Santa Ana Recall: Union Power at Stake
A friend who lives in Santa Ana, California, wrote to me objecting to my Aug. 29 Epoch Times article, “Voters to Decide Extent of Union Dominance in Santa Ana.” The issue is whether to recall Councilmember Jessie Lopez.
In article, I quoted a Voice of OC report from June, “The recall threats come after [Councilmember Thai Phan] and Ms. Lopez supported a December labor contract that went against the police union’s pay-raise proposals.” Ms. Phan is no longer facing a potential recall.
My friend wrote my article “was not accurate regarding Jessie Lopez. If you would have read about her background to see that she is truly a far-left leaning Democrat. She wants to BAN a 30-year ruling that is on the books for street racing and ‘take overs’ in intersections. No, John, this is a woman who wanted to defund our Santa Ana Police entirely. These ideological and left-leaning concepts that Ms. Lopez holds are a Marxist viewpoint to further the decline of our Santa Ana community, in my opinion.”
In my article, I mentioned my experience seeing how the unions mercilessly smeared state Sen. John Moorlach when I worked for him and his reelections. My friend also wrote, “Furthermore, I certainly would not lump Ms. Lopez in with John Moorlach and the issues he went through. She represents Ward 3. We got over 5,700 signatures that wanted her to be replaced. She is a radical! Please know that we are in a mess with Santa Ana politics with the likes of Ms. Lopez. This is an opportunity to find a more moderate Councilmember.
“We are hopeful for her to be defeated. She does not stand for anything that is favorable to Santa Ana, except radical far-left-wing ideas. Do you want to lift a 30 year ban on street racing and allow this to happen where you reside? She has the Cannabis dollars to promote her left agenda. You may get what you want—a total hard lefty.
“However, what a mess if we have to have her continue on Santa Ana City Council. The unions and Santa Ana Police Department have enough hostility toward them, not a council member.”
I also mentioned the March primary was just four months after the recall. My friend wrote, “Glad they did not wait until the 2024 elections! Please remove Jessie Lopez. She is harmful to Santa Ana Neighborhoods. She is for radical rent control laws. Not good for landlords.”
Indeed, in my original article I wrote how Ms. Lopez’s positions on rent control and other policies were not good for the city.
My Response: Union Power Rules
Here’s my response to my friend’s excellent points, expanded for this article.
In the end, this is about union power, specifically police union power. There is no worse kind. After my Aug. 29 article came out, on Aug. 30 the Voice of OC published another article, “Orange County’s Police Unions Are Increasingly Electing, Unseating Their Own Bosses.” The title is similar to one I have been using for about 35 years, and might even have invented, “The unions want to sit on both sides of the bargaining table.”
The Voice of OC article began, “It’s the story that replays itself every few years.
“Police unions are becoming the biggest spenders in Orange County’s municipal and county elections.
“Some local leaders from both political parties fear it’s creating an environment where police have the power to elect—or unseat—the very people they’re supposed to answer to.
With Anaheim’s police union entangled in a City Hall corruption scandal—and Santa Ana’s spending $371,000 in hopes of successfully recalling a City Council member over police salaries for the second time in three years—police union politics are out on full display this year like never before.
“And in Anaheim’s case, under city investigators’ focus.
“A July 31 report by independent investigators—hired by the City of Anaheim in response to an ongoing FBI corruption probe into City Hall—alleged that a powerful network of Disneyland resort interests improperly controlled city policymaking from the shadows.
“City-hired investigators—themselves former police officials—tied the police union to forces improperly exerting influence at city hall. Investigators highlighted police union efforts opposing a gas station approval that would have competed with one owned by a political fundraiser for disgraced former mayor Harry Sidhu.”
Admission of Union Power
Union bosses even boast of this. In 2021, Alex Caputo-Pearl, formerly the vice president of the United Teachers of Los Angeles, said to a meeting of his union, “We have a unique power—we elect our bosses. It would be difficult to think of workers anywhere else who elect their bosses. We do. We must take advantage of it. … If we win, they will decide how the hundreds of millions of dollars in additional money is used. They will be across the bargaining table from us in our huge full contract negotiations in 2022.”
Mr. Caputo-Pearl on July 1 was appointed practitioner-in-residence at the UC Berkeley Labor Center. The website said, “He will build on the Leadership Development Program’s partnerships with the NEA, United Teachers Los Angeles (UTLA), and other educator unions.” That means he will be teaching the next generation of union officials how to “elect our own bosses.”
Regular Elections
Recalls are supposed to be for extraordinary purposes, not recalling someone just four months before a regular election. The union is acting now as a display of pure political clout. They want to show, clearly, in a single up-or-down vote, who is running the city: the people or the unions. Special elections like this one also have much lower turnouts than primary elections, meaning the union campaign cash, derived ultimately from the taxpayers, more likely will decide the issue. By contrast, next March’s primary election will feature contentious presidential elections for both Democrats and Republicans.
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