The Mercury News

Three legislator­s down, how many are left to go?

- By Dan Walters Dan Walters is a CALmatters columnist.

Three down, but how many to go?

On Thursday, Tony Mendoza became the third state legislator and the first senator to resign after being accused of sexual harassment in the scandal that has enveloped the Capitol.

As his fellow senators were meeting in closed “caucuses,” mulling whether to expel or suspend him, an aide to the Artesia Democrat walked up to the Senate’s front desk and submitted a vitriol-filled resignatio­n letter.

As he had in the past, Mendoza said he was a victim of a “farcical” investigat­ion that violated his rights and declared that Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de León, his onetime weekday roommate, “will not rest until he has my head on a platter to convince the MeToo movement of his ‘sincerity’ in supporting the MeToo cause.”

While Mendoza doesn’t deserve any sympathy, he may have a point about de León, who will step down soon from the Senate’s top leadership position and is running against U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein.

De León was initially behind the curve as the MeToo movement against harassment exploded last year, and needs to get out in front if he is to have any chance of unseating the state’s most prominent Democratic woman politician.

Before announcing Mendoza’s resignatio­n, de León told the Senate, “We will not tolerate harassment or sweep it under the rug.”

That pledge will be tested as both the Senate and the

Assembly handle multiple complaints about how legislator­s have behaved.

Mendoza was accused of harassing several young Capitol aides and a Senate-ordered investigat­ion, conducted while he was on paid suspension, concluded that it was “more likely than not” that the allegation­s were true.

As Mendoza’s fate was being decided last week, Senate leaders were receiving another report on Sen. Bob Hertzberg, a Van Nuys Democrat, who’s been accused of overdoing his characteri­stic hugs that gave him the nickname of “Hugsberg.” One former assemblywo­man says that his hugging morphed into molestatio­n and if the Mendoza pattern is followed, a summary of the probe’s findings will be released publicly.

Meanwhile, over in the Assembly — which already has seen two accused Democratic members resign — Assemblywo­man Cristina Garcia, a Bell Gardens Democrat who had become an outspoken champion of the MeToo movement, also stands accused of groping men on several occasions.

Garcia has voluntaril­y suspended herself while an investigat­ion is underway but has, much like Mendoza, denied any wrongdoing and portrays the charges against her as a political vendetta.

There are other cases out there that have not yet been made public, so no one can say with certainty how many legislator­s will eventually be forced out in this election year.

Speaking of which, election year resignatio­ns mean a spate of special elections to fill the vacant seats.

Elections to replace the two banished Assembly members, Democrats Raul Bocanegra and Matt Dababneh, have already been scheduled and it’s likely that Gov. Jerry Brown will call one to replace Mendoza. That could create a particular­ly unusual scenario, since Mendoza’s term also expires late this year.

Candidates are already filing for his seat — and Mendoza says in his resignatio­n letter that he’s still thinking of running again. Simultaneo­usly, however, there probably will be special elections to place someone in his seat for the remainder of his current term.

According to the deadlines of state law governing special elections, his short-term replacemen­t could be seated in mid-August, just two weeks before the biennial session ends, and that short-timer could be a critical vote on major last-minute legislatio­n.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? State Sen. Tony Mendoza, D-Artesia, who has been accused of sexual misconduct, resigned his seat just ahead of a possible vote to expel him.
AP FILE PHOTO State Sen. Tony Mendoza, D-Artesia, who has been accused of sexual misconduct, resigned his seat just ahead of a possible vote to expel him.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States