La Politics Remain in the Sandbox

Los Angeles is the nation's second largest city, but in political terms it's more like a kindergarten sandbox than a grown-up municipality.

Its mayor, Antonio Villaraigosa, was seen as a rising political star with national potential when he was elected eight years ago.

However, a series of tabloid-worthy exploits, unresolved budgetary crises and other negative factors appear to have short-circuited his political career.

A campaign is under way to choose Villaraigosa's successor, but the aspirants exhibit no vision for the troubled city and are busily trashing each other in hopes of surviving the first round of voting on March 5 and making it into the runoff.

The City Council has placed a half-cent sales tax hike on the same ballot, and the city's administrative officer warns that if it doesn't pass, mass layoffs, including hundreds of cops, may be the city's only option to close a budget deficit of more than $200 million.

But none of the candidates for mayor endorses the tax hike, while most back a cut in the city's business tax that would widen the deficit, and most of the council candidates are running away from it as well. Villaraigosa finally endorsed the new tax after weeks of indecision, but only tepidly.

The two leading candidates for mayor, the ones most likely to make it into the May runoff, appear to be city Controller Wendy Greuel and City Councilman Gil Garcetti.

Neither supports the sales tax hike, but neither offers any reasonable...

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