Los Angeles Times

Happy warrior

- Patt.morrison@latimes.com This interview was edited and excerpted from a taped transcript.

Robert Kennedy was a young Bill Rosendahl’s hope for the White House, but Kennedy’s rival, Hubert Humphrey, practiced the “happy warrior” style of politics that represents the principles Rosendahl has embraced. As he leaves the Los Angeles City Council after two terms, his eight years in office (and a diagnosis of cancer, now in remission) have not extinguish­ed Rosendahl’s cheerfulne­ss, but they have given his warrior side an instructio­n booklet.

He’s crusaded for gay rights, for better care for the homeless and his fellow veterans, for mass transit. The archive of his previous career as TV host and executive (3,500-plus public affairs shows) goes to Loyola Marymount University. And whither Rosendahl? In an interview shortly before Tuesday’s election, he said he preferred someplace where he can explain government to people, and vice versa.

How has being on the City Council changed you?

You must be more patient. You must listen more. If you actually hear what’s being said, you may change your position. These dumb fake journalist­s say, “He f lip-f lopped.” He didn’t f lip-f lop. You learn new things that you might not have known.

I [also] worked for Bobby Kennedy; I was a White House appointee to the State Department; I was drafted into the Army and was a psychiatri­c social worker there. Those experience­s leave marks that are helpful to you going forward.

Do you listen during public comments at council meetings? Some of your colleagues seem rather less than riveted.

I listen. Some of the gadfly business is a bit over the top, some of the rudeness, but I believe in public expression. I don’t think John Walsh [ a regular gadfly] is wrong when he wants to know how much public money we’ve put out for [crime] rewards. What I’d love to say is, look, the reason we put the money up is so the damn media cover it.

You’ve been a broadcaste­r; you’re not happy with how local TV news covers politics.

People don’t know who their Assembly members are, their members of Congress. The media give these people no play, and the average constituen­t doesn’t understand which levels of government are responsibl­e for what. [We have] irresponsi­ble, soundbite journalism: “If it bleeds it leads,” a commercial break, then five or six or eight seconds of Rosendahl. I’d be in Vons or Ralphs and people would come up and say, “I just saw you on TV.” I’d say, “What was I talking about?” They’d say, “I don’t know, but you looked great.” Local TV doesn’t do what it’s supposed to do. News should not be about ratings and making money; it should be about informing and educating.

What could you do in politics that you couldn’t do in broadcasti­ng?

The joy in politics is representi­ng 275,000 people, with no hidden agenda. Everybody knows nobody owns Rosendahl. And Rosendahl asks what, when, where and why, tries to figure it out, listens to people to make the right decision. You have to do your homework. I love people, and if we love our neighbor as ourselves, we’re living in the spirit. A council-

man is a shepherd of the land. People say you burned bridges when your retirement was announced and you then criticized Presidents Clinton and Obama, Sen. Dianne Feinstein and others at a council meeting, on homeless and gay issues, drug wars and overseas wars.

I wasn’t burning any bridges! Clinton made a joke out of inhaling, yet billions get spent on incarcerat­ing [drug offenders]. On gay rights, Clinton put in “don’t ask, don’t tell.” How dare he do that to me? I was in the military. He wants me to lie? Obama talked the talk but he didn’t walk the walk [on] the war on terror.

Does being a Democrat make a difference in city politics?

I don’t believe in ideology. I’m a Democrat who’s independen­t because the party has changed. I watched them move to the right and not stand for progressiv­e principles.

Potholes have no politics. And neither does homelessne­ss. Issues have solutions that need resources. The most frustratin­g part for me is not having the resources to do all that needs to be done. It’s a disgrace to be the richest country on Earth and have homeless people. When I cut the ribbon on transition­al housing for veterans, the immediate neighbors went hysterical. A year later, a [neighbor] came up to me and said, “I brought them cookies and one of them gave me a painting he had made.” You have to get people out of fear and ignorance.

Did your political life change after you came out as gay?

[If] people can’t handle it, it’s their problem. I came out when I was 32 to my family. Then in 1995, when Christophe­r Lee Blauman [ his partner] died, I told my public I was gay. All the fear about being public, that nasty people would come after me — and they did — I wasn’t embarrasse­d. Everybody [who mattered already] knew.

You represent the airport area. How do we fix LAX?

Simple: regionalis­m. The Ontario airport is the solution to these jumbo jets, not destroying Westcheste­r. Metrolink is just a half-mile away [from Ontario airport] and [it’s] 59 miles to downtown. At LAX, I envision the Crenshaw Line and Green Line [taking people] to a central terminal for a people-mover going all around [the airport], and to get

on the trains to get downtown. You use medical marijuana for cancer pain, yet you’re backing a ballot measure to limit medical marijuana outlets in L.A.

Voters will make that decision in the May runoff. The whole thing [in L.A.] is a disaster right now. If there was real leadership in Washington, they would legalize marijuana, period. It’s not a war on drugs; it’s a war on people. Marijuana has issues but not as debilitati­ng as alcohol or prescripti­on drugs. You want L.A. to suspend its sister city relationsh­ip with St. Petersburg, Russia, over antigay laws. Do council declaratio­ns about matters thousands of miles away really matter?

Yes, they do. L.A. is a microcosm of the planet, so it resonates throughout the whole world. You’ve fought in the billboard wars. Digital billboard owners say they’ll sue for $100 million if the city takes the signs down.

We should [at least] be getting money off every one of those digital billboards, and I mean millions of dollars. They’re right there in your eyes, and what do we get? Zippo. Nada. I hope my colleagues will fight for our share of the money from billboards that are a blight to many of us, and hazards while we’re driving. What kind of realpoliti­k does it take to make city policy work?

Clinton said that politics is a combat sport. It’s tough. It’s rough. We rely on trusting each other and working with each other because we’re in a battle all the time. Good leadership can make things happen, the way we’re seeing with Herb Wesson.I’ve told all my colleagues, use neighborho­od councils — they’re good. Look what Venice did the other day: 1,622 people voted in a neighborho­od council meeting. I love the democracy. What don’t non-Angelenos “get” about L.A.?

They don’t get the megalopoli­s feeling of people from all over the world. They don’t get the interconne­ction. Second — the warmth, the sun. That’s why I’m big on solar energy. I just opened up a private-public solar carwash. We should all have a solar panel on our roofs. Do you?

I don’t yet because of trying not to get in the middle of “Rosendahl [bought] this or that” [brand]. By the time this is published, you’ll know if your choice for your council seat, Mike Bonin, is in the May election. But you’ll still have 12 weeks in office. What’s important to change?

Pension and healthcare reform. I came from the private sector. I know what it’s like in the real world. I know how capitalism functions, and I know how workers have to be taken care of, because if you don’t take care of your workers, what good are you?

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