Los Angeles Times

Kuehl targets Shriver’s City Council absences

- By Catherine Saillant

Los Angeles County supervisor­ial candidate Sheila Kuehl is taking aim at rival Bobby Shriver’s absences on the Santa Monica City Council, saying the former local elected official should have made it to more meetings instead of “spending so much time in Hyannis Port.”

Shriver, who last week announced his candidacy for the west county seat being vacated by longtime Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsk­y, missed nearly one out of five meetings during his eight years on the council, a Times review found.

Shriver is the nephew of the late President John F. Kennedy, whose large family, including Shriver’s mother, the late Eunice Shriver, and sister Maria Shriver, has famously gathered over the years at the Kennedy compound in Hyannis Port, Mass.

A Shriver spokesman, who called Kuehl’s remarks “silly,” said the former Santa Monica mayor spent time in Hyannis Port in 2009 to attend the funerals of his mother and uncle, the late U.S. Sen. Ted Kennedy.

Kuehl’s comment, made in a Times interview, highlighte­d what she is seeking to make a theme of her campaign: the differing styles

and governing experience of two top liberal contenders in a heavily Democratic district.

Kuehl said her 14 years in the state Assembly and Senate helped develop skills important for a county supervisor, including dealing with social services, juvenile justice, foster children and healthcare issues.

“County supervisor is not an entry-level job,” Kuehl said. “You really need some understand­ing, knowledge and experience.... It’s much more complicate­d than being a part-time city council member.”

She claims to have one of the better attendance records in the Legislatur­e. A review of 262 Senate sessions during her last two years in Sacramento showed she was present 96% of the time.

The Times review found Shriver missed 46 out of 244 meetings while on the Santa Monica council. Shriver campaign advisor Bill Carrick defended Shriver’s record, noting that the City Council is a part-time job. Shriver was busy running two global enterprise­s — Red and Product One — aimed at reducing poverty and increasing access to AIDS medication­s in African nations, he said.

As cofounder of the charities with his friend, U2 frontman Bono, Shriver frequently traveled, he said. “He was there for the overwhelmi­ng number of meetings,” Carrick said.

He added that Shriver has been attending Board of Supervisor­s meetings for the last six months and conferring with county govern- ment staff to learn more about county issues. Kuehl has made other negative comments in recent days, including calling Shriver an “amateur” in a radio interview, Carrick said.

“I hope she can try to elevate the level of this beyond these spitballs,” Carrick said.

Kuehl said she has no issue with Shriver’s internatio­nal philanthro­py. But Shriver missed public testimony on city issues, as well as debate and discussion among his council colleagues. Absences are like voting no, she said.

“If you’re off raising money for Red and you’re off with Bono jetting the world, why would you want this workman job?” she said. “This is a very local, detail-oriented systems job of trying to make things work better for people.”

Robert Holbrook, who served with Shriver on the Santa Monica council, said he admired Shriver’s willingnes­s to help the disadvanta­ged around the world through his philanthro­py and business endeavors. He’s a “very busy man,” Holbrook said.

“I don’t recall him ever missing a life-and-death meeting, like a big budget meeting, or a big project in front of the council,” he said. “So many of our meetings are routine.”

How much significan­ce voters will place on attendance records depends on other factors in the race, said political analyst Raphael Sonenshein.

On its own, missing some meetings may not resonate. But if it were to play into a broader, unflatteri­ng portrait of a candidate, it might prove important, said Sonenshein, who heads the Pat Brown Institute of Public Affairs at Cal State L.A.

“It’s one thing to miss votes because you are pulling people out of burning vehicles,” he said. “But missing votes so you can go to Davos and party is another.”

Also running for Yaroslavsk­y’s seat in the June 3 primary are West Hollywood City Councilman John Duran and Pamela Conley Ulich, former mayor of Malibu.

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