Three races have drawn considerable attention as bellwethers of a leftward shift in L.A. local politics.
â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â [Los Angeles Times] Essential California November 5, 2020
[View in browser]( Good morning, and welcome to the Essential California [newsletter](. Itâs Thursday, Nov. 5, and Iâm writing from Los Angeles. The fate of the presidency still hangs in the balance, as President Trump and Joe Biden duel over battleground states. The margin between Trump and Biden has continued to narrow in Georgia as final votes are tallied in Democratic-leaning areas. The presidentâs [extraordinary attack]( on the voting system continued Wednesday with [a broad legal assault]( on ballot counting across a handful of toss-up states that will decide the presidential election. [See also: [âLegal experts cast doubt on Trumpâs bid to involve Supreme Court in election resultsâ]( in the Los Angeles Times] In short, Americans â who [turned out to vote]( in this yearâs election as never before â are probably in for another day of nail-biting and waiting. With little definitive news to report in the presidential race, weâll focus this morning on three L.A. races that have drawn considerable attention as bellwethers of a leftward shift in local politics. On Wednesday, state Sen. Holly Mitchell defeated former City Council President and current City Councilman Herb Wesson [to win a seat]( on the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors. With Mitchellâs victory, the powerful governing body once known as the âfive little kingsâ will soon be entirely female. (Quite a feat, especially considering that only men served on the board [for 127 years]( [See also: [âL.A. County will have an all-female Board of Supervisors for the first timeâ]( in the Los Angeles Times] Meanwhile, as of Wednesday night, former San Francisco Dist. Atty. [George Gascón held a steady lead]( over incumbent Los Angeles County Dist. Atty. Jackie Lacey in the race to lead the nationâs largest local prosecutorâs office, and urban planner Nithya Raman remained in a strong position to unseat Councilman David Ryu, which would make him the first L.A. council member to be ousted in 17 years. (To be clear, votes in both of those races are still being counted, and neither candidate has yet declared victory.) [See also:[âFrom George Gascón to jail diversion, criminal justice reform got a big boost in Californiaâ]( in the Los Angeles Times] What do Mitchell, Raman and Gascón have in common? For one, all three were endorsed by Sen. Bernie Sanders. And in a true rarity for L.A. political races, both the Gascón and Raman campaigns were under the national spotlight, with the district attorney race framed as a referendum on criminal justice reform. Hillary Clinton also weighed in on the Raman-Ryu City Council race, endorsing Ryu. Raphael J. Sonenshein, a local government expert who runs the Edmund G. âPatâ Brown Institute of Public Affairs at Cal State L.A., characterized Sandersâ and Clintonâs endorsements in the race as âa testimony to the growing significance of L.A. politics in national Democratic politics.â [As my colleagues report]( activists pointed to all three races on Wednesday and said L.A.'s political leaders can no longer dismiss those fighting the status quo on homelessness, public safety and other issues. Progressive dreams of a national âblue waveâ may have been dashed on Tuesday, but it was a heck of a day for local progressive candidates. Sonenshein attributed the success of L.A. progressives to several factors, including the sheer number of people drawn to the polls by the presidential election. He also saw the death of George Floyd in the custody of Minnesota police as a pivotal part of L.A.âs progressive wave at the ballot box. âIt really took something that had been an intense debate and turned it into a movement,â Sonenshein said, explaining that the protests for racial equity had energized voters and fundamentally changed the landscape in the months after the March primary. [See also: [âAngry voters, higher turnout, Hollywood money: How Nithya Raman gained an edge in L.A.â]( in the Los Angeles Times] Still, Los Angeles has a long history of not caring about local politics. In the past, a certain class of L.A. liberal might donate to half a dozen House candidates across the country but not be able to name their own City Council person. But local races galvanized Angelenos in 2020. So, does all this mean Angelenos are finally starting to care about politics in their own backyard? âI donât know yet,â Sonenshein said. âI think what youâve got is a different electorate.â Letâs rewind quickly to 2015, when an outsider named David Ryu was challenging the status quo and promising to shake things up at City Hall. The March primary that year [made headlines]( as [a low point]( in the cityâs decades-long slide in voter turnout, with just 16.4% of registered voters in the district casting ballots. Local L.A. elections had long been held in odd-numbered years. But during that same March 2015 election, [voters approved amendments]( to the city charter that would move local elections to even-numbered years to coincide with gubernatorial and presidential elections. These changes went into effect in 2020. As opinion writer [Kerry Cavanaugh reports,]( the first test of that new voting schedule â the March 2020 primary, which also coincided with Californiaâs newly relevant spot on the Super Tuesday roster â saw a [big increase]( in participation. In some city council races, the number of votes cast tripled or quadrupled compared with the previous election. [See also: [âOpinion: Donald Trump has been good for one thing at least: L.A. election voter turnoutâ]( in the Los Angeles Times] âEven before all the things happened in May and June and July to make everything more intense, the even-numbered thing was already creating this gigantic turnout model,â Sonenshein explained. That surge in turnout didnât just affect the number of people casting ballots, it also marked a fundamental shift in their demographics. According to Sonenshein, the electorate in local L.A. races has typically skewed toward older homeowners, and generally been pretty white. But when the local election moves to an even-numbered year, that group âgets changed to a more diverse electorate that weâre used to in presidential and statewide elections, which is more renters, more communities of color, younger voters.â âItâs not the same election,â Sonenshein said, noting that he hadnât seen such a dramatic change in the local electorate since the early 1990s, when the passage of Proposition 187 mobilized a massive increase in working-class Latino voters. And now, hereâs whatâs happening across California: Republicans may take back two congressional seats in key Orange County races: In a rare bright spot for Californiaâs beleaguered GOP, two Republican challengers are within striking distance of unseating two Orange County Democrats who were elected to Congress during the 2018 blue wave. As of Wednesday, county Supervisor Michelle Steel was clinging to a slender lead over Rep. Harley Rouda, and former state Assemblywoman Young Kim was leading Rep. Gil Cisneros. [Los Angeles Times]( Californiaâs COVID-19 efforts fare better than the national average, but hospitalizations are rising: The statewide number of hospitalizations increased by 13.5% over the last 14 days, and the number of patients in intensive care has grown by nearly 20%. [Los Angeles Times]( Note: Some of the sites we link to may limit the number of stories you can access without subscribing. ADVERTISEMENT
L.A. STORIES Well, one thing is certain: Kanye West will not be elected president. [Los Angeles Times]( Los Angeles County Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas declared victory over attorney Grace Yoo in his race to represent a Koreatown-to-Crenshaw district on the Los Angeles City Council, setting the stage for a return to City Hall after an 18-year absence. [Los Angeles Times]( [Los Angeles County Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas speaks to the press ]
Because he has been on the City Council previously, Mark Ridley-Thomas, an elected official for nearly three decades, is permitted to serve only a single four-year term. (Dania Maxwell / Los Angeles Times) Two groups of activists converged in downtown L.A. on Wednesday night: One group gathered to celebrate the seeming defeat of incumbent Dist. Atty. Jackie Lacey, against whom theyâve long rallied; and the other to protest the erroneous claim by Donald Trump that he had already won the presidential election. [LAist]( Support our journalism [Subscribe to the Los Angeles Times.]( POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT Republicans brushed back challengers in some of the most competitive U.S. Senate contests, bolstering the partyâs hopes of retaining control of the chamber and erecting a powerful firewall against a potential Joe Biden administration. [Los Angeles Times]( Top takeaways â and surprises â from high-profile races in Sacramento and Northern California. Voters reelected a slew of incumbents but left a couple of nationally prominent mayors â including Stockton Mayor Michael Tubbs â fighting for their political lives. Tubbs was trailing his opponent. [Sacramento Bee]( Rep. Devin Nunes has won reelection to Congress. In a surprise to many, the Central Valley Republican briefly appeared to be at risk of losing his seat during the early vote tallies Tuesday night. But he emerged victorious, besting Democratic challenger Phil Arballo. [Los Angeles Times]( Hereâs a proposition-by-proposition rundown of where things stand for the state ballot measures: - Proposition 14, the stem cell research bond, is still leading, but results had yet to be called as of Wednesday night. [Los Angeles Times](
- Proposition 15, which would loosen Californiaâs business property tax rules, is trailing. The ballot measure â an effort to remove high-value business properties from the low-tax protections enacted by California voters more than four decades ago â had yet to be called. [Los Angeles Times](
- Proposition 16, which would have allowed affirmative action policies in California, was rejected. The proposition was placed on the ballot by the Democrat-controlled California Legislature to repeal Proposition 209, a highly controversial measure approved by voters in 1996 that barred affirmative action programs in the state. [Los Angeles Times](
- Proposition 17, which will let parolees vote in California, was approved. The measure restores the vote to some 50,000 parolees by changing the state Constitution, which disqualifies people with felony convictions from voting until their incarceration and parole are completed. [Los Angeles Times](
- Proposition 18, which would allow some 17-year-olds to vote, is trailing but had also yet to be called. [Los Angeles Times](
- Proposition 19, which gives new property tax breaks to older homeowners, holds a lead. The California Assn. of Realtors was the driving force behind the proposition, with real estate interests raising more than $39 million for its passage. [Los Angeles Times](
- Proposition 20, which would have toughened sentencing in criminal cases, was rejected. Former Gov. Jerry Brown, who played a key role in some changes that would be rolled back by Proposition 20, campaigned against the measure and criticized its supporters, calling the measure âvindictive.â [Los Angeles Times](
- Proposition 21, a bid to expand rent control statewide, was rejected. A statewide ban on most new forms of rent control will remain in effect. [Los Angeles Times](
- Proposition 22, Uber and Lyftâs $200-million campaign to keep drivers as independent contractors, was successful. The measureâs passage â which grants ride-hail and delivery companies an exemption from California employment law â also deals a blow to Californiaâs powerful labor unions. The fight over Proposition 22 was one of the most closely watched ballot measure contests in the country and the costliest in state history. [Los Angeles Times](
- Proposition 23, which would have imposed new regulations on the dialysis industry, failed. The proposition would have required dialysis clinics to employ at least one doctor who would be on site whenever patients are receiving treatment. [Los Angeles Times](
- Proposition 24 was approved, ushering in new rules for online privacy. The changes will go into effect in 2023. [Los Angeles Times](
- Proposition 25, which would have abolished Californiaâs cash bail system, was rejected. The ballot measure was heavily opposed by the bail industry and sheriffâs associations, but it was [by no means uniformly supported]( by critics of the money bail system. A coalition of [prominent social justice groups]( campaigned against it, with the ACLU warning that Proposition 25 would replace money bail âwith risk assessment tools that are racially and socioeconomically biased.â [Los Angeles Times]( [See also: [âCaliforniaâs highest court could still curtail cash bail, upheld by the stateâs votersâ]( in the Los Angeles Times] HEALTH AND THE ENVIRONMENT The U.S. has formally pulled out of the Paris climate accord. The move, long promised by President Trump and put in motion by his administration a year ago, further isolates the U.S. but has no immediate effect on international efforts to curb global warming. [Associated Press]( ADVERTISEMENT
CALIFORNIA CULTURE The Gap posted a video of a half-red, half-blue hoodie on social media with the caption, âThe one thing we know, is that together, we can move forward.â And yes, backlash ensued. âIt was just too soon for this message,â a Gap spokeswoman said in an email. [San Francisco Chronicle]( The NBA and players are trying to finalize a Dec. 22 start for the new season: The NBAâs owners will hold a meeting Thursday while players continue discussions on whatâs rapidly considered an inevitability â a Dec. 22 start to next season. [Los Angeles Times]( A poem to start your Thursday: âIn a Countryâ by Larry Levis. [Poets.org]( Free online games Get our free daily crossword puzzle, sudoku, word search and arcade games in our new game center at [latimes.com/games](. CALIFORNIA ALMANAC Los Angeles: cloudy, 91. San Diego: partly sunny, 82. San Francisco: partly sunny, 66. San Jose: sunny, 77. Fresno: sunny, 81. Sacramento: sunny, 81. [More weather is here.]( AND FINALLY Todayâs California memory comes from Diane Brunson: Our Newport Beach vacation home was small and old, even by 1950s standards. A lifeguard perched on his tower in front of our house. The ball and rope attached to a pole haphazardly stuck in the sand provided us with tetherball. On the nearly empty beach, we played cards, napped and swam. Waves pushed us to shore on rubber air-mattresses later replaced by boogie boards. Skim boards slid us across damp sand. Volleyball occupied part of the day. Swiveling hula hoops around waists, kids walked the beach to a train trestle where the Santa Ana River entered the ocean. If you have a memory or story about the Golden State,[share it with us](. (Please keep your story to 100 words.) Please let us know what we can do to make this newsletter more useful to you. Send comments, complaints, ideas and unrelated book recommendations to [Julia Wick](mailto:julia.wick@latimes.com). Follow her on Twitter [@Sherlyholmes](. ADVERTISEMENT
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