Los Angeles Times

Horvath declares win in county contest

West Hollywood council member beats state Sen. Hertzberg for supervisor seat.

- By Andrew J. Campa

West Hollywood City Councilmem­ber Lindsey Horvath declared victory Thursday evening for the only vacant Los Angeles County supervisor seat after taking a nearly 20,000-vote lead over state Sen. Bob Hertzberg (D-Van Nuys), who also conceded Thursday.

The 40-year-old will become the lone millennial and renter on the five-member board, which remains all female after her victory. The board is in charge of a budget of nearly $39 billion.

As of Thursday’s vote drop, Horvath leads with 52.24% of the vote with more than 450,000 ballots counted.

“I am thrilled, humbled, excited and feeling a whole range of emotions,” she said in a Zoom interview Thursday. “We had so many people join our team, many who saw a bit of themselves in us, and we picked up the fight together.”

Horvath’s triumph came despite a more than 3-to-1 fundraisin­g advantage for the seasoned Hertzberg, 67, who picked up endorsemen­ts from Gov. Gavin Newsom and U.S. Sen. Alex Padilla.

“I want to offer my most sincere and humble congratula­tions to Supervisor­Elect Horvath,” Hertzberg said in an emailed statement. “The challenges that we face as a county are extraordin­ary and it will take someone with Lindsey’s work ethic to be successful.”

Horvath rallied a coalition, including outgoing Supervisor Sheila Kuehl, whom Horvath will replace Dec. 5, along with all but one supervisor. Horvath also earned most endorsemen­ts from neighborho­od Democratic clubs along with the Los Angeles County Democratic Party.

Horvath will represent a sprawling 431-square-mile 3rd District that includes the Westside of Los Angeles and the San Fernando Valley. In total, 10 cities, 25 unincorpor­ated communitie­s and parts of 50 neighborho­ods in Los Angeles constitute the water-pistolshap­ed district of 2.06 million residents.

The 3rd District is about 43% white, 37% Latino, 12% Asian and 4% Black.

Horvath campaigned as a decision maker unafraid to make tough calls. She backed Los Angeles County’s Measure A, which granted the Board of Supervisor­s the ability to remove an elected sheriff. She called out Sheriff Alex Villanueva and did not support his campaign.

Measure A passed with more than 70% support, while Villanueva was handily defeated in his reelection bid by retired Long Beach Police Chief Robert Luna.

Conversely, Hertzberg lukewarmly supported Measure A and often refrained from publicly criticizin­g Villanueva.

Throughout her campaign, Horvath labeled homelessne­ss, safety and the environmen­t as the district’s most pressing issues.

“I want to make sure that we know where the resources are and that they’re appropriat­ely allocated to address those needs and concerns,” Horvath said. “We need to build a team that is not just reflective of the diversity of the district but of the diversity of interests that we need to serve.”

Hertzberg led Horvath on election night, with the first ballots giving him a 5,000-vote advantage with 51.24% of the vote.

Horvath received more votes on every subsequent update. She eventually surged ahead by less than 700 votes on Nov. 11 and continued to build her lead.

Hertzberg, the former speaker of the Assembly, will term out of the state Senate on Nov. 30.

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