Turnout Low, Except in Candidates' Strongholds
By Jennifer Oldham, Times Staff Writer
Voter participation in last week's mayoral election sank to
its lowest level in 16 years, but some areas of the city
saw a more robust turnout.
Up to 45% of voters went to their polling places in
strongholds of the major candidates.
San Pedro, where Mayor James K. Hahn lives, had a
larger-than-average turnout, as did Boyle Heights, where
Councilman Antonio Villaraigosa enjoys strong support. And
in some areas of the San Fernando Valley, voters showed up
to back hometown candidates: former Assembly Speaker Bob
Hertzberg, a lawyer from Sherman Oaks, and state Sen.
Richard Alarcon (D-Sun Valley). But overall turnout at the
polls was just 20%; absentee ballots brought the total to
26%.
Villaraigosa, who finished first, and Hahn, who was second,
will compete in a runoff May 17.
Turnout was also stronger in Westchester and other
communities in the 11th Council District, where three
candidates vied for the seat being vacated by Councilwoman
Cindy Miscikowski. Bill Rosendahl, best known as the host
of a public affairs talk show, and Flora Gil Krisiloff, a
Brentwood community activist, made it to the runoff.
But even with strong showings in some precincts, overall
voter turnout was weak, in part because the election came
just four months after the presidential contest, and the
campaign dragged out for weeks, failing to capture the
public's imagination.
"This jaundiced view is not new among voters," said Jaime
Regalado, executive director of the Edmund G. "Pat" Brown
Institute of Public Affairs at Cal State L.A. "They're not
believing politicians â€" especially in a
term-limited era."
Historically, turnout in Los Angeles has peaked in
particularly galvanizing elections. In 1969, when Tom
Bradley first challenged Mayor Sam Yorty, unsuccessfully,
66% of voters cast ballots. Four years later, the fiery
rematch between the two drew 57% of voters. Both advanced
to a runoff, which Bradley won, becoming the city's first
African American mayor.
In contrast, only 24% of voters participated in the 1989
mayoral election involving Bradley, Councilman Nate Holden
and nine others. Holden, the best-known challenger, started
late and had trouble raising money, allowing Bradley to
squeak to a fifth term without a runoff.
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