Los Angeles Times

Villanueva takes lead for sheriff

Riding an unlikely coalition, challenger stuns with slight edge over the incumbent in L.A. County.

- BY MAYA LAU, BRITTNY MEJIA AND JAMES QUEALLY

Until recently, the convention­al wisdom held that Jim McDonnell had a fairly easy path to be reelected as Los Angeles County sheriff.

He’d made strides in bringing stability to a troubled agency torn by scandal. His resume boasted years in the top echelons of local law enforcemen­t.

Now McDonnell, 59, is in the political fight of his life, with the future of his slate of reforms aimed at stamping out corruption and misconduct hanging in the balance. There is the possibilit­y he could lose his job to a challenger with far less management experience but a stronger ground game who took a razor-thin lead in the race just before dawn Wednesday morning.

Retired Sheriff ’s Lt. Alex Villanueva was ahead by 4,927 votes, stirring prediction­s of a potential upset.

With nearly a million provisiona­l and mail-in ballots still being counted, the outcome of the race was far from certain. But the fact that McDonnell’s fate will come down to the last batch of votes has stunned Los Angeles’ political establishm­ent.

While Villanueva positioned himself as a progressiv­e alternativ­e to McDonnell in a deep-blue county, he has also expressed doubts about some of the reforms pushed by McDonnell, including greater transparen­cy about police misconduct.

Whereas McDonnell commanded high-dollar donations, Villanueva inspired phone bankers and social media ads.

Campaign workers with

Citizens PAC, a group that received most of its funding from labor organizati­ons including the Service Employees Internatio­nal Union, knocked on doors, made 2 million calls, sent 3 million text messages and created memes and web videos on behalf of Villanueva, said Javier Gonzalez, the group’s campaign strategist.

Though the sheriff ’s race is nonpartisa­n, Villanueva, 55, advertised himself as a Democrat who wants to kick immigratio­n agents out of county jails, earning him an endorsemen­t from the L.A. County Democratic Party and giving him a narrative hook McDonnell lacked.

Gonzalez said they hit “lightning in a bottle” with Villanueva, who checked all of the boxes.

“A Democrat, progressiv­e, straight and narrow, law enforcemen­t credential­s, military credential­s, fluent Spanish, lived in Puerto Rico,” Gonzalez said. “It was a perfect storm here.”

Though Villanueva has deviated from a typical progressiv­e platform — he’s raised the possibilit­y of giving deputies metal flashlight­s to defend themselves against inmates — his message provided enough cues to draw in voters.

Indeed, Villanueva attracted an unlikely coalition, with support from the rankand-file deputies union as well as progressiv­e activists.

Patrisse Cullors, a cofounder of Black Lives Matter and creator of Dignity and Power Now, a group that advocates for inmates and their families, said she was involved in organizing to vote McDonnell out. She said her campaign work was separate from her relationsh­ip to those groups.

“It needs to be clear: We can vote you out of office if we’re not happy with what you’re doing. That’s the point I want to make,” she said.

McDonnell’s campaign manager, Steve Barkan, said the flood of mailers touting Villanueva as a Democrat provided voters with valuable informatio­n, while his own client couldn’t find an equally effective way to promote his agenda.

“Our polling showed a perception of extraordin­arily high job performanc­e for McDonnell himself,” he said.

Barkan said McDonnell mainly relied on slate mailers as well as print and radio ads. He said that it had been a struggle to promote McDonnell’s positive, more general message of reform and that the past strategy of reaching voters through traditiona­l news media is no longer a guarantee.

Some observers said McDonnell stumbled by not winning outright in the primary.

“His campaign’s efforts were beyond tepid. He should have gone for it. He should have gone all out in terms of, one, raising money, and two, spending money, and running like he was behind,” said Steve Cooley, a former L.A. County district attorney who organized a fundraiser for McDonnell. “He would have knocked out his two opponents. He came very, very close.”

Many political experts said that even though Villanueva had pushed McDonnell into a runoff, it should have been nearly impossible to pose a serious threat to a sitting sheriff.

“The voters sent a really clear message,” said Jessica Levinson, a Loyola Law School professor who teaches election law. “They need faster and different change, and they think the Sheriff ’s Department needs an overhaul that hasn’t happened yet. On the other hand, this was a low-informatio­n race, so I still have to wonder how much this has to do with confusion on the ballot.”

She said voters are often influenced by the barebones informatio­n inside the voting booth: a candidate’s name and title. She also cautioned that the volume of uncounted ballots means the race could still go either way.

The Sheriff’s Department has faced new questions in recent months. A Times investigat­ion found that a team of deputies targeted thousands of innocent Latino motorists on the 5 Freeway in drug searches, a practice now under review. There also have been concerns about why the department has not done more to curb the wearing of matching tattoos that critics say are indication­s of secret cliques within the agency.

McDonnell campaigned on a promise to continue the improvemen­ts he’s made in his first term, such as reducing serious jail violence and enhancing mental-health care behind bars.

The former Long Beach police chief and longtime Los Angeles Police Department official touted his support for the nearly 2-year-old Sheriff Civilian Oversight Commission and made news when he tried to give prosecutor­s a so-called Brady list of about 300 deputies with histories of misconduct.

But Villanueva, who says he was the victim of unjust discipline while with the department, has called the roster a “fake list” compiled from retaliator­y investigat­ions. His position echoes that of the Assn. for Los Angeles Deputy Sheriffs, the rank-and-file union that sued McDonnell to block disclosure and has given at least $1.32 million to an outside group supporting Villanueva.

Villanueva argued that the Sheriff’s Department hadn’t done enough to distance itself from U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, which is allowed to use office space inside one of the county jails.

An Air Force veteran who served three decades in the Sheriff ’s Department, Villanueva said he would kick ICE agents out of the lockup, saying his deputies would instead march inmates out of the jail into ICE custody.

It’s unclear, though, how that position might have helped in a diverse county where opposition to President Trump’s immigratio­n crackdown is strong.

Villanueva, who has Puerto Rican and Polish American heritage, was most strongly supported in heavily Latino areas like Southeast L.A., the San Fernando Valley and Pomona, just as in the primary, a Times analysis showed.

In Central L.A. neighborho­ods such as Mid-City and Mid-Wilshire, Villanueva picked up many precincts that McDonnell had won in the primary.

McDonnell remained the stronger fundraiser, drawing about $1.2 million from individual donors, mostly in Los Angeles, Long Beach and Beverly Hills. He was supported by at least $954,000 in additional dollars from an independen­t committee funded by business executives and a union representi­ng sergeants, lieutenant­s and other Sheriff’s Department employees.

Villanueva raised $156,000 from people concentrat­ed mostly in eastern parts of the county near La Habra Heights, where he lives, but he was backed by an additional $1.4 million in outside money from labor groups including the rankand-file deputies union.

More clarity in the contest may come Friday, when the next update to vote totals is scheduled.

 ?? Thomas Suh Lauder Los Angeles Times ?? Source: Los Angeles County Registrar-Recorder / County Clerk
Thomas Suh Lauder Los Angeles Times Source: Los Angeles County Registrar-Recorder / County Clerk

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