Welcome to the CD2 Special Election 2009 blog

With the departure of Wendy Greuel, as she has now assumed the role of LA City Controller, the constituents of Council District 2 are now faced with our most important election in recent memory.

This is an election that boils down to one important factor - the very real possibility that whichever candidate assumes the position of Councilperson for CD2 may be in office for the next 14 years.

On this site, we will bring you all the breaking news, issues, and developments, as this brief campaign progresses. This site also will serve as a resource for voter information and scheduled candidate forums. We welcome your participation as residents of CD2 and we hope to hear from the candidates as well.

This site will not endorse any candidate, all postings are provided to inform the public only.

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Special Election or Secret Election:The Race for L.A.’s Council District 2

from The Jewish Journal

by Adeena Bleich

Activist and author Gore Vidal once said: “Half of the American people never read a newspaper. Half never vote for president. One hopes it is the same half.” If you are reading this article, you are probably part of the half of people who do pay attention to world happenings and elections. But does this include local politics? Do you know who your councilmember is or when the next city election is? Do you care what goes on at City Hall?

This Tuesday, Dec. 8, Angelenos in City Council District 2 are being asked to vote in a special run-off election. District 2 is huge, encompassing Lakeview Terrace, La Tuna Canyon, North Hollywood, Shadow Hills, Sherman Oaks, Studio City, Sunland, Tujunga, Valley Village, Valley Glen and Van Nuys.

It’s an election so special, almost no one is talking about it. Like many off-cycle elections before, this special election is set to become a “secret” election — something no one knows about and no one cares about.

In the special primary election held for this seat on Sept. 22, only 16,000 out of a possible 125,000 registered voters cast ballots for the then-10 candidates. Now the race is winnowed down to two candidates, Paul Krekorian and Christine Essel, and if previous city elections are anything to go by, those who voted for the losing eight candidates in the first election are likely to stay home. Whoever gets elected on Dec. 8 will win with less than 7 percent of the potential vote.

Los Angeles is a city where elected officials must raise and spend millions in the course of a campaign. Yet outside of campaign years, neither they nor anyone else spend a dime, if that, to get voters engaged in local elections or to get them to pay attention to what our officials in City Hall are doing. Local TV coverage is slim, usually focusing on Election Day itself, and the once-vibrant local section of the Los Angeles Times is dwindling. In addition, large district sizes and poor outreach on the part of our elected officials means it becomes embarrassingly easy to not know what’s going on in our city, and most people are pretty sure that whatever is going on doesn’t affect them all that much.

So for the 80 percent of you out there who don’t think city elections matter, let me bring you up to speed. Los Angeles is heading for a quake, and I don’t mean an earthquake. Los Angeles faces upwards of a $400 million budget shortfall, an unemployment rate over 10 percent, a failing public school system, decrepit roads and rising homeless numbers. Last year the city raised our phone and trash taxes, and just recently the DWP doubled our water and power bills, our meter prices and parking tickets nearly doubled, and we still don’t have enough public transportation. These are a few of the critical issues our 15 City Council members and mayor need to work on. These aren’t secrets that we can pretend don’t apply to us. They will affect all of our lives and our wallets. Do we really want these decisions to be made by people who are only accountable to so few Angelenos?

To read the rest of this story, go HERE.

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