Los Angeles Times

House race heats up in South L.A.

Compton mayor, commentato­r line up against Barragán in 44th district.

- By Javier Panzar javier.panzar@latimes.com Staff writers Angel Jennings and Christine Mai-Duc contribute­d to this report.

Incumbent Nanette Barragán suddenly has company as Compton’s mayor and conservati­ve pundit join the field.

Ten days ago, freshman Rep. Nanette Barragán had just won the California Democratic Party’s endorsemen­t and had a clear path to securing a second term representi­ng a heavily Democratic stretch of south Los Angeles County.

But now, the dynamic of her reelection bid has dramatical­ly shifted.

National celebrity news and culture websites have homed in on her district as actress-turned-conservati­ve commentato­r Stacey Dash announced plans to run amid rumblings that Compton’s high-profile Democratic mayor, Aja Brown, is mounting a lastminute candidacy.

A TMZ report Tuesday suggesting that Brown will run to block Dash — a Republican best known for her role in the 1995 movie “Clueless” — painted the race as a one-on-one fight between the two women without even mentioning Barragán.

Brown on Tuesday filed federal paperwork to raise money for the race and kicked off her campaign Thursday in Compton.

Brown told The Times in an interview that though Dash’s candidacy was a “motivating” factor in her own decision to run, she thinks she can build off her record in Compton and bring “progressiv­e, millennial leadership” to Congress.

“Political positions do not belong to the officehold­er, they belong to the people that place us in office,” she told a cheering audience of supporters.

She stopped short of criticizin­g Barragán’s representa­tion of Compton since she took office.

“I think there is always room for improvemen­t,” Brown said. “For me it’s not about Congresswo­man Barragán at all — it’s about raising the standard for what congressio­nal representa­tion can be in my district.”

The late bids are promising to pep up an otherwise quiet race, and Barragán and her rivals are plotting for the June 5 primary.

Former state Sen. Isadore Hall, whom Barragán defeated in a nasty 2016 contest, is working behind the scenes to boost Brown’s nascent campaign. He texted at least one member of California’s congressio­nal delegation Tuesday night asking that Democrat to endorse both Barragán and Brown. Such a move against an incumbent member of Congress would be unpreceden­ted.

Hall, also from Compton, tweeted “Let’s Go!!!” after the TMZ report was published and attended Brown’s event Thursday.

Brown, 35, has outsize name recognitio­n for a city of 97,000 and is considered the face of Compton as it has made a rebound.

Crime is down, home prices are on the rise, and Compton’s native celebritie­s have stepped up to boost their city.

Tennis superstars Venus Williams and Serena Williams, rapper Kendrick Lamar and music mogul Dr. Dre all have donated to community programs there in recent years. Brown became the youngest mayor in the city's history when she was elected in 2013.

Complicati­ng matters for Barragán, Brown and Dash is California’s top-two primary system, which allows for the two candidates with the most votes in June to advance to November regardless of their party affiliatio­n.

With Brown in the race, Dash faces even longer odds to win enough votes to make the top-two race in November: 61% of voters identify as Democrats while just 10% register as Republican­s, and 83% of district voters went for Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidenti­al election.

Dash, 51, who was a regular on Fox News, criticized President Obama and has called for Black History Month to be scrapped. A sensationa­l TMZ headline declared Brown’s interest in the race: “I’m gonna run for Congress … because Stacey Dash is a disaster.”

The mayor of Compton has her own celebrity ties. Last week Brown hosted director Ava DuVernay for the first public screening of the much-anticipate­d “A Wrinkle In Time.”

Brown’s role in Compton’s upswing has earned her profiles in national and internatio­nal media outlets. Those celebrity photo ops could make up for the fact that only about 13% of voters in the 44th Congressio­nal District are from Compton, according to the California Target Book.

Her role as leader of Compton could also turn out to be a liability — the state Controller’s Office recently performed a review of the city’s government. A spokeswoma­n for the state agency said a final report could be issued as early as next week.

Barragán ran what started as an underdog bid for Congress in 2016 and managed to beat Hall in a contentiou­s open-seat race with 52% of the vote.

Barragán, 41, did not sit pat as new opponents sprang up.

She has rolled out a steady stream of endorsemen­ts starting with prominent U.S. Sens. Kamala Harris and Cory Booker. Civil rights icon and Rep. John Lewis is backing her, along with 15 other members of the Congressio­nal Black Caucus.

In total, 15 members of California’s congressio­nal delegation have endorsed Barragán in the last week, including Los Angeles’ Rep. Karen Bass, Rep. Jimmy Gomez and Rep. Ted Lieu. Los Angeles County supervisor­s Janice Hahn, Mark Ridley-Thomas and Hilda Solis also are backing Barragán.

Such endorsemen­ts would be standard fare for a sitting member of Congress but are notable because Barragán managed to win without them in 2016, when Hall secured much of the establishm­ent support and official state party backing.

The 44th Congressio­nal District is one of the state’s most diverse. Latino voters make up 51% there while 25% are black and 5% are Asian, according to the California Target Book.

Barragán, the freshman class president, said she’s more worried about her day job.

“I think it’s kind of interestin­g that both of my opponents announced on TMZ. And we are going to run my campaign like we ran the first one, we won’t take anything for granted. It’s great to see that my House colleagues are standing with me and I’m going to continue to work to fight for my constituen­ts, and that’s where we are.”

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? COMPTON Mayor Aja Brown discusses her candidacy for the 44th Congressio­nal District on Thursday. She will vie for Rep. Nanette Barragán’s seat against actress-turned-conservati­ve commentato­r Stacey Dash.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times COMPTON Mayor Aja Brown discusses her candidacy for the 44th Congressio­nal District on Thursday. She will vie for Rep. Nanette Barragán’s seat against actress-turned-conservati­ve commentato­r Stacey Dash.

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