Los Angeles Times

Effort to recall Gascón f izzles

- By James Queally

Committee seeking to oust L.A. County district attorney says it will try again later this year.

Signaling that its first attempt to boot Los Angeles County Dist. Atty. George Gascón from office was all but certain to fall short, the campaign seeking the progressiv­e prosecutor’s recall said Thursday that it would relaunch efforts later this year.

The campaign — which struggled to attract financial support or collect signatures after an initial burst of enthusiasm in May — issued a statement Thursday morning announcing it would launch a new recall committee later this year to “restart the petition gathering effort and timeline.”

The group, which needed to collect the signatures of approximat­ely 580,000 L.A. County voters by Oct. 26 to force Gascón into a recall election, had compiled just 200,000 with a little over five weeks before the deadline, according to Tim Lineberger, a campaign spokesman.

In a statement, the committee tried to brand the decision as a strategic maneuver rather than a defeat. Lineberger said the committee did not withdraw its current recall petition, but rather signaled it would be refocusing efforts toward the rebranded recall campaign.

“The incredible effort by thousands of volunteers gathering hundreds of thousands of signatures during the last few months has been nothing short of amazing and is a sign of what’s to come,” the statement read. “This reset will put all that work to great use, and it is invaluable to the recall effort moving forward. Make no mistake, this is not a white flag — it is a double down on our efforts.”

Michael Sanchez, a spokesman for the L.A.

County registrar, said his office had not been contacted about “an intent to abandon the current recall effort. "The earliest a new petition could be submitted by the same group would be Oct. 27, the day after the deadline for the current effort passes.

Gascón ousted incumbent Jackie Lacey from office last November, riding a wave of support for police reform that followed the murder of George Floyd. On his first day in office, Gascón announced plans to do away with the use of the death penalty, sentencing enhancemen­ts and the practice of trying juveniles as adults. His policies drew immediate backlash among law enforcemen­t officers, victims’ rights groups and many of Gascón’s own line prosecutor­s.

Murmurs of an effort to recall Gascón began to bubble up just weeks after he took office. Spearheade­d by the widow of a murdered L.A. County sheriff ’s deputy and a woman whose son was killed in 2018, the grass-roots campaign launched in May with the support of L.A. County Sheriff Alex Villanueva and former Dist. Atty. Steve Cooley.

But the group had no communicat­ions staff and little backing from veteran political operatives until months after it took off, a factor that kept many of the police unions that spent millions opposing Gascón’s candidacy last year from donating to the recall effort, according to people familiar with the campaign and some of the unions’ thinking.

The people spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the matter candidly.

While the unions representi­ng rank-and-file L.A. police officers and sheriff’s deputies spent more than $2 million in support of the incumbent Lacey last year, they did not contribute to this year’s recall effort. By mid-July, recall organizers said they had raised approximat­ely $1 million, but spent nearly half of that on petition circulatio­n alone, campaign finance records show.

Jamarah Hayner, director of Gascón’s anti-recall campaign, said Thursday’s announceme­nt showed recall efforts in L.A. County and across California only represent a small, aggrieved voter base. She likened the news to Gov. Gavin Newsom’s landslide defeat of a statewide effort to remove him from office.

“This week’s resounding defeat of the recall attempt against Gov. Newsom punctuated months of underperfo­rmance and disorganiz­ation by the interests backing the flailing recall effort against D.A. Gascón,” she said. “I hope we can finally get back to the real work of keeping all Los Angeles’ communitie­s safe and building a more equitable justice system, which is precisely what D.A. Gascón was elected to do by a quartermil­lion-vote margin.”

Two-thirds of California voters rejected the bid to recall Newsom, which had some overlap with the effort to oust Gascón.

Earlier this month, conservati­ve radio talk show host and gubernator­ial hopeful Larry Elder appeared with leaders of the Gascón recall effort in L.A., laying blame on Newsom and prosecutor­s such as Gascón for rising crime rates. Signs and shirts supporting the effort to recall Newsom could also often be seen at rallies calling for Gascón’s ouster. One of the largest donors to the Gascón recall effort, Susan Groff, was also a major player in financing the bid to oust Newsom, records show.

While Thursday’s move will sting for recall boosters, similar tactics have worked in other cities. In San Francisco, the first effort to force progressiv­e Dist. Atty. Chesa Boudin into a recall race failed earlier this year, but a second campaign now seems likely to meet the signature requiremen­ts.

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