Los Angeles Times

Campaign to recall Rendon over single-payer issue advances

Backers of such a healthcare system tell speaker’s office they’ll circulate a petition.

- By Melanie Mason melanie.mason @latimes.com Twitter: @melmason

SACRAMENTO — When Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon (D-Paramount) halted a measure to establish single-payer healthcare in California, the bill’s most dedicated backers immediatel­y called for him to be removed from office.

Now, more than a month later, single-payer advocates have taken the first formal step to follow through on their threat, giving Rendon’s office this week notice of intent to circulate a recall petition.

Rendon’s move to stop the single-payer bill — which he called “woefully incomplete,” noting that it passed the state Senate without a method to pay for it — was the catalyst for the outcry.

“If we recall the Assembly speaker, maybe someone else [will be] willing to push this bill, to get it out of the rules committee and send it to the Assembly to get a vote on it,” said Jessica Covarrubia­s, a proponent of the effort.

“Maybe that will help everyone get healthcare.”

Covarrubia­s, a 27-yearold law student from South Gate, described the recall campaign as “literally a grass-roots effort.” She first learned of the recall campaign when single-payer activists, incensed by Rendon’s action, launched a door-knocking drive to inform voters in his district.

The notice, which proponents mailed on Tuesday and was received by Rendon’s office Friday, was signed by 60 people; at least 40 signatures must be deemed valid, belonging to registered voters of his Southeast Los Angeles County district. It was filed by Stephen Elzie, an Irvinebase­d USC law professor who is acting as an attorney for the effort.

“Assemblyme­mber Rendon trusts in the fairminded voters of his district to see through the misleading and false allegation­s made by the recall’s petitioner, who doesn’t even live in Southeast Los Angeles,” said Bill Wong, a spokesman for Rendon.

The recall effort faces tough odds. As the powerful Assembly speaker, Rendon has been a robust fundraiser, ending 2016 with more than $1.2 million in the bank. Some labor groups, including unions representi­ng constructi­on workers and grocery clerks, publicly sided with the speaker's decision to shelve the single-payer bill and could serve as as a well-financed cavalry should Rendon face a heated campaign to oust him.

Still, this week’s step forward in the recall effort underscore­s how activist anger over Rendon’s decision continues to simmer weeks after the measure, Senate Bill 562, was blocked.

Last week, the California Nurses Assn., which sponsored the legislatio­n, paid for two mailers to be sent in Rendon’s district, assailing his move as “holding healthcare hostage“and “protecting politician­s, not people’s healthcare.“Both mailers encouraged recipients to call or visit Rendon’s office to voice their displeasur­e, although the fliers stopped short of calling for a recall.

Michael Lighty, policy director for the nurses group, said the union was not involved with the recall effort, focusing instead on pressuring Rendon to let the singlepaye­r bill move forward.

 ?? Robyn Beck AFP/Getty Images ?? THE MOVE by Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon to stop the single-payer bill angered proponents and was the catalyst for the effort to remove him from office.
Robyn Beck AFP/Getty Images THE MOVE by Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon to stop the single-payer bill angered proponents and was the catalyst for the effort to remove him from office.

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