High-profile scandals lead to high-profile local reforms in California

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When Ben Flores went to the polls in Los Angeles last month, it wasn’t the presidential election that had him fired up. He was drawn by a city charter amendment that would create an independent commission for determining new city council districts.

The 27-year-old freelance copy editor is among millions of Californians who responded to years of high-profile ethics scandals here by ushering in policies promising greater transparency and accountability – and turning out some officials tainted with suspicion.

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Fed up with high-profile scandals, California voters chose greater transparency and accountability in local elections.

A crescendo of mistrust at the local level made the moment ripe for ethics reforms throughout the Golden State, and especially in LA, where a slate of measures will overhaul local government. And across the United States, the mood was apparent: Lawmakers in 34 states introduced 146 ethics bills to state legislatures.

“In general, there’s a feeling that politics is a game for moneyed interest and politics is about pay to play,” says Jessica Levinson, director of Loyola Law School’s Public Service Institute. Add to that these examples of “politicians behaving badly, and you have a perfect ingredient for voters to be in a reform state of mind.”

When Ben Flores went to the polls in Los Angeles last month, it wasn’t the presidential election that had him fired up. He was drawn by a city charter amendment that would create an independent commission for determining new city council districts.

“It just doesn’t make sense that the people who are making policy are also the ones who are, like, establishing their own districts,” says the 27-year-old copy editor. “I think independent redistricting like that makes a lot of sense.”

Mr. Flores is among millions of Californians who responded to years of ethics scandals in the state by ushering in policies promising greater transparency and accountability – and turning out some officials tainted with suspicion.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Fed up with high-profile scandals, California voters chose greater transparency and accountability in local elections.

Polls show Americans overwhelmingly believe large donors have too much influence on government – although a majority voted for a president with well-documented ethics breaches. But a crescendo of mistrust at the local level made the moment ripe for ethics reforms throughout the Golden State, and especially in Los Angeles, where a slate of measures will overhaul local government.

“In general, there’s a feeling that politics is a game for moneyed interest and politics is about pay to play,” says Jessica Levinson, director of Loyola Law School’s Public Service Institute. Add to that these examples of “politicians behaving badly, and you have a perfect ingredient for voters to be in a reform state of mind.”

Grabbing “ahold of the wheel”

California has had a run of recent high-profile scandals. In the Bay Area, voters recalled two top officials caught up in ethics probes: Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao and Alameda County District Attorney Pamela Price. Both were swept up in an FBI investigation of influence-peddling. The cloud of scandal added to deep frustrations with their progressive policies on crime.

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