San Francisco Chronicle

Villaraigo­sa seeks Republican’s help in governor race

- By Laurel Rosenhall

One wants to end the death penalty. The other thinks capital punishment is just. One campaigned for tax increases that the other opposed. One tried to put Hillary Clinton in the White House. The other helped elect President George W. Bush.

What both men believe, however, is that Latinos — California’s largest ethnic group — suffer disproport­ionate levels of poverty in part because they barely turn out to vote. That common ground helps form the basis of an unlikely political alliance that could shape the 2018 race to determine the next governor of California.

Democrat Antonio Villaraigo­sa — a former mayor of Los Angeles and speaker of the Assembly — has hired a Republican political consultant, Mike Madrid, to work on his campaign to become California governor.

“I brought him on because I want a broad cross section of eyes and ears to help me navigate through what admittedly is tough terrain ahead,” Villaraigo­sa said. “I make the decisions ultimately. But I’m smart enough to know I don’t know everything.”

Madrid is a widely recognized expert in Latino voting patterns who has long urged Republican­s to reach out more to Latino voters. He was the state Republican Party’s political director in the 1990s and, more recently, has been paid by the state party to research local government elections. But Madrid has been so turned off by Donald Trump that he

says he did not cast a vote for president last year and has begun criticizin­g his party for adopting a nationalis­tic tone.

Villaraigo­sa had a Republican chief of staff when he was mayor of Los Angeles. Madrid has done research for the Legislatur­e’s Latino Caucus, which is open only to Democrats. But this race marks the first time either man has formally joined forces with someone from the opposite party during a political campaign.

“Isn’t that what’s wrong with politics right now — the screaming, the polarizati­on?” Villaraigo­sa said. “I think people are looking for uniters. And I am a uniter.”

Their bipartisan alliance comes as California has shifted to an openprimar­y system, in which the top two votegetter­s on the June ballot advance to the general election even if they are from the same party. So far, four Democrats and two Republican­s have entered the governor’s race, and the most recent poll shows Villaraigo­sa in second place to fellow Democrat Gavin Newsom, the lieutenant governor and former mayor of San Francisco.

The top-two system was designed to nudge candidates to appeal to voters beyond their own party, although Villaraigo­sa said that was not a factor in his decision to hire Madrid. The two have similar biographie­s — the grandchild­ren of Mexican immigrants, both grew up in working-class families in Southern California. But long before they joined forces, they were political rivals.

In the 1990s, Villaraigo­sa was Assembly speaker and Madrid was the press secretary to the Assembly Republican leader. As a consequenc­e of a political spat, Villaraigo­sa had stopped issuing paychecks to the Republican leader’s staff. After a few months, Madrid — whose job required him to live in Sacramento, away from his Southern California home — was going broke and decided he had to confront Villaraigo­sa.

“I said, ‘Look, I’ve got a pregnant wife at home, and I’m sleeping on my friend’s couch. I need to get my paycheck approved. Can you help me out?’ ” Madrid recalled. “He looks at me and says, ‘Let me see what I can do.’ Very noncommitt­al.”

But Villaraigo­sa was moved by Madrid’s appeal and immediatel­y released the paycheck. “So that’s where the relationsh­ip started,” Villaraigo­sa said.

The Assembly Republican leader at the time, Rod Pacheco, didn’t know that Madrid is now working for Villaraigo­sa until a reporter told him.

“Are you kidding?” he replied.

After further reflection, Pacheco said the arrangemen­t makes sense given the decline of the Republican Party in California and how the state’s open primary is shaking up traditiona­l partisan dynamics.

“Antonio Villaraigo­sa doesn’t need a Latino consultant to tell him about Latinos,” Pacheco said. Madrid’s “value is really as a Republican consultant, and he knows Republican politics very well.”

In a traditiona­l primary, the four Democrats running for governor would be going after the party’s liberal base. “In a top-two, I’m assuming Antonio is looking at how can he pull voters (outside) of the base,” said Dana Williamson, a Democratic political consultant who is not working on a gubernator­ial campaign. “I think he knows he is at a political disadvanta­ge with the left.”

Both Villaraigo­sa and Newsom have progressiv­e track records — they support gun control, marijuana legalizati­on and same-sex marriage. But Villaraigo­sa clashed with labor unions during his tenure as Los Angeles mayor and blamed teachers unions for low performanc­e in the city’s schools.

Newsom has won endorsemen­ts from the teachers and nurses unions, while Villaraigo­sa is positionin­g himself as more of a centrist. He frequently talks about the state’s economic divide and has called for limiting statewide regulation­s, themes California Republican­s have used to attack ruling Democrats.

If Villaraigo­sa embraces the Republican argument that deregulati­ng industry will lead to more jobs, “that’s going to be a big problem,” said Steve Smith, spokesman for the California Labor Federation, a powerful union umbrella group that has not yet endorsed a candidate in the race. Such a move would “do nothing to alleviate poverty, but is a boon to big-business interests.”

Madrid shares Villaraigo­sa’s interest in expanding jobs in depressed regions and engaging Latino voters. But he said he does not advise Villaraigo­sa on policy positions, instead focusing on statistica­l voting models that could help expand his reach.

“That won’t pull him to the right,” Madrid said. “It will explain his record to a broader base of voters.”

 ?? Michael Macor / The Chronicle ?? Antonio Villaraigo­sa is consulting with a Republican on his race for governor.
Michael Macor / The Chronicle Antonio Villaraigo­sa is consulting with a Republican on his race for governor.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States