The Mercury News

Padilla’s selection marks new chapter for state politics

- By George Skelton George Skelton is a Los Angeles Times columnist. © 2020 Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

California Secretary of State Alex Padilla is an excellent choice for U. S. senator. He’s actually the only choice Gov. Gavin Newsom could have made — intellectu­ally and politicall­y.

Padilla, 47, will be the first Latino senator from California. And that should be embarrassi­ng for a state with such deep Mexican roots — where the largest ethnic group is now Latino, representi­ng 40% of the population.

It’s about time we had a Latino senator. And it’s something Newsom couldn’t ignore.

The governor and Padilla go back — to when Newsom was the San Francisco mayor trying to run for governor the first time in 2009. He dropped out when Jerry Brown entered the race and ran for lieutenant governor instead. But Padilla was there from the start as Newsom’s campaign chairman.

“We’ve known each other a long time — 20 years,” Padilla told me Tuesday, referring to Newsom. “We’ve talked to each other about our future opportunit­ies over the years.”

So if Newsom had selected someone else to fill out the unexpired term of Vice President- elect Kamala Harris, what kind of message would that have sent to other politician­s the governor might ask for a favor in the future?

Padilla was a state senator for eight years then was elected California secretary of state. Again, he was the first Latino to hold that office.

Padilla’s parents were Mexican immigrants who met in Los Angeles. His dad was a short- order cook; his mom cleaned aff luent people’s houses. Padilla earned a mechanical engineerin­g degree at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology.

He returned to the San Fernando Valley, where he caught the political bug during the 1994 campaign to pass Propositio­n 187. The measure’s purpose was to deny most public services to immigrants living here illegally. It was tossed out by a judge but inspired a generation of Latino politician­s who championed immigrant rights.

“It’s way past time to pass comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform,” Padilla told me. “For starters, ‘Dreamers’ should be brought out of the shadows and their status stabilized. … And there should be a true path to citizenshi­p.”

“Dreamers” are the young adults who were brought across the border as children by their undocument­ed parents. They’ve known no other country than this one.

When I asked Padilla what his priorities would be as a senator, he replied: “There’ll be three — COVID, COVID, COVID.

“The first thing I want to do is get my arms around the pandemic and help the working families that have been devastated from both health and economic standpoint­s. These families are going to need a lot more support.”

Padilla is not a spellbindi­ng orator. But he’s bright, focused and energetic. He goes about his business, like running a clean election process with an enormous voter turnout.

On Monday, the governor sent word to Padilla that he wanted to chat via Zoom in the evening. On Tuesday, a link of the brief conversati­on was shared by a Padilla staffer.

Newsom asked about Padilla’s immigrant parents and they bantered a bit. Then the governor said: “What would your mom think now as I ask if you want to be the next U.S. senator from California?”

“You serious?” Padilla replied, his eyes tearing up. “I’m honored, man. I’m humbled.”

Padilla talked emotionall­y about his dad cooking and his mom cleaning — and was interrupte­d by the governor. “You’ve got to say ‘yes.’ ” “Absolutely. I will make you proud.”

“It would have been political malpractic­e if Newsom didn’t appoint a Latino or Latina,” says political consultant Mike Madrid, a disenchant­ed Republican who’s about to reregister as an independen­t.

“The Senate seat from California — the state with the largest Latino population — will provide a platform for an emerging America. Padilla’s voice will write history.”

He’ll first need to get elected to a full term in 2022. But he’ll have an incumbent’s edge.

Padilla represents a new chapter in California politics. Hopefully it’ll be a page turner.

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