The Mercury News

Newsom recall gives Villaraigo­sa risky road comeback

- By Dakota Smith

Former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigo­sa popped in to speak to a Loyola Marymount University class earlier this year, offering up a story about the pandemic and his career.

When some people ask if he’s glad he’s not governor or mayor during the tumultuous period of the health crisis, Villaraigo­sa responds with a dirty look, he told the students, according to a video of the class.

“I say, ‘Obviously, you don’t know me,’ ” Villaraigo­sa said, sounding as feisty as when he would spar with reporters at City Hall news conference­s. “Because if you did, you would know I want to be right in the middle of all of it.”

He could soon get his chance. Three years after his underwhelm­ing performanc­e in the California governor’s race, Villaraigo­sa is being talked about as a possible Democratic candidate in the likely recall election of Gov. Gavin Newsom.

The election — pushed by a consortium of conservati­ve voters disgruntle­d with Newsom — could allow for any number of candidates, including the former mayor. Olympian-turned-reality star Caitlyn Jenner has also emerged as a possible contender.

Some political analysts argue that a well-known Democrat should appear on the ballot to blunt the

chances of a Republican or fringe candidate winning. Others, including state Democratic leaders, urge a united front and are discouragi­ng Democrats from running.

Villaraigo­sa, who declined to be interviewe­d, has criticized the recall. But he’s not publicly ruled out a run, prompting speculatio­n about his plans.

Former Democratic Assemblyma­n Richard Katz regularly talks to Villaraigo­sa and said he can tell from the sound of his friend’s voice that he enjoys seeing his name being bandied about in the recall talk.

“Everyone likes being in the mix,” Katz said. “Everyone likes to stay relevant.”

Mounting a campaign would be a time-consuming and expensive endeavor for Villaraigo­sa, who last held office in 2013.

“I love Villaraigo­sa. He’s one of my closest friends,” said former Democratic Assembly Speaker Fabian Nuñez, who doesn’t want a Democrat to run because he thinks it will bolster the recall campaign. “But I don’t see it happening.”

Villaraigo­sa has spent the past few years largely behind the scenes. He works at Nuñez’s consulting business, one of a patchwork of jobs for the former mayor. He spends his time in Los Angeles and Mexico, where he met his wife, Patricia Govea.

He backed former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg in the 2020 presidenti­al race before supporting Joe Biden.

His slick jet-black hair is now a curly silver crown. He was recorded on video getting a shot earlier this year to promote COVID-19 vaccinatio­n efforts and AltaMed, a health care company Villaraigo­sa has advised.

He said he has filled his time during the pandemic focusing on his health, looking for work and taking Spanish lessons.

“Like so many of us, COVID hit me in the pocketbook,” Villaraigo­sa said in an October interview with Zocalo Public Square. “Working in the kind of business where you’re pretty much on you’re own ... (I) had to go and work extra hard to make up for the losses.”

In interviews, Villaraigo­sa often mentions poverty, inequality and education — topics he focused on in his governor’s race. In his Zocalo interview, he also weighed in on policing — he built up the city’s police force during his two terms as mayor — and rising crime.

“Defund? You know, I’ve heard some people say we don’t need a police force. I don’t buy that,” Villaraigo­sa said, adding that he supports police reforms.

At LMU, he told the students, “What’s a Republican in a big city like L.A.? It’s a Democrat that has been mugged. Wait till your parents or somebody you know, is ... carjacked or robbed at gunpoint. I tell you, people get a little more conservati­ve.”

Villaraigo­sa went to Roosevelt High School in Boyle Heights with L.A. City Councilman Gil Cedillo, and they check in with one another around their birthdays. Villaraigo­sa, who turned 68 in January, told Cedillo, “68 is the new 38!” this year, according to the councilman.

Villaraigo­sa also quizzed Cedillo about what workout he was doing and his diet, according to the councilman.

“He was very energetic,” Cedillo said. “Very enthusiast­ic.”

Villaraigo­sa, a former state Assembly speaker, left the mayor’s office in 2013 having pushed through pension reform and major transporta­tion and environmen­tal projects. A public extramarit­al affair and his affinity for the red carpet turned off voters.

“Those eight years, I can tell you I grew. I think in the beginning, like so many of us, you know, you want to be loved, you cherish being popular,” Villaraigo­sa told Zocalo Public Square. “In the end, it was more important to me to be respected.”

He’s attributed his thirdplace finish in the 2018 gubernator­ial primary — he received about 13% of the vote, behind Republican John Cox — in part to his inability to excite the Latino voters who helped propel his career.

At LMU, Villaraigo­sa talked about his interest in serving in public office again, but sidesteppe­d when asked if he would run in the recall election.

If the election qualifies for the ballot, voters will be asked two questions: Do they want to recall Newsom, and — regardless of how they answer the first question — if he is recalled, who should replace him?

Villaraigo­sa knows the intricacie­s of a recall election. When Gov. Gray Davis faced removal in 2003, Villaraigo­sa, then a city councilman, appeared in Spanish-language television ads urging voters to reject the recall.

At the same time, Villaraigo­sa endorsed California Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante as a backup candidate. Bustamante originally said he’d stay out of the race, but later ran. He urged voters to reject Davis’ removal as he campaigned as his possible replacemen­t.

“The risk is clearly that the state will could end up with a candidate with absolutely no experience in governance,” Villaraigo­sa told the Los Angeles Times in 2003, announcing his support for Bustamante. “There’s too much at stake to allow that to happen.”

Some Democrats blamed Bustamante for helping give legitimacy to the recall election. Others aren’t convinced that he dramatical­ly altered the outcome.

Nathan Click, spokesman for the campaign against the Newsom recall, called the effort to oust the governor a “GOP power grab.” “Democrats are united behind Gavin Newsom and against the Republican recall,” Click said.

Some political strategist­s doubt that Villaraigo­sa would take a passive position, as Bustamante did, in the election if he runs.

Jaime Regalado, professor emeritus of political science at California State, Los Angeles, said Villaraigo­sa faces potential backlash. “If he ran, he would be a pariah among Democrats,” Regalado said.

Fernando Guerra, professor of political science at Loyola Marymount University, argues Villaraigo­sa is the best pick among Democrats because of his substantiv­e experience in office.

Newsom and Villaraigo­sa should campaign together to urge voters to pick “no” on the first question and Villaraigo­sa on the second one, Guerra said.

Guerra, whose class Villaraigo­sa spoke at earlier this year, predicts Newsom will beat the recall. But he says Democrats need a backup candidate just in case.

“You never know what’s going to happen,” Guerra said.

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