L.A.'s Democratic Party Machine
The party has Politboro-style sway over candidates, relieving voters of their power to pick who wins which job.
Editorial
IT'S STARTING TO feel like the Politburo. Power brokers in
California's Democratic Party move the pieces on the
chessboard, then go through the charade of putting their
choices on the ballot. But the representatives of "the
people" already have been named.
So Felipe Fuentes is designated to step into the Assembly
shoes of Richard Alarcon, who served three months of his
term before filling the Los Angeles City Council seat left
by Fuentes' former boss, Alex Padilla, who moved to the
state Senate by defeating Cindy Monta?ez (in a rare
election with actual choices), who was going to run for
Padilla's council seat but, like Fuentes, dropped out of
the race when the powers that be designated Alarcon.
Monta?ez's reward for playing ball was a seat on the city
Planning Commission and a post on the state Unemployment
Insurance Appeals Board. Fuentes is being awarded the
Assembly seat, although the voters get to rubber-stamp the
coronation in a May 15 special election.
The cure for removing the voters from the political process
is supposed to be the general election, when the Democrat
named by the power brokers faces the candidate from the
other party. But there is no other party ? at least not in
most parts of Los Angeles, where Democrats are practically
the only party.
Should the Republicans jump in? They shrewdly, though
quietly, acknowledge that the national party's increasingly
right-wing stances offer little that resonates with most of
the region's working-class and immigrant-rich voting
districts. That's too bad, because there are voters waiting
for moderate and pragmatic alternatives to Los Angeles'
Democratic Party machine.
Will there be someone else? The Greens? The Libertarians?
Those and other parties often put forward little-known,
underfunded, long-shot (at best) challengers. For now, it's
a closed, and private, Democratic Party game.
Meanwhile, Alarcon flew to Sacramento for his Assembly
going-away tributes Monday, just days after being back in
City Hall for the welcome festivities and just months after
he had his farewell bash on the floor of the state
Senate.
And they say reporters are the cynical ones.
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