Los Angeles Times

A rich source of Trump support

Two neighborho­ods in Beverly Hills favored the president in voting last week.

- By Lila Seidman

Two neighborho­ods in Beverly Hills favored the president.

Hours after the U. S. presidenti­al election was called for Joe Biden on Saturday morning, an older, darkhaired woman clutched her ash- blue jacket tighter in a chilly shadow cast by the Greystone Mansion in one of the priciest areas of Beverly Hills. She wasn’t feeling festive.

“What do you want me to say? I’m not happy,” said the woman walking on Loma Vista Drive in the 90210 ZIP Code and who, like many Beverly Hills residents asked about their perspectiv­e on the election, declined to give her name. Without going into policy specifics, the woman said that although she did not dislike Biden, she didn’t support “what he’s going to do.”

The woman lives in the Trousdale Estates area, where the average home sale price is more than $ 15 million. It’s also in one of two adjacent neighborho­ods in Beverly Hills where a majority of voters chose Donald Trump over Biden in the presidenti­al election.

On a Times map of election results, the two precincts — both above Sunset Boulevard in the areas synonymous with wealth — stick out like a red thumb among the blue sea representi­ng what has traditiona­lly been seen as Los Angeles’ liberal stronghold on the Westside. They are some of the county’s most aff luent areas, yet they backed Trump more than neighborin­g luxury areas such as BelAir, Brentwood, Pacific Palisades and Holmby Hills, which went to Biden along with other parts of Beverly Hills.

About a mile and a half southwest of Trousdale Estates, Shane Steel passed the Beverly Hills Hotel on his way to a celebrator­y breakfast with his uncle.

The 24- year- old resident of the same precinct that backed Trump, Steel said he was “very happy” with the results. He supports Biden.

But neighborin­g precincts — which run roughly from Trousdale Estates to the Los Angeles Country

Club, with the Beverly Hills Hotel in the middle — voted for Trump 56% to 44%, according to data compiled by The Times.

When it came to light that one of the same neighborho­ods, or precincts, in 2016 voted for Trump over Hillary Clinton, it was seen as an anomaly. This time around, no one seemed shocked to learn that an even wider swath of the small, aff luent city of about 34,000 went red.

“Trump has been very good for rich people,” Steel said, “and I think that sometimes people forget to think about human life and human policies versus what’s good for your wallet.”

Walking his dog near Will Rogers Memorial Park, just south of Sunset Boulevard, resident David Shapiro said he voted for Trump for the f irst time this year — after abstaining in 2016 — because of his economic and tax policies, as well as his support of Israel and tough stance on China.

A Jewish emigre from Moscow, Shapiro, 65, said that Trump was not cozy with Russia as many people thought and that the U. S. was not seen as a friend in his home country.

“He’s good for internatio­nal relations,” said Shapiro, a businessma­n. “We don’t have any war — the problem is there will be war in the Middle East. And he’s good to Israel.”

Beverly Hills Mayor Lester Friedman said he didn’t see the expansion of Trump voters to two neighborho­ods as indicative of a trend.

“I don’t really sense a big change in political outlooks, just that they’re more vocal,” Friedman said by phone Friday afternoon.

As some residents noted, pro- Trump supporters have gathered every week for nearly four months along one of Beverly Hills’ main thoroughfa­res to proclaim their support for the president. Rally organizer and resident Shiva Bagheri said in late October that the events empowered people like her to go from “the silent majority” to the “loud- lion majority.”

On Saturday morning, a handful of Trump supporters gathered at a park where the rally usually kicked off at 2 p. m. A man and a woman who declined to comment were standing behind a sign calling for the recall of Gov.

Gavin Newsom, as neighborho­ods just a few miles away were celebratin­g Biden’s victory by dancing in the street, cheering and honking their horns.

Contrary to the notion of a louder electorate, many Trump and Biden supporters said they felt they could not speak fully on the record for fear of retributio­n from neighbors or potential negative effects to their business. One man from Bel- Air went off on Trump but then declined to give his name, saying, “I have to work in this town.”

Longtime Beverly Hills resident Adrienne, 81, would give only her f irst name. A lifelong Republican who immediatel­y switched to independen­t when Trump became the Republican nominee said she hoped Biden could bring back a sense of normalcy and common sense. Several people in her condo support the president and don’t wear masks, she said, something she thinks is a mistake.

“The world is laughing at us,” she said. “We need to get back to calmness. We need to get back to where we were the strongest nation on Earth.”

 ?? Jason Armond Los Angeles Times ?? backers of President Trump rally Saturday after Joe Biden was declared president- elect. In the liberal Westside, two neighborho­ods in the 90210 were conspicuou­s for not supporting Biden. “Trump has been very good for rich people,” a resident said.
Jason Armond Los Angeles Times backers of President Trump rally Saturday after Joe Biden was declared president- elect. In the liberal Westside, two neighborho­ods in the 90210 were conspicuou­s for not supporting Biden. “Trump has been very good for rich people,” a resident said.

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