Advertisement

Exit Poll Indicates Tight Race, Divided Electorate

Share
TIMES STAFF WRITERS

Forecasting a tight runoff election in June, a Los Angeles Times exit poll reveals deep ideological, economic and racial divisions among voters who on Tuesday selected Michael Woo and Richard Riordan as finalists in the mayor’s race.

Woo received only 13% of the white vote, compared to 45% for Riordan. The disparity is significant because whites cast more than two-thirds of the ballots in Tuesday’s primary election--even though the city’s voting-age population is 58% nonwhite.

Blacks made up the second biggest ethnic voting bloc Tuesday, accounting for 18% of the vote. Fifty-two percent of African-American voters favored Woo, compared to just 4% for Riordan.

Advertisement

Latinos--who make up 40% of the city’s population--constituted only 8% of the electorate Tuesday, The Times exit poll found. Woo did best among Latinos, with 30%, while Riordan received 20% of the their votes.

Woo took 60% of the Asian-American vote, which represented only 4% of the ballots cast in the primary; Riordan garnered 21%.

Liberals and conservatives turned out in equal numbers for the primary--which attracted a record 24 candidates seeking to succeed Mayor Tom Bradley. With no other strong right-of-center alternative in the race, Riordan took 65% of the conservative vote. Woo--who had to split the liberal vote with several left-of-center rivals--received 37% of the liberal vote.

The exit poll data portends an unusually divisive general election June 8.

“It says we have a pretty polarized city,” said Larry Berg, director of the Unruh Institute of Politics at USC. “Boy, it’s gonna be a knock-down drag out.”

Overall, the exit poll--the first of its kind to examine the Los Angeles electorate in a mayor’s race--tended to confirm earlier analyses of where Riordan and Woo are getting their support.

Riordan was preferred by conservatives, Republicans, Anglos, homeowners and the affluent. Woo, on the other hand, drew his base from African-Americans, Asian-Americans, gays, liberals, renters and those with lower incomes.

Advertisement

The exit poll indicated that the runoff could be extremely close. The survey showed that Riordan--who bested Woo 33% to 24% among primary voters--is the runoff choice of 43% of those who voted Tuesday, whereas Woo is preferred by 37%. Riordan’s lead is slight, given the poll’s three-point error margin.

The poll indicates that 33% of those who backed candidates other than Woo and Riordan in the primary would go with Woo in the runoff; 21% would opt for Riordan. But 46% said they would choose someone else or not vote at all.

The survey of 2,816 voters suggests that the campaigns probably will battle each other for support from Jews, political moderates, younger white voters, white Democrats and Latinos, among others. Union households and voters having $20,000 to $40,000 annual incomes also look to be prime targets for either campaign, said John Brennan, director of The Times Poll.

Many of those groups tended to cast their votes in the primary for candidates other than Riordan and Woo. They also are divided in their runoff preferences, the poll found.

Just 14% of Jewish voters backed Woo in the primary, less than the 21% who went with Riordan.

The poll--and a city analysis released Wednesday that broke down the vote by City Council district--indicate the low turnout, 25% of registered voters, worked against Woo and for Riordan, with the latter’s base more likely to vote.

Advertisement

“One of the keys to Riordan’s strong showing was a low turnout, which produced an electorate skewed to high-income Anglo conservative Republican voters,” Brennan said.

“Woo appears to have a double challenge: to expand his appeal among the swing constituencies and to get more of his voters to the polls.”

Riordan carried Westside and San Fernando Valley districts where the ballots cast Tuesday were up to five times the totals cast in the inner-city districts where Woo led.

For example, 53,010 votes were cast in Councilman Zev Yaroslavsky’s heavily Jewish 5th District--stretching from Fairfax to the Valley--but just 13,791 votes were cast in the overwhelmingly minority Central and South-Central district of Councilwoman Rita Walters, where Woo led.

On the Westside, a territory rich with the liberal Democrats and environmentalists that Woo has courted heavily, Riordan did surprisingly well. In Councilwoman Ruth Galanter’s coastal 6th District, Riordan led the pack, with 14,291 votes--one-third more than Woo. Riordan handily carried Yaroslavsky’s district with 15,807 votes, 60% more than Woo.

City Councilman Joel Wachs finished ahead of Woo in Yaroslavsky’s district, and both Wachs and Assemblyman Richard Katz ran ahead of Woo across the Valley.

Advertisement

That may give Riordan room to stretch his base.

“If you look at where Joel did well, it’s areas where Riordan thinks he can pick up votes,” said political consultant Harvey Englander, who advised the Wachs campaign.

Riordan also showed strength in mid-city areas, leading in Councilman John Ferraro’s Hollywood Hills district and running a respectable second, just 1,500 votes behind Woo, in Councilman Richard Alatorre’s Eastside district.

In their battle for all groups, Woo and Riordan can be expected to talk about the same issues: jobs, crime and education. Those topics ranked uppermost in the minds of voters surveyed in Tuesday’s election, regardless of race, income or ideology.

Times staff writer Faye Fiore contributed to this story.

THE TIMES POLL: How They Voted

The following chart shows the demographic profile of those who voted in Tuesday’s city election. It also shows how each group voted in the primary and their preferences in a runoff.

EACH LINE SHOWS % OF VOTERS IN EACH GROUP WHO VOTED FOR: % OF ALL VOTERS RIORDAN WOO WACHS KATZ GRIEGO WHO ARE GENDER 49% Male 38% 23% 11% 10% 5% 51% Female 31% 24% 12% 9% 10% RACE/ETHNICITY 68% Anglo 45% 13% 14% 12% 7% 18% Black 4% 52% 3% 2% 7% 8% Latino 20% 30% 11% 8% 12% 4% Asian 21% 60% 5% 6% 4% AGE 11% 18-29 25% 30% 5% 11% 8% 40% 30-49 32% 26% 9% 10% 9% 24% 50-64 38% 21% 14% 8% 7% 25% 65 and up 37% 20% 15% 11% 5% IDEOLOGY 29% Liberal 8% 37% 13% 13% 12% 42% Moderate 31% 23% 13% 12% 7% 29% Conservative 65% 9% 7% 5% 3% 16% Anglo liberal 11% 30% 17% 17% 14% 24% Anglo moderate 42% 11% 17% 15% 7% 19% Anglo conservative 78% 2% 6% 5% 2% PARTY 62% Democrat 15% 33% 15% 11% 10% 5% Independent 39% 20% 5% 14% 8% 32% Republican 71% 6% 6% 7% 3% INCOME 17% Under $20,000 17% 33% 10% 7% 7% 25% $20,000-$39,999 26% 30% 11% 10% 9% 24% $40,000-$59,999 36% 21% 15% 10% 7% 34% $60,000 or more 46% 17% 10% 12% 7% RELIGION 41% Protestant 39% 24% 7% 6% 7% 23% Roman Catholic 44% 21% 10% 8% 7% 16% Jewish 21% 14% 27% 25% 7% 22% Anglo Protestant 56% 10% 10% 9% 6% 13% Anglo Catholic 61% 12% 10% 8% 4% RESIDENCE 64% Homeowner 41% 18% 11% 11% 7% 33% Renter 19% 34% 11% 7% 8% UNION MEMBERSHIP** 32% Yes 31% 25% 10% 10% 9% 68% No 36% 22% 12% 10% 7% SEXUAL ORIENTATION 5% Gay 11% 36% 25% 8% 10% GEOGRAPHIC LOCATION 16% Westside 39% 24% 9% 7% 12% 43% S.F. Valley 42% 12% 15% 16% 6% 20% Central L.A. 27% 30% 11% 7% 9% 21% South L.A. 15% 45% 5% 2% 5%

PROP. 1 % OF ALL VOTERS YES NO WHO ARE GENDER 49% Male 57% 43% 51% Female 60% 40% RACE/ETHNICITY 68% Anglo 56% 44% 18% Black 68% 32% 8% Latino 60% 40% 4% Asian 59% 41% AGE 11% 18-29 66% 34% 40% 30-49 60% 40% 24% 50-64 54% 46% 25% 65 and up 58% 42% IDEOLOGY 29% Liberal 70% 30% 42% Moderate 61% 39% 29% Conservative 44% 56% 16% Anglo liberal 73% 27% 24% Anglo moderate 58% 42% 19% Anglo conservative 40% 60% PARTY 62% Democrat 65% 35% 5% Independent 45% 55% 32% Republican 49% 51% INCOME 17% Under $20,000 61% 39% 25% $20,000-$39,999 59% 41% 24% $40,000-$59,999 56% 44% 34% $60,000 or more 60% 40% RELIGION 41% Protestant 56% 44% 23% Roman Catholic 56% 44% 16% Jewish 73% 27% 22% Anglo Protestant 48% 52% 13% Anglo Catholic 54% 46% RESIDENCE 64% Homeowner 53% 47% 33% Renter 70% 30% UNION MEMBERSHIP** 32% Yes 59% 41% 68% No 58% 42% SEXUAL ORIENTATION 5% Gay 70% 30% GEOGRAPHIC LOCATION 16% Westside 67% 33% 43% S.F. Valley 52% 48% 20% Central L.A. 63% 37% 21% South L.A. 61% 39%

Advertisement

RUNOFF CHOICE* % OF ALL VOTERS RIORDAN WOO WHO ARE GENDER 49% Male 46% 36% 51% Female 40% 38% RACE/ETHNICITY 68% Anglo 55% 26% 18% Black 6% 69% 8% Latino 27% 49% 4% Asian 27% 65% AGE 11% 18-29 30% 47% 40% 30-49 42% 40% 24% 50-64 48% 35% 25% 65 and up 46% 30% IDEOLOGY 29% Liberal 14% 62% 42% Moderate 43% 36% 29% Conservative 74% 13% 16% Anglo liberal 19% 59% 24% Anglo moderate 56% 22% 19% Anglo conservative 87% 4% PARTY 62% Democrat 23% 53% 5% Independent 50% 23% 32% Republican 81% 9% INCOME 17% Under $20,000 23% 43% 25% $20,000-$39,999 35% 45% 24% $40,000-$59,999 47% 34% 34% $60,000 or more 56% 31% RELIGION 41% Protestant 47% 35% 23% Roman Catholic 50% 30% 16% Jewish 38% 37% 22% Anglo Protestant 66% 18% 13% Anglo Catholic 67% 16% RESIDENCE 64% Homeowner 53% 30% 33% Renter 24% 52% UNION MEMBERSHIP** 32% Yes 38% 41% 68% No 45% 35% SEXUAL ORIENTATION 5% Gay 17% 65% GEOGRAPHIC LOCATION 16% Westside 48% 37% 43% S.F. Valley 54% 24% 20% Central L.A. 33% 46% 21% South L.A. 21% 60%

NOTE: Percentages for top five mayoral candidates are shown.

*Runoff percentages do not add to 100% because “someone else” and “won’t vote” responses are not shown.

**Indicates whether anyone in household belongs to a union.

SOURCE: L.A. Times exit poll taken April 20. The margin of error is plus or minus 3 percentage points; subgroups may be somewhat higher.

How The Poll Was Conducted

The Times Poll interviewed 2,816 voters as they exited 50 polling places across the city of Los Angeles during voting hours. Precincts were chosen based on the pattern of turnout in past municipal elections. The survey was self-administered and confidential. The margin of sampling error for percentages based on the entire sample is plus or minus 3 percentage points. For some subgroups the error margin may be somewhat higher. Because the survey does not include absentee voters nor those who declined to participate when approached, actual voter returns and demographic estimates by the interviewers were used to adjust the sample slightly.

Advertisement