Daily News (Los Angeles)

Newsom names former L.A. mayor to new post

- By Michael R. Blood

LOS ANGELES >> California Gov. Gavin Newsom on Thursday appointed onetime nemesis and rival Antonio Villaraigo­sa, the former Los Angeles mayor, to a new post helping steer a gusher of federal dollars to road, port and transit projects.

These days, the two are more friends than frenemies.

Newsom announced that Villaraigo­sa would assume the post of “infrastruc­ture czar,” an advisory position in which he would be pursuing billions of federal dollars and helping pair it with needs in the state.

“Money is not our problem anymore,” the governor said, referring to a recently enacted $1 trillion federal infrastruc­ture deal that promises to send billions for improvemen­ts to the nation's most populous state.

California has to “go out and get it,” Newsom said, which is the charge Villaraigo­sa has in the new post.

“We got to build. We got to invest,” Villaraigo­sa said. “And that's what this is all about.”

The appointmen­t marks the latest chapter in a long-running relationsh­ip that has veered from open hostility to, now, playing for the same team.

Newsom was mayor of San Francisco when Villaraigo­sa was in charge of City Hall in Los Angeles, a time when each was often looking to outshine — if not rattle or embarrass — the other. The two Democrats later faced off in a 2018 primary race for governor, a contest won by Newsom that turned so nasty the two later made a public appearance together to dispel any notion of lasting enmity.

As mayor in L.A., Villaraigo­sa was credited with kicking off a transit buildup that continues today. Newsom said he would bring extensive know-how in capturing federal dollars and getting shovels in the ground.

Technicall­y, Villaraigo­sa will not be a state employee. This position is funded through a partnershi­p with California Forward, a nonprofit that seeks to promote job growth and costeffect­ive government.

During their 2018 campaign matchup, Villaraigo­sa depicted Newsom as a wealthy elitist, out of touch with California­ns left behind by the surging economy. Newsom's campaign ads recalled a six-figure ethics fine paid by Villaraigo­sa and his time as adviser to supplement­s and weight loss company Herbalife, which the ads called a “pyramid scheme.”

They later sought to mend the relationsh­ip. At a news conference shortly after the election, they traded compliment­s and shared a lunch. Villaraigo­sa, a former state Assembly speaker, said it was important to “move beyond whatever difference­s we might have had.”

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