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Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa |
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Los Angeles Mayor
Villaraigosa Ending Successful First
Term
LOS ANGELES (By David Zahniser and Phil
Willon, LATimes) November 8, 2008
—
Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa finishes his
first four-year term on a perch that any
big-city politician would envy — no
strong opposition, cash in his campaign
coffers and a City Hall that is closely
in sync with his agenda. The politician
has no strong challengers in his
reelection bid, is flush with cash and
enjoys a City Council largely in accord
with his goals.
His most formidable potential
challenger, billionaire real estate
developer Rick Caruso, announced Friday
that he would not run for the city's top
office this year. While Caruso was
explaining that decision, Villaraigosa
was in Chicago appearing onstage with
President-elect Barack Obama.
A second term would give Villaraigosa
the opportunity to make further progress
on goals he set out in his 2005 mayoral
campaign, some of which have not been
achieved. As he seeks reelection March
3, he will be in a position to
strengthen his hold even further on
L.A.'s political institutions — ones
with the power to shape policy on crime,
education, transportation and the
environment.
The City Council rarely challenges
Villaraigosa's broader policy wishes.
Two of the mayor's closest allies,
council members Jack Weiss and Wendy
Greuel, are seen as front runners for
city attorney and city controller,
respectively.
The mayor now has four allies on the Los
Angeles school board and will probably
push to get two more elected in March.
With the passage of Measure R, the sales
tax hike for transit, he has forged a
new working relationship with county
Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky, an
occasional antagonist on the
Metropolitan Transportation Authority
board.
Even though he was a national
co-chairman of Sen. Hillary Clinton's
presidential campaign, Villaraigosa
landed a coveted spot Thursday on
Obama's economic transition team. Two
days earlier, he helped secure passage
of three local ballot measures that will
pour up to $50 billion into new transit
projects, public schools and community
college buildings.
His work on behalf of those tax hikes —
Measures J, Q and R — drew high praise
from business leaders who had said they
were critical to rebuilding the area's
infrastructure.
"There is probably no one in the
community in a better position to raise
money than the mayor. And I think it had
a positive result," said Gary Toebben,
president and chief executive of the Los
Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce. "All
three were an investment in the future
of Los Angeles."
The mayor's strong showing stands in
sharp contrast to last year, when he
came under fire for engaging in an
extramarital affair with a
Spanish-language television reporter. By
then, he had also drawn criticism for
getting bogged down in a fight over
control of the Los Angeles Unified
School District.
Still, some critics are wary of
Villaraigosa's resurgence. Urban
historian Joel Kotkin, author of "The
City: A Global History," said the
mayor's expanding influence is resulting
in far fewer policy arguments and an
overall lack of dissent.
"There is no debate," Kotkin said. "We
have no legitimate institutions with
even the slightest opposition, and the
same thing is true in Chicago and New
York now."
Villaraigosa's ability to sway — and
help elect — other politicians stands in
sharp contrast to his two most recent
predecessors: James K. Hahn and Richard
Riordan.
During his four-year term, Hahn had
bitter fights with the council over his
plans for hiring new police officers and
modernizing Los Angeles International
Airport. He avoided school politics and
had difficulty getting even his four
appointees on the 13-member MTA board to
vote his way.
Riordan, a Republican who served from
1993 to 2001, had a famously contentious
relationship with the left-leaning City
Council. Although he did wade into
school board politics, he did not elect
a new board majority until his sixth
year in office. Four years later, three
of those trustees were swept out.
Villaraigosa spent his first 18 months
fighting with the school board over his
effort to take some control of the
district. But last year, he spent $3.5
million on a campaign to elect a new
board majority. With two vacant seats
now up for grabs, the mayor could soon
have six allies on the seven-member
board.
Earl Ofari Hutchinson, a pundit who had
urged Caruso to run, said he would like
to see the council challenge
Villaraigosa on his budget and hiring
decisions. And he warned that the
addition of two more mayor-friendly
school board members could actually
undermine Villaraigosa — by keeping him
from hearing opposing views.
"They're going to tell him what he wants
to hear, not what he needs to hear to
carry out his school reform project, and
that's what bothers me," said
Hutchinson, who also heads the Los
Angeles Urban Policy Roundtable.
Villaraigosa allies have a sharply
different view, saying his increased
political clout will allow him to
accomplish more of his policy goals.
"I also think he has really raised the
profile of L.A. A perfect example of
that was today," said Assembly Speaker
Karen Bass (D-Los Angeles), referring to
the mayor's appearance with Obama on
national television.
Despite his higher profile, Villaraigosa
has said he has no interest in serving
in an Obama Cabinet. If he changed his
mind and took a position after today's
deadline, no additional people would be
allowed to run for mayor unless they
were write-in candidates.
Still, the mayor has another potential
distraction ahead of him: deciding
whether to a run for governor in 2010.
He remains coy about a possible
campaign, saying repeatedly that he is
happy being mayor.
For now, Villaraigosa has at least $1.5
million available to use against his 16
likely challengers in the mayoral race,
all of whom are running with little or
no money. His best-known opponent so far
is Walter Moore, a lawyer from the
Carthay Circle neighborhood who finished
sixth in the 2005 mayoral race. Moore, a
regular on local talk radio, has $11,000
available for his bid, according to
contribution reports.
Until Friday, the race had the potential
to turn lively, with Caruso, the
shopping mall magnate who developed the
Grove, seen as a serious and well-funded
challenger. Caruso had confided to
people close to him that he considered
Villaraigosa politically vulnerable, in
part because of the city's dire finances
and what he considers an inhospitable
business climate that has driven
companies and jobs out of town.
Instead, the GOP businessman said he
believed that a mayoral bid — and life
in public office — would place too heavy
a burden on his family, particularly his
two younger children.
"I was very confident that we could
mount a winning campaign, and I mean
that with all sincerity. He has a lot of
weaknesses," Caruso said. "The good news
for Antonio today is that he doesn't
have to worry about a campaign. He gets
a free ride."
Villaraigosa campaign manager Ace Smith
had long dismissed the notion that
Caruso would run this year. Even if the
developer had jumped into the race,
Smith contended, the millions Caruso
could have poured into it would not have
been enough to overcome the mayor's
record on crime, the environment and
transportation.