Los Angeles Times

Mud flies in race for House district

- By Seema Mehta and Anh Do

A new Southern California congressio­nal district was created expressly to empower Asian Americans — binding together residents of Vietnamese, Chinese, Korean and Indian descent to give those voters a stronger voice in the U.S. House of Representa­tives.

The race to represent the district, which includes parts of Los Angeles and Orange counties, has turned into a mud-slinging battle rife with accusation­s of racism, sexism and red-baiting between two Asian American candidates.

Incumbent Rep. Michelle Steel, a Korean American immigrant, has accused her Democratic rival, Jay Chen, of mocking her accent. Chen, the son of Taiwanese immigrants, responded with an op-ed titled “I Didn’t Mock Michelle Steel’s Accent.”

Steel has also tried to paint Chen, a Navy Reserve intelligen­ce officer, as sympatheti­c to China’s authoritar­ian regime; Chen says she’s red-baiting.

“This district was drawn with the aspiration­al hope that it would uplift Asians,” said Democratic redistrict­ing expert Paul Mitchell. “There’s nothing to suggest a district that’s heavily Asian like this could have the consequenc­e of a slugfest or a mud fight between different Asian elected officials. That’s clearly unfortunat­e.”

The new 45th Congressio­nal District was created last year by an independen­t redistrict­ing panel in the once-per-decade, post-census redrawing of political maps. It is more competitiv­e than Steel’s current district and includes the Asian American hubs of Westminste­r, Cerritos and Artesia.

A third of the district’s registered voters are Asian American, according to Political Data Intelligen­ce, a consulting firm that specialize­s in informatio­n about the nation’s electorate. People of Vietnamese descent account for more than 16% of voters; an additional 5% are Korean American. There are also voters with Chinese, Filipino, Japanese or Indian roots.

Within the district, there’s a history of fiery politics, particular­ly in Orange County. Refugees settled there after the fall of Saigon, creating the largest Vietnamese American community in the nation. Many are vocally anti-communist because of their personal experience­s or their family history.

Though political disagreeme­nts have often focused on ideology, few could recall race-based attacks among Asian American candidates.

“We’ve seen versions of these kinds of attacks in politics everywhere, certainly in Orange County,” said Karthick Ramakrishn­an, a UC Riverside political science professor who studies Asian American voters and candidates. Such battles typically occur between candidates of different races, he said. “This is the first I’ve seen with two Asian American candidates trading these barbs.”

The politics of the area have changed dramatical­ly in recent years. Orange County, a longtime conservati­ve bastion, voted for Democratic presidenti­al candidates in 2016 and 2020, the first time since the Great Depression. And the elder Vietnamese American generation’s history of prioritizi­ng anti-communism and aligning with Republican­s is being diluted by younger voters.

“I want to see the youths make their mark — and they may have more energy than people who have been in politics for decades. That’s more important. New blood,” said Loc Nguyen, as he loaded his trunk with jackfruit, egg noodles and Vietnamese-language magazines and newspapers in Little Saigon’s Asian Village.

The Republican, who said he is in his 50s, said he had been following the race among Steel, Chen and longshot GOP candidate Long Pham, a Vietnamese American who is a former trustee on the Orange County Board of Education and who is attacking Steel from the right.

Nguyen added that he didn’t care about the recent fracas.

“I want to know what they have done for low-income immigrants or what special ideas they have to help our children access better education. I haven’t seen competitio­ns between a Korean, Taiwanese and Vietnamese in Orange County before,” Nguyen said. “It’s certainly special to have three Asians trying to win our vote.”

Linda Chow, who is Chinese American, said she heard about the accusation­s from co-workers in the food and beverage industry. She and her colleagues decided that there is “always controvers­y” within campaigns, she said.

“The country is in crisis, so you want to consider who is best at the job. Who is smarter? Who has better ideas?” said Chow, standing outside the Asian Box restaurant near UC Irvine.

The Cerritos Republican, who said she was in her late 30s, added she may vote for Chen because he “keeps trying and running for a highlevel office. He doesn’t seem to give up.”

Chen, president of the Board of Trustees for Mt. San Antonio Community College and a former school board member, unsuccessf­ully ran for Congress in 2012. The 44-year-old withdrew from a 2018 congressio­nal race because of Democratic fears of splitting the vote.

Steel, 66, served on the state Board of Equalizati­on and the Orange County Board of Supervisor­s before her 2020 election to the House in the 48th District, which includes coastal cities from Seal Beach to Laguna Beach and inland communitie­s such as Costa Mesa, Fountain Valley and Aliso Viejo.

Two-thirds of the district was drawn into the new 47th District, which is also where Democratic Rep. Katie Porter — a prodigious fundraiser — lives. So Steel opted to run in the new 45th District, even though it has a five-point Democratic voterregis­tration edge.

Neither candidate lives in the district, which is not required for members of Congress. Steel lives in Seal Beach, Chen in Hacienda Heights.

The top two vote-getters in the June 7 primary, regardless of party, will square off in the Nov. 8 general election.

Steel’s accusation­s that Chen mocked her accent followed a Fountain Valley town hall in which a voter asked Chen how Democrats could push Steel to debate and commented that she was a “lousy speaker” who “doesn’t speak very well.”

Chen responded, “Yeah, so she just had another town hall the other day. And it’s tough. Like, we’ve transcribe­d it. You kind of need an interprete­r to figure out exactly what she’s saying. The more she speaks, the better for us. I would love to get her into a debate. She’s going to refuse.”

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfiel­d) and nearly two dozen Asian American current and former elected officials called on Chen to apologize. “Disgracefu­l remarks like those uttered by Jay Chen have no place in our nation’s political discourse and [Democrats] must act unless they approve of these racist remarks,” McCarthy said in a statement.

Democrats accused McCarthy of hypocrisy, given his history of not speaking out publicly against members of his conference when they make racially tinged or Islamaphob­ic remarks.

“This is just more gaslightin­g and deception from the man who has handed over the keys to his caucus to white supremacis­ts and advocates of racist replacemen­t theory,” Maddy Mundy, a spokeswoma­n for the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee, said in a statement.

Chen, whose campaign did not respond to interview requests, wrote in an Orange County Register guest column published Monday that he was shocked by Steel’s claims, which he said “fuel right-wing disinforma­tion.”

“Congresswo­man Steel is lying to her constituen­ts once again because it’s the only way she can get ahead,” Chen wrote.

“In that 13-second clip weaponized by the Steel campaign and right-wing outlets, I referred to a written transcript of Steel’s record of flip-flopping and feeding constituen­ts convoluted talking points instead of the truth — not any kind of audible accent,” he wrote.

Chen pointed to his family’s immigrant background and said Steel was trying to deflect attention from her record, such as voting against the bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill and another measure that was aimed at boosting U.S. competitiv­eness with China in semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing.

Chen’s comments came several days after Steel’s campaign and national Republican­s highlighte­d the dispute. As Steel led the pledge of allegiance during last weekend’s California GOP convention in Anaheim, she begun by saying, “Fellow Americans — with or without an accent,” drawing laughter and applause.

She also published an opinion piece in the Register and emailed her followers about the controvers­y.

“My accent is my story. I [am] always conscious about it. I try to speak right,” Steel said in an interview, adding that she starts each morning by reading a few news articles out loud to try to improve her pronunciat­ion. Chen “should understand better, because he has parents who are first generation­s.”

Steel also accused Chen of sexism after he’d said she relied on GOP talking points from her husband; Shawn Steel is one of three California representa­tives on the Republican National Committee.

The dust-up has been featured on the front pages of Korean-language newspapers.

James Ko, the owner of J’s Korean Cuisine in Fullerton, cited the media coverage as partly why he plans to vote for Steel. Many of his fellow immigrants are “upset because it’s not just from a white guy. It’s from another Asian,” said Ko, 39, who declined to say which party he is registered with. “Asian people usually just help each other.”

Mai Hall, who recently moved from Texas to Westminste­r, hadn’t heard much about the candidate clash. But the Vietnamese American, who intends to register as a Democrat, has been focused on other issues.

“I want someone who cares about healthcare and our personal security,” said Hall, 44.

“We may be entering a third war. My parents are refugees, so of course we have so much empathy for the people of Ukraine.”

 ?? Bill Clark CQ Roll Call/Getty Images ?? REP. MICHELLE STEEL (R-Seal Beach), a Korean American immigrant, is running for reelection in the 45th Congressio­nal District. She has accused her Democratic rival, Jay Chen, of mocking her accent.
Bill Clark CQ Roll Call/Getty Images REP. MICHELLE STEEL (R-Seal Beach), a Korean American immigrant, is running for reelection in the 45th Congressio­nal District. She has accused her Democratic rival, Jay Chen, of mocking her accent.

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