Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Voters want De León gone, poll says

Majority of those in his council district say he should resign or would support a recall.

- By Rachel Uranga and Melissa Gomez

Voters in Councilman Kevin de León’s district have little confidence in him, and as a scandal involving racist comments continues to dog him, a majority want him to resign, a new Los Angeles Times poll shows.

The poll paints a grim picture for De León, the former state legislator and rising Democratic star who has adamantly refused to step down despite a chorus of calls to do so by everyone from protesters at City Council meetings to President Biden.

After a nearly two-month absence from the council, De León returned last month hoping to repair his reputation and promising to fight for constituen­ts in his Latino, working-class district.

But voters are unsympathe­tic. By a wide margin, they said De León puts his political self-interest ahead of the people he represents. Even reliable supporters who voted for him in the past have lost faith, the poll found.

Only 23% of voters surveyed approve of the job De León is doing, compared with 48% who disapprove, the poll found. Just over half think he should resign, a quarter want him to stay in office, and 18% were undecided; 9% did not answer the question.

If a recall were to qualify for the ballot — petitions are currently circulatin­g — 58% would support removing him from office, compared with 25% who would be opposed and 17% undecided, the survey found.

The poll of 400 registered voters in Council District 14 was conducted Jan. 10-16. It has a margin of error of 4.9 percentage points.

De León’s political collapse began in the fall, when a recording surfaced of him and two other Latino council members in a private meeting using racist insults as they plotted to reshape district maps.

The recording upended City Hall and sparked boisterous protests that led to the resignatio­n of City Council president Nury Martinez and Los Angeles Labor Fed

‘Across demographi­cs, across ideology, in this poll these voters have soured on him, and they’re just sort of ready for him to go.’

— Drew Lieberman, pollster at Strategies 360

eration chief Ron Herrera, who also took part in the meeting. Councilman Gil Cedillo, the third council member involved, has since left office, leaving De León as the only participan­t still serving.

De León has pleaded for forgivenes­s and argues that he does a good job representi­ng his constituen­ts, many of whom are undocument­ed and Spanish-speaking.

Yet voters across lines of race, ethnicity and geography showed little support for him in his Eastside district, which stretches from downtown Los Angeles and Boyle Heights to the gentrifyin­g neighborho­ods of Highland Park and Eagle Rock in the north. It also encompasse­s El Sereno and Lincoln Heights.

Among Latino voters, almost half said having De León on the council is “now more negative than positive for the Latino community,” compared with about 3 in 10 who said it is “still more positive than negative.”

“It’s pretty clear,” said Drew Lieberman, a pollster at Strategies 360, a national research firm that conducted the survey for The Times. “It’s hard to reach any conclusion other than that the last few months have been a pretty difficult period for Kevin de León, and frankly, it constitute­s a disqualify­ing set of events for him.” He added, “Across demographi­cs, across ideology, in this poll these voters have soured on him, and they’re just sort of ready for him to go.”

Latino voters, young voters and those without a college education were less likely than white, collegeedu­cated voters to view De León negatively, but he failed to get majority support from any demographi­c group, the poll found.

Nearly two-thirds of voters said they were paying very or somewhat close attention to news about the recording and its fallout, and it has clearly influenced their thinking.

Among those who said they’ve been following the coverage at least somewhat closely, two-thirds think De León should resign, and 7 in 10 think he should be recalled. Those who haven’t been following closely are much more likely to say they’re undecided.

Westley Garcia-Encines, 34, a downtown Los Angeles resident who was among the poll respondent­s and agreed to a follow-up interview, said De León should have resigned the moment the audio became public.

In the recording, De León accuses fellow Councilmem­ber Mike Bonin of using his Black son as an accessory and compares Black political power in Los Angeles to the Wizard of Oz.

“Staying to work through the hurt that he has caused is not the answer,” GarciaEnci­nes said. “It seems to me that it’s more about his ego at this point, because his community has been calling [for] him to step down.”

Garcia-Encines, who supported De León when he ran for the U.S. Senate in 2018 and for the council, isn’t alone in that sentiment.

When offered a list of five attributes and asked whether each described De León well, a majority of respondent­s said he put his self-interest ahead of those he represents. Just under a third of voters said he was effective and got things done.

Not all voters in the district have abandoned De León. He retains the support of about 2 in 10 voters, and, among Latinos, 3 in 10.

Vivian Vasquez, a poll respondent who lives in El Sereno, believes De León should finish out his term.

While she was disappoint­ed with what the council members were caught saying, she said De León had not caused direct harm to the people he represents.

“I feel he’s at least doing his job in leading the group he was elected to lead,” said Vasquez, 41. “When I look at it in the grand scheme of the needs of the world, there’s no harm in letting him stay and finish out his term and focus on the bigger needs of our society.”

She said she dislikes the in-your-face style of protesters who have demanded De León’s resignatio­n, forcing several council sessions to shut down.

Sentiment against the protests was widespread among older voters. About half of voters 50 and older said the protests have “gone too far,” compared with just over a third who say they have “generally been fair and peaceful.” By contrast, voters younger than 50 said by more than 3 to 1 that the protests were fair and peaceful.

Unhappines­s with the protests does not appear to have translated into support for De León, however: Older voters were more likely than younger ones to say he should resign, primarily because younger voters were more likely to say they were undecided.

While the protests have died down recently, De León’s future is unclear. He remains politicall­y isolated as the recall effort continues. In December, he got into a physical altercatio­n with a protester during a toy giveaway.

If a recall were to make it onto the ballot, a majority of Latino voters would vote him out, as would an even larger share of white voters, the poll found. Latinos make up about half of the district’s voters; whites make up about a quarter. Other ethnic groups were too small a portion of the sample to be analyzed separately.

Across racial and ethnic lines, only 20% of voters said they view De León favorably, with nearly half indicating that recent news has dimmed their view of him.

De León gets more support among moderates and conservati­ves than among liberals, who make up about half of the district’s voters. Even among those smaller groups, however, more say he should resign than stay.

Voters’ opinions about De León are significan­tly lower than their view of other political figures. Voters in the heavily Democratic district have a much more optimistic view of newly installed Mayor Karen Bass, for example, who once served in the state Assembly with De León.

A large majority of the district’s voters, 54%-14%, have a favorable view of Bass, with the rest undecided or saying they don’t know enough to have an opinion. Voters were split 35%-35% in their opinion of the City Council, where De León’s colleagues are attempting to limit his power.

De León represents some of the poorest parts of the city, with a large immigrant population and high rates of renters. About 250,000 people live in the district.

He was elected in 2020, winning the primary that year with about 52% of the vote. Now, however, those who say they voted for him in that election are divided on whether he should stay or go: 43% say he should resign, 38% say he should stay, and the rest are uncertain. Voters who did not back him that year overwhelmi­ngly think he should resign.

One group among whom De León fares especially badly is women with college degrees, who are in favor of him resigning and in favor of a recall by a margin of 3 to 1. And while voters across the district think he should resign or be recalled, the majority is largest in the northern parts of the district, which has the largest share of college-educated voters.

Marita Forney, an educator who lives with her wife, Evangeline Griego, in Eagle Rock, strongly disapprove­s of De León. Forney, who is white, voted for De León, but says she has been bothered by his air of arrogance and his suggestion that he is his district’s only shot at representa­tion.

“There’s definitely more than one or 10 or 100 people who are qualified or capable,” Forney said. “I’m sure there are sixth-graders in school in the district who can do a better job of representi­ng us right now.”

De León’s presence is polarizing, she said, pitting his critics against Latinos in the district who previously supported him.

Griego, meanwhile, said she has found his office to be unresponsi­ve to her concerns about homelessne­ss and street cleanlines­s.

“Even before all of this, he was just not a very good council member,” Griego said. She found his participat­ion in the leaked conversati­on “deplorable” and believes he should resign.

“This idea he keeps saying he’s there to serve his constituen­ts — I don’t know what constituen­ts he says he’s serving, but he’s not serving me; he’s not serving my neighbors,” Griego said.

The poll of registered voters in Council District 14 was conducted in English and Spanish by phone and by SMS to web interviews. A complete descriptio­n of the methodolog­y, as well as the full questionna­ire and top-line results, is available on the Strategies 360 website.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? “STAYING to work through the hurt that he has caused is not the answer,” a constituen­t said of Councilmem­ber Kevin de León. Only 23% of voters who were surveyed approve of the job De León is doing.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times “STAYING to work through the hurt that he has caused is not the answer,” a constituen­t said of Councilmem­ber Kevin de León. Only 23% of voters who were surveyed approve of the job De León is doing.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States