Despite her rivals raising more money and garnering more attention in Los Angeles' mayoral race, City Councilwoman Jan Perry said Saturday she should not be counted out.
“People focus on money as a measure of status, and if this was a race just about money, then you might as well hold it today and elect the one who has the most money. But I think this is not about that,” Perry told The Times. “It's about the democratic process and about empowering people and energizing them and getting them to turn out and whether or not you have a message and a record and whether or not you connect with people.”
Perry recalled her first run for office, and how the conventional wisdom was that she had no shot at success. “I basically just ignored them, OK, and I went on and did what I had to do. And today's emblematic of that,” she said, standing at a boisterous campaign rally in the parking lot of her campaign headquarters near USC.
Moments earlier, Perry had rallied supporters, danced to a youth band's cover of a Sly and the Family Stone song and snapped pictures with politicians, longtime backers and volunteers. The councilwoman and several high-profile endorsers, including Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Los Angeles) and Councilman Bernard C. Parks, urged the few hundred attendees to volunteer, donate, knock on neighbors' doors and phone their friends to get the word out about Perry's candidacy.
“I'm running for mayor because I think I'm strong enough and I'm tough enough to do what is right for Los Angeles, and I want you to join me,” Perry proclaimed.
Despite the optimistic tone of the rally, it was evident that many political observers are questioning her path forward.
“There are some people out there trying to say, ‘Oh, she can't win,'” former Councilwoman Ruth Galanter told the crowd. “And the answer to that is: Of course she can win. People vote for her, she gets enough votes, she wins.”
The race has been underway for more than a year, but now that the 2012 presidential election and the holidays have passed, the contest is shifting into high gear publicly. The election is in March, with a probable runoff in May.
Perry is among the top three contenders, with a long career in elected office and fundraising ability.
But Councilman Eric Garcetti and Controller Wendy Greuel have raised millions more than Perry. And their candidacies appear to have greater momentum: Last week, county Democrats knocked Perry out of contention for their endorsement by giving her only 8% of the vote. (The majority of their members backed Garcetti and Greuel, but the party did not endorse anyone because no candidate garnered 60% of the vote.)
Perry is banking on grass-roots supporters driving a surge at the polls. Many in the crowd said they were standing by Perry because of her longtime work on behalf of her constituents in downtown and South Los Angeles.
In 2007, Adela Barajas formed a nonprofit in South Los Angeles after her sister-in-law was slain in a drive-by shooting. When the founders reached out to five politicians for assistance, Perry was the only one to respond.
“She's been there for us. She comes to every event. She spends time with the community,” Barajas said. “She may be the underdog right now, but it doesn't mean she doesn't have an opportunity.”
By any political calculation, Perry must win the support of many black voters in order to win a spot in the runoff.
Greuel sought to tap into this voter base Saturday, opening an office in South Los Angeles and rolling out several high-profile African American endorsements.
Invoking the memory of the late Mayor Tom Bradley, with whom she worked for a decade, Greuel pledged to carry on the legacy of the city's first black mayor and to bring economic equity to struggling South L.A. neighborhoods.
Choking back tears, she described Bradley as the person “who taught me to fight for justice, who taught me that you should use your voice in a way that lets all boats rise, who taught me that you can be and should be a mayor for all of Los Angeles.”
Greuel campaign manager Rose Kapolczynski said the decision to locate the campaign's first field office in South Los Angeles was not an accident.
“Jan Perry has the natural support of African Americans,” she said. “We want to be their second choice.”
Kapolczynski said that if Perry does not make the runoff, black voters will choose Greuel.
Forescee Hogan-Rowles, who is part of the African Americans With Wendy group announced by the campaign, said Greuel won't have to work to make inroads in the black community. “She already has the roads in,” Hogan-Rowles said. “She has friendships here. She visits the churches when she's not campaigning, and she stays for the whole service.”
L.A.’S RACE FOR MAYOR
Jan Perry banks on grass-roots support in L.A. mayor race
Having raised less money than fellow candidates Wendy Greuel and Eric Garcetti, Perry hopes for a surge at the polls. Meanwhile, Greuel makes a play for African American voters.
Comments (7)
Add / View comments | Discussion FAQJan Perry is one of the dirties politicians in the race. Look how she screwed the South Central Farmers only to scratch the back of a greedy real estate developer in illegal closed door dealings.
I am voting for Kevin James for mayor, but do give credit to Jan Perry for being diligent in this campaign. She's still one of the three City Hall "Insiders" that are running for mayor yet both Greuel and Garcetti have a deeper level of being compromised and working for special interests, evidenced by the size of their campaign collections. (Perry's got a few enemies and Wesson's handlilng of the City Redistricting was not very well disguised retalliation against Perry and Parks for not voting for him as Council President- Oh, that Sacramento-learned style of political lethality that damaged the district's of each.)
You can see large donations being indications of the "investment" and continued "reward" for working for these sources. Look at the new PAC for Wendy- Brian D'Arcy, IBEW Local 18 leader and a big part of this. Wendy and Villaraigosa both supported by same proponents- should tell you something.
The "Insider"candidates are in this campaign, experiencing a "political makeover" that tries to erase so much of what the did and what they did NOT do. They were consistent pals to Antono Villaraigosa even though he was so removed from any first hand knowledge of the day-to-day situations in the city due to his absences for one trip or another, on his self-serving promotion or campaigning for others to get later favors- and maybe a job in D.C. They never opposed him.
Jan Perry has done so much for the communities of South LA and downtown. To dismiss all the work she's done in the past 12 years such as creating affordable housing, wetlands, senior homes.

