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With racial tension in LA, mayor struggles to hold black vote
AP ^ | 2/19/5 | MICHAEL R. BLOOD

Posted on 02/19/2005 1:29:09 PM PST by SmithL

LOS ANGELES - Outrage over alleged police brutality is shaking up a wide-open contest for City Hall in which an influential, if relatively small, black vote could determine whether Mayor James Hahn keeps his job.

The death of 13-year-old Devin Brown, who was shot by police after driving a stolen car into an LAPD cruiser, galled black residents who see the killing as the latest example of Police Department abuse. The Feb. 6 shooting came three days after prosecutors declined to file charges against an officer who was videotaped hammering black car-theft suspect Stanley Miller with a metal flashlight - images that evoked the beating of Rodney King.

As the March 8 primary election approaches, community unrest carries both risks and opportunities for Hahn, a Democrat who was elected four years ago with overwhelming black support. His situation is further complicated by his decision in 2002 to push the ouster of police Chief Bernard Parks, now the only black candidate among Hahn's four chief rivals.

Hahn is running on the city's falling crime rate. But some community leaders say the Brown shooting is evidence that, despite the statistics, not enough has changed.

In the black community, there is a "feeling that it's really not better," said the Rev. Norman Johnson, a Baptist pastor and former executive director of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference in Los Angeles.

"Ultimately, this is a problem for the mayor," Johnson said.

There are, of course, factors beyond race that will factor into who wins, including accusations that the Hahn administration traded contracts for political donations and issues from traffic to troubled schools.

But the Brown shooting has brought renewed focus on police-minority tensions, an issue that troubled the city since the 1965 Watts riot.

With his re-election far from certain, Hahn's typically cautious demeanor has vanished. He demanded that the city's police oversight board rewrite the policy for shooting at moving vehicles, publicly browbeat City Council members who blocked a proposal to hire more officers and denounced the decision not to charge the officer who clubbed Miller.

Hahn's hand-picked replacement for Parks, Chief William Bratton, has been an emissary into minority neighborhoods. The pro-active approach had shown progress, with some South Los Angeles ministers appealing to the public a year ago to help stop attacks on officers.

But if the mayor sees a safer city as his crowning achievement, he also hasn't hesitated to question the actions of officers in the Brown and Miller cases.

"He's playing to his base and trying to turn a negative into a positive by ... demanding quick accountability and action," said Jaime A. Regalado, executive director of the Edmund G. "Pat" Brown Institute of Public Affairs at California State University, Los Angeles.

Hahn succeeded four years ago by knitting together a coalition of largely white, moderate-to-conservative voters in the suburbanish San Fernando Valley and blacks in South Los Angeles - a bloc he inherited from his late father, a longtime county supervisor beloved in the black community.

This time, Hahn's support among blacks had nose-dived, with many of those voters defecting to Parks, the former police chief, a Los Angeles Times poll found this month. Voters had no clear favorite, although Hahn was clustered at the front of the pack with City Councilman Antonio Villaraigosa, whom he beat in a 2001 runoff.

The major mayoral candidates this year, all Democrats, represent a rainbow of backgrounds not unlike the city itself - Hahn has Irish roots, Parks is black, former Assembly Speaker Hertzberg is Jewish and there are two Hispanic candidates, Villaraigosa and state Sen. Richard Alarcon, D-Sun Valley.

The black vote remains crucial for Hahn - and an important voting group overall - even though Los Angeles' black population has been shrinking.

In the 2000 Census, the black population was pegged at 11 percent in a city of 3.7 million, although blacks accounted for 17 percent of the turnout in the 2001 mayoral race, exit polls found.

Hispanics make up nearly half the population but accounted for only 22 percent of the turnout four years ago. Why the disparity? One key reason: Of the 1.1 million Hispanics over 18 years old, about 650,000 are not citizens, the census found.

As Hahn looks to keep a foothold in the black community, Parks' challenge is to extend beyond the black community. Villaraigosa, the son of a Mexican immigrant, is courting voters outside the Hispanics and liberal Democrats who propelled his campaign four years ago. And Hertzberg and Alarcon are trying to push out of their strongholds in the San Fernando Valley.

If no candidate wins 50 percent of the vote, a likely scenario given five major candidates, the top two finishers advance to a May 17 runoff.

Villaraigosa, in particular, has been trying to avoid being pigeonholed as just a Hispanic candidate. Four years ago, he was regarded as the first Hispanic in years with a legitimate chance of winning the mayoralty.

When asked in an interview last week whether it was important for Los Angeles to have a Hispanic mayor, Villaraigosa said: "I think most people are looking for a mayor who can get things done, who can unite us around a common vision."

Some analysts say Villaraigosa's ethnic image was turned against him when Hahn ran a campaign ad in 2001 that used grainy images of a crack pipe to fault Villaraigosa for writing a letter on behalf of a convicted cocaine trafficker. Regalado called it a veiled attempt to paint the Hispanic candidate as weak on crime - a "devastating kind of association" that shifted more conservative Valley voters to Hahn.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events; US: California
KEYWORDS: blackvote; hahn; jameshahn; lapd; losangeles; mayor

1 posted on 02/19/2005 1:29:14 PM PST by SmithL
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To: SmithL
A Democrat in trouble with blacks? A lot can happen in four years and Jim Hahn now finds himself deep in the hole both in South Central and in The Valley. Los Angeles is a more complicated place than San Francisco.

Denny Crane: "There are two places to find the truth. First God and then Fox News."

2 posted on 02/19/2005 1:37:46 PM PST by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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To: goldstategop

I will be voting for Hahn. He's the best of a bad lot.


3 posted on 02/19/2005 1:55:23 PM PST by ambrose (....)
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To: SmithL

A 3000 pound car is as deadly as a 300 gram bullet. Try to run anyone down with a car and you ought to be shot.


4 posted on 02/19/2005 2:06:50 PM PST by hoosierham
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To: goldstategop

"Los Angeles is a more complicated place than San Francisco."

You've got that right. L.A. is a bewildering confusing place, it's own nation in many ways. A bit too exciting for me and just about anyone else who wants to have a normal workday.


5 posted on 02/19/2005 2:40:56 PM PST by surfette
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To: rdb3; Khepera; elwoodp; MAKnight; condolinda; mafree; Trueblackman; FRlurker; Teacher317; ...
Black conservative ping

If you want on (or off) of my black conservative ping list, please let me know via FREEPmail. (And no, you don't have to be black to be on the list!)

Extra warning: this is a high-volume ping list.

6 posted on 02/19/2005 2:45:59 PM PST by mhking (Do not mess with dragons, for thou art crunchy & good with ketchup...)
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To: goldstategop
LA has become a sh*thole. I work in Downtown. It's only 22 miles from home, yet it can often take 90 minutes one way. Even though I'm in the nicest section of Downtown, the smell of human excrement is unbearable while walking around, I'm asked for a handout at least 10 times a day, and every day there seem to be more and more teen age latinos walking around with a couple of kids in tow.

The homes in my neighborhood are approaching seven figure averages. Good for me I suppose, but bad for my kids and everybody elses kids. The healthcare system in LA has become seriously eroded. Our local hospital, in a nice part of town and with a good reputation, only survives because it takes Medi-Cal.

This means that every trip to the emergency room means I'm one of the few English speakers in the room, the same is especially true of the maternity ward.

My beef is not that this city is overrun with latino's. There are many I've come to admire by becoming successful by the sweat of their brow.

My beef is that this city is over run with people who don't speak the language, they don't speak their own language correctly, have little education, maintain an underground, cash economy to the detriment of legitimate businesses, and take more from the economy than contribute to it. The non-stop flow of illegals will create an permanent underclass because of collapsing wages, from which will flow non-stop crime.

To those who say that they will do the work other people won't, I say, you pay more for it in hidden costs than if you were to limit the resource pool and pay more per item. People would end up consuming less.

The worst part is that no Republican is in the mayor's race.
7 posted on 02/19/2005 2:57:31 PM PST by LA Conservative (Peace Kills)
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To: LA Conservative

Thank you. VERY good post.


8 posted on 02/19/2005 7:44:49 PM PST by Brad’s Gramma (aitch tee tee pea colon 2 slashes dubya dubya dubya dot proud patriots dot org)
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To: SmithL; LA Conservative; goldstategop
Hahn succeeded four years ago by knitting together a coalition of largely white, moderate-to-conservative voters in the suburbanish San Fernando Valley...

By "moderate-to-conservative," does that mean in this case truly moderate-to-conservative, or just in relation to what I'm sure is the heavily liberal core of the city?

9 posted on 02/19/2005 8:05:20 PM PST by iceemonster ("When is silence ever the answer?")
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To: iceemonster
You are exactly right. Anything to the right of left wing becomes moderate-to-conservative.

King James will be in for a nasty surprise in the Valley since he put the kibosh on secession, and he is being sucked into the pay-to-play scandal.

I think the most moderate Democrat in this race is Hertzberg.
10 posted on 02/20/2005 11:12:28 AM PST by LA Conservative (Peace Kills)
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