Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Who will succeed Kuehl in L.A. supervisor race?

Elsewhere on ballot, incumbent Solis faces four challenger­s for her 1st District seat.

- By Andrew J. Campa and Jeong Park

After Sheila Kuehl announced she was not seeking reelection to the L.A. County Board of Supervisor­s, the political maneuverin­g began.

The jockeying for the open seat intensifie­d after district lines were redrawn in December in a once-in-adecade process, bringing some conservati­ve-leaning parts of the San Fernando Valley into Kuehl’s 3rd District.

That set the stage for Bob Hertzberg (D-Van Nuys) and Henry Stern (D-Malibu), state senators who represent parts of the Valley, to mount campaigns.

They are running against West Hollywood City Council Member Lindsey Horvath, who is backed by Kuehl, and three other candidates in a race where homelessne­ss and crime have emerged as defining issues before the June 7 primary.

The supervisor­s are sometimes referred to as the “five little kings” because of their unglamorou­s but powerful jobs controllin­g an annual budget of nearly $39 billion in a county of more than 10 million people.

In the redistrict­ing, which was led for the first time by a citizens commission instead of the supervisor­s themselves, the 3rd District lost some world-renowned cultural venues, including the Hollywood Bowl and the L.A. County Museum of Art.

It now includes much of the San Fernando Valley while retaining liberal bastions such as Santa Monica and West Hollywood and stretching along the coast to Malibu.

Kuehl was angered by the changes, saying in emails to constituen­ts that they were meant to make the district more centrist and “a much easier district for a man who’s been salivating to run for the office but found himself in need of an electorate more closely tailored to his politics.”

She did not name the male politician.

The 1st District seat, which includes much of East Los Angeles and the San Gabriel Valley, is also on the June 7 ballot.

Hilda Solis, a former U.S.

[Supervisor­s,

Labor secretary who represente­d the district since 2014, is running against four challenger­s. An incumbent supervisor has not lost reelection since 1980.

With Hacienda Heights, Rowland Heights and Diamond Bar joining the majority Asian cities of Monterey Park and Rosemead, the newly configured 1st District is almost 27% Asian.

About 52% of voters in the 1st District are Latino, down from 62%.

The 3rd District is now about 43% white, 37% Latino, 12% Asian and 4% Black.

The race between Hertzberg, Horvath and Stern — all Democrats — in the 3rd District should be highly competitiv­e, said Raphael Sonenshein, executive director of the Pat Brown Institute for Public Affairs at Cal State L.A.

“You got three candidates with pretty well-defined constituen­cies and strong records and significan­t support and endorsemen­ts,” Sonenshein said.

The three have been closely matched in financial resources, with each raising about $800,000 through April 23, according to campaign finance filings.

A political action committee, the Alliance to End Homelessne­ss, had raised $115,000 in support of Hertzberg’s candidacy through April 23.

Neighbors for Lindsey Horvath for Supervisor 2022 raised about $76,000 in the same period, and a Service Employees Internatio­nal Union committee supporting Stern raised about $58,000.

Stern’s supporters include the Los Angeles teachers union and SEIU Local 721, in addition to several Democratic clubs and state senators Ben Allen (DSanta Monica), María Elena Durazo (D-Los Angeles) and Connie Leyva (D-Chino).

Besides Kuehl, other politician­s endorsing Horvath include 4th District Supervisor Janice Hahn, Solis and Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti.

Hertzberg’s endorsemen­ts

include three members of Congress, Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis, Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon (D-Lakewood), 5th District Supervisor Kathryn Barger and the Assn. for Los Angeles Deputy Sheriffs.

Rendon has also endorsed Horvath.

The other 3rd District candidates — small-business owner Jeffi Girgenti, canine recreation­al provider Craig Brill and business owner and actress Roxanne Beckford Hoge — do not have political experience, and none had raised more than $30,000 as of April 23.

As of April 23, Solis, a Democrat, had raised more than $730,000.

Solis’ opponents — Pomona entreprene­ur Kevin Dalton, West Covina businesswo­man Tammy Solis and Azusa resident Brian Smith — each raised less than $5,000, except for La Puente City Councilman David Argudo, who loaned himself about $46,000.

Solis, who was not available for an interview, has prioritize­d closing Men’s Central Jail in downtown Los Angeles, as well as “carefirst”

alternativ­es to incarcerat­ion. She recently co-authored a motion to create a “super agency” on homelessne­ss.

Mail-in voting started May 9. If no candidate gets at least 50% in the primary, the top two advance to the Nov. 8 general election.

Hertzberg, 67, served in the state Assembly from 1996 to 2002, including more than two years as speaker. After terming out of the Assembly, he finished third in the Los Angeles mayor’s race in 2005, then was elected to the state Senate in 2014, representi­ng an east San Fernando Valley district.

He touts the funding he helped secure for crime labs to process DNA tests and rape kits, along with a $1.2billion expansion to California’s Cal Grant financial aid program during his time leading the Assembly.

But in Sacramento, Hertzberg was nicknamed “Huggy Bear” for his love of embraces that made some women uncomforta­ble. In 2018, three lawmakers accused him of initiating unwanted hugs, and he was reprimande­d by the state

Senate Rules Committee.

In a campaign mailer, Hertzberg called L.A. County “a mess” and said “nobody is taking responsibi­lity.”

Law enforcemen­t is “too militarize­d,” and “new methods” are needed to handle mental health calls, he said in an interview with The Times.

But he is not in favor of major cuts to the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department, which runs the nation’s largest county jail system and patrols unincorpor­ated areas and contract cities such as Compton.

“Defunding the police is the dumbest statement in the world,” he said.

He said the supervisor­s, who oversee the Sheriff ’s Department’s budget, need to improve their antagonist­ic relationsh­ip with Sheriff Alex Villanueva, who is up for reelection.

On creating housing for homeless people, Hertzberg said the biggest stumbling blocks are “finger pointing” and lack of leadership.

“It’s really just someone taking responsibi­lity and saying, ‘Let’s get this done,’ ”

he said.

Horvath, 39, has served on the West Hollywood City Council, including stints as mayor, since 2015 after two years as an appointed member.

Recently, she advocated for the opening of a 40-unit West Hollywood apartment complex for struggling performers and pushed for more COVID-19 relief funding and expanding outdoor dining.

In November, the West Hollywood City Council voted unanimousl­y to raise the minimum wage for hotel workers to $17.64 per hour, the highest in the nation, with other workers eventually to follow.

In an interview with The Times, Horvath did not take a position on a proposal to cut the West Hollywood sheriff’s budget by $3.2 million and redirect the money to homeless services.

The city, which contracts with the Sheriff’s Department for law enforcemen­t, would have 10 fewer deputies under the proposal by Public Safety Commission­er Nika Soon-Shiong, daughter of Los Angeles Times owner

Patrick Soon-Shiong.

The City Council is expected to vote on the proposal in the next few months.

“We certainly knew how to defund mental health services, and we’ve never refunded them,” said Horvath, an advertisin­g executive who appointed Soon-Shiong to the commission.

“Public safety has to be our No. 1 priority,” Horvath added.

West Hollywood, where 20% of all new units are priced for low- to mediuminco­me families, can be a model for the county on housing affordabil­ity, she said.

“We can look in all of our neighborho­ods to see the impacts of the housing crisis, the homelessne­ss crisis, the affordabil­ity crisis, and where they all intersect,” Horvath said. “In my community, we’ve taken it head on.”

An environmen­tal attorney, the 40-year-old Stern was elected to the state Senate in 2016, representi­ng Thousand Oaks, Calabasas, Simi Valley and western parts of the San Fernando Valley.

Stern’s Senate district includes Porter Ranch and surroundin­g communitie­s, where residents were sickened and driven from their homes by a massive methane leak at the Aliso Canyon gas facility.

Stern has pushed for answers on why it took so long to close the facility and recently introduced a bill to shut it down by 2027.

A lot of Democrats “took the bait” in voting for Villanueva, and the supervisor­s must continue to play a strong role in overseeing the Sheriff ’s Department, Stern said. He expressed sympathy for sheriff’s deputies, saying they “have a target on their back.” He called for mental health care, peer support and training for first responders to address posttrauma­tic stress disorder and other issues.

Stern has introduced a bill in the state Senate that would create a right to mental health care and housing for homeless people.

 ?? Associated Press; Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times; Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? BOB HERTZBERG, left, Lindsey Horvath and Henry Stern are the leading candidates in a 3rd District race.
Associated Press; Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times; Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times BOB HERTZBERG, left, Lindsey Horvath and Henry Stern are the leading candidates in a 3rd District race.

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