Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

It’s about the job, not politics

Re “City attorney race isn’t the usual suspects,” May 10

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It is unfortunat­e that The Times has fallen into the trap of analyzing the candidates for Los Angeles city attorney using irrelevant attributes even if they are the ones being stressed by the candidates themselves.

Having practiced municipal law for more than 40 years, and having served as the city attorney for a number of Southern California cities, I can tell you that the most important criteria for the job are these: the ability to work with council members and staff regardless of their politics or personal quirks; knowledge of and willingnes­s to advise those individual­s about the statutory and constituti­onal limits on their proposed actions; and the ability to organize workflow and oversee personnel in the city attorney’s own office.

Political affiliatio­n, an impoverish­ed childhood, success in winning lawsuits or prosecutin­g crimes or even stupid comments (if made decades ago) do not tell you anything about whether the candidate meets any of those criteria. Stephanie Scher

Los Angeles

Who at The Times determined the “two top candidates” for city attorney?

Both are “former” Republican­s who convenient­ly now identify as Democrats. One ran unsuccessf­ully for office in Virginia and Vermont; the other hosted a right-leaning talk show on local AM radio. Each seems to be following Sheriff Alex Villanueva’s campaign playbook of pretending to be what you are not.

The top candidates should be those with consistent political views and a commitment to public service.

Eric Carlson Los Angeles

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