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OPINION

L.A. Mayor Garcetti Is a Presidential Contender

L.A. Mayor Garcetti Is a Presidential Contender
Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti delivers remarks during the U.S. Conference of Mayors 86th annual Winter Meeting at the Capitol Hilton January 25, 2018, in Washington, D.C. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

George Will By Saturday, 17 February 2018 08:00 PM EST Current | Bio | Archive

It was dicey being Jewish in a Russia that was tolerant of pogroms, and then came the threat of conscription into the 1904-05 Russo-Japanese War, so one of Mayor Eric Garcetti's great-grandfathers headed West to America. Another Garcetti great-grandfather married a Mexican woman who, fleeing revolutionary ferment there, headed north to America. Which is why Garcetti, a fourth-generation resident of the world's most polyglot city, is as American as a kosher burrito, a delicacy available at Mexikosher on Pico Boulevard.

Trim, natty — colorful socks are, alas, fashionable — and with the polish of one born to public attention (his father Gil was LA's district attorney who prosecuted O.J. Simpson), Garcetti, like dozens of Democrats who have noticed recent presidential history, is asking: Why not me?

Good question. Although presidents Andrew Johnson, Grover Cleveland and Calvin Coolidge had been mayors of Greeneville, Tennessee, Buffalo and Northampton, Massachusetts, respectively, no mayor has gone directly from a city hall to the White House. But the 44th president came from eight years in the nation's most docile and least admirable state legislature (Barack Obama effectively began running for president as soon as he escaped to Washington from Springfield, Illinois). The 45th came from six bankruptcies and an excruciating television show. So, it is not eccentric to think that a two-term mayor of one of the world's most complicated cities might be as qualified to be president as was, say, the governor of one of the 23 states (Arkansas) with a population smaller than this city's. And less challenging: LA's schools teach children whose parents speak Tagalog and 91 other languages.

Recent history does not suggest that America has such a surplus of presidential talent that it can afford to spurn an audition by a mayor who governs where over 40 percent of waterborne imports enter the country — through the LA and Long Beach ports. Where more than 50 percent of residents are immigrants or the children of immigrants. Where immigrants from more than 30 nations form those nations' largest overseas communities.

His immersion in immigration realities gives him standing to warn his party, which is addicted to identity politics, that "people do want a national identity." We are "not an ethnic nation but a civic nation," and Democrats must speak to "identity" rather than "identities." Also, he brings practicality to the ideological argument about "sanctuary cities": When a Korean immigrant who became a citizen and then an LA cop was shot, not fatally, witnesses and others in the neighborhood, many of them likely illegal immigrants, came forward with information that enabled the police to capture her assailant within hours. Such police-community cooperation is, Garcetti says, jeopardized when local police are viewed as closely allied with federal immigration enforcement.

Garcetti, 47, is a generation younger than some progressives' pinups (Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, Joe Biden). And living far from Washington, he is positioned to deplore the Beltway, within which his party has been concentrating power for a century. He suggests a rule for those who are perpetually enraged about the president: "You only get five minutes a day to yell at your TV." Democrats, he says, sometimes are "the smarty-pants party" that does not "speak plain English." He seems, however, to be tiptoeing on egg shells when trying to avoid offending his party's easily offended keepers of litmus tests. When, last September, an interviewer asked him if gun manufacturers should be liable for the misuse of their products, he said, "I think you have to be open to that." Such mush (should we be "open to" distillers' liability for drunken driving?) does not move nominating electorates.

New York's mayor (1933-1945) Fiorello La Guardia , a Republican in a Democratic city, famously said, "There is no Republican or Democratic way to pick up the garbage." And mayors have what Garcetti considers "the luxury of doing." But LA mayors are not powerful — the schools are run by others — and he must get along with the mayors of 87 other cities in LA county. This is, however, training for the presidency, which is less powerful than those who seek it think it is until, in office, they must deal with Washington's rival power centers.

California's presidential primary, which usually has been a June irrelevancy, will occur in March 2020. This might benefit Kamala Harris, the state's freshman U.S. senator, too. Anyway, Garcetti deserves a hearing. America could do worse, it usually does and in 33 months it probably will.


George F. Will is one of today's most recognized writers, with more than 450 newspapers, a Newsweek column, and his appearances as a political commentator on Fox news. Read more reports from George Will — Click Here Now.

© Washington Post Writers Group.


GeorgeWill
It was dicey being Jewish in a Russia that was tolerant of pogroms, and then came the threat of conscription into the 1904-05 Russo-Japanese War, so one of Mayor Eric Garcetti's great-grandfathers headed West to America.
garcetti, mayor, immigrants, presidential, washington, democrats, republican
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2018-00-17
Saturday, 17 February 2018 08:00 PM
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