be censured, but that doesn’t result in suspension or removal from office.

O’Farrell said he had spoken to Cedillo, and “I sense that he is making some progress toward that decision.” O’Farrell said he and others haven’t been able to reach de Leon.

Cedillo lost his reelection bid this year and was already due to leave the council in December. De Leon is up for reelection in 2024.

The furor over the recording has thrown City Council into turmoil.

On Wednesday, a crowd of about 50 protesters drowned out the acting president by chanting “no meeting without resignatio­n” and other slogans.

A minimum of 10 out of 15 members necessary for a quorum had assembled. But the meeting was adjourned when Councilmem­ber Marqueece Harris-Dawson walked out because it was out of control, a spokespers­on said. None of the three embattled council members showed up.

“Who shut you down? We shut you down!” the raucous crowd cheered as the lights were being turned down.

Also Wednesday, California Attorney General Rob Bonta, another Democrat, said he will investigat­e Los Angeles’ redistrict­ing process, which could lead to civil liability or criminal charges, depending on what is found.

“It’s clear an investigat­ion is sorely needed to help restore confidence in the redistrict­ing process for the people of LA,” he said.

Jessica Levinson, a Loyola Law School professor who previously was a member of the Los Angeles City Ethics Commission, said she did not see evidence in the recording that would prompt criminal charges.

 ?? RINGO H.W. CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? People hold signs and shout slogans in Los Angeles on Wednesday as they protest before the cancellati­on of the City Council meeting.
RINGO H.W. CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE People hold signs and shout slogans in Los Angeles on Wednesday as they protest before the cancellati­on of the City Council meeting.

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