Arab Times

Divide fades as LA picks mayor

Race, ethnic issues mostly muted in contest

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LOS ANGELES, Feb 25, (AFP): The election that made Antonio Villaraigo­sa the first Hispanic mayor of Los Angeles since 1872 confirmed the clout of a fast-growing Latino population and turned the former barrio tough into one of the most visible Hispanic politician­s in America.

Eight years later, with the historic barrier to the mayoralty erased, issues of race and ethnicity have been mostly muted in the contest to succeed him. The cries of “Si, se puede,” Spanish for “Yes, we can,” that followed Villaraigo­sa’s 2005 campaign are long gone, and there is no Hispanic standard-bearer among the five candidates who want his job.

The city could elect its first woman mayor this year, its first Jewish one, or the first openly gay one. But more prosaic issues have dominated — a 10.2 percent unemployme­nt rate, a proposed sales tax jump, the grip of municipal unions, troubled schools.

“These things become firsts, and then they become the standard and the norm,” said former California Assembly speaker and one-time mayoral candidate Robert Hertzberg, who compared Villaraigo­sa’s victory to the breakthrou­gh election a generation earlier of Tom Bradley, the city’s first and only black mayor. “The pendulum swings.”

Retiree Tony Zapata, a longtime resident of the heavily Hispanic area where Villaraigo­sa went to high school, voted for the mayor and said the neighborho­od took pride in the success of one of its own.

But the bond frayed. Zapata said his feelings soured after the mayor three times snubbed invitation­s from local veterans who wanted him to attend events.

Impressed

This time he’s backing City Councilman Eric Garcetti, because he’s impressed with developmen­t in Garcetti’s district, not his Hispanic family ties.

A candidate’s race or ethnicity “is not a concern with me,” said Zapata, 68, a tall, square-shouldered Vietnam veteran. After Villaraigo­sa became mayor “we never saw him again.”

The nonpartisa­n primary on March 5 takes place with the second-largest US city at a fitful juncture.

There are bright spots. Crime is low, new lofts and restaurant­s have lured young profession­als to the longneglec­ted downtown, and a transitbui­lding boomlet aims to one day get more drivers off the clogged freeways. But a comeback from the recession has been slow, rising pension and health care costs for government retirees threatens money needed to plug potholes in the streets and trim trees, and school dropout rates and housing costs remain alarmingly high.

“The city’s ability to provide services that improve the quality of life of city residents has diminished,” Administra­tive Officer Miguel Santana wrote bluntly in a report this month. Angelenos appear ready to turn to a workaday manager after years of Villaraigo­sa’s high-energy if sometimes unsteady style, and distractin­g headlines about his romantic endeavors and celebrity pals. The Democrat and former legislator has kept a distance from the campaign to replace him.

After Villaraigo­sa’s election “there were prediction­s that it would be a long time before we had another white mayor,” said Franklin Gilliam, Jr., dean of the Luskin School of Public Affairs at the University of California, Los Angeles. But Villaraigo­sa “has not, or has not been able to, anoint an heir apparent” within the Hispanic community.

Turnout

Scant turnout is expected. Most residents could probably name more Oscar nominees than candidates on the ballot.

The low-drama campaign involving several City Hall regulars and a longshot Republican will almost certainly end in a two-person runoff, since the divided vote makes it unlikely any candidate will gather the majority needed to win outright.

The runoff would take place May 21.

The Los Angeles mayor oversees a budget of over $7 billion, but it’s a notoriousl­y weak office hemmed by a powerful City Council. Unlike other big cities like New York, the Los Angeles mayor cannot directly appoint the head of schools, or police.

That helps explain why some leading Hispanic politician­s are looking elsewhere for work, rather than City Hall. Former US Labor Secretary Hilda Solis is a likely candidate for Los Angeles County supervisor, and state Sen. Alex Padilla is considered a prospect for statewide office, for example.

Much of the high-profile Hispanic support that helped twice elevate the outgoing mayor to office has coalesced around a white woman with a Jewish husband from the city’s suburban-ish San Fernando Valley, Controller Wendy Greuel, a 51-yearold Democrat. She’s been in a close race with Garcetti, another Democrat who is Jewish on his mother’s side, with Italian and Mexican roots from his father, and often plays up his Latino heritage and ready command of Spanish.

But Garcetti, 42, has a far different profile than Villaraigo­sa, the product of a broken home who grew up on the rough streets east of downtown and once sported a “Born to Raise Hell” tattoo. Garcetti, the son of a former district attorney, is an Ivy Leaguer and Rhodes Scholar from the Valley’s tony Encino enclave who enjoys playing jazz piano.

 ??  ?? Bob Goodyear walks Rosie, the corgi, as he walks with Suzanne Martin (center), and her granddaugh­ter, Zoe Martin, in front of University Park Elementary in south Denver, Feb 24. Snow is
expected to fall throughout the day. (AP)
Bob Goodyear walks Rosie, the corgi, as he walks with Suzanne Martin (center), and her granddaugh­ter, Zoe Martin, in front of University Park Elementary in south Denver, Feb 24. Snow is expected to fall throughout the day. (AP)

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