This election showed L.A. voters are fed up with City Hall corruption and scandal
Two years after the leaked audio scandal rocked Los Angeles City Hall, voters finally had their say in this election. And speak they did.
Voters overwhelmingly backed charter changes designed to curb elected officials’ political power by creating an independent redistricting commission and empowering the city’s Ethics Commission. Advocates had long pushed for these reforms, but until the 2022 scandal, they had been blocked by the city’s political leadership. The measures were passing with nearly 75% support as of Friday afternoon.
Voters in Council District 14, meanwhile, ousted Councilmember Kevin de León, who refused to resign after being caught on tape making deplorable, racially divisive comments. Tenants rights attorney and first-time candidate Ysabel Jurado had a double-digit lead over the veteran politician at last count.
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This was an important election for Los Angeles, even if it was overshadowed by the presidential race. City voters laid the groundwork for fairer, more representative elections by passing Charter Amendment DD, enacting independent redistricting. That means the city’s politicians can no longer draw their own district boundaries and effectively choose their own voters.
The leaked recording revealed De León, two other council members and a labor leader plotting to manipulate redistricting to retain their power and diminish that of their perceived enemies. That was allowed under the city's old redistricting system.
Reform is long overdue. Independent redistricting commissions increase public participation, reduce gerrymandering and draw districts that represent communities, not individual politicians' interests.
Voters also sent a message that they will hold elected leaders accountable. De León was an active participant in the vile conversation that touched off the scandal. He disparaged a colleague's Black son as a prop carried like a Louis Vuitton handbag, suggested Black people have too much political power and made other demeaning remarks about activists and constituents.
When the recording was exposed, residents and fellow elected leaders urged De León to step down in recognition of how much his words hurt Los Angeles. Instead, he dug in his heels, hoping voters would forgive and forget. They did not.
After a series of recent corruption scandals that have so far sent two local elected officials to prison, voters backed Charter Amendment ER to strengthen the Ethics Commission. The commission will now have a guaranteed minimum budget so that elected officials can’t defund ethics enforcement. Another change will make it harder for the City Council to kill ethics reforms they don’t like — which the council has done, for example, when asked to tighten the city's law regulating lobbyists, which is difficult to enforce.