Race hustlers demand affirmative action democracy in SoCal.

Race hustlers are demanding affirmative action elections tailored to help non-white candidates defeat those pesky white incumbents. Apparently democracy is only working when the percentage of white elected officials is equal to or less than their percentage in a given area.


Retired engineer Jose Maldonado ran for the City Council in Montclair, where the Latino population is 70 percent of the total. He lost to two white incumbents in the 2010 contest.

As the entire state of California sinks into a socialist one party failed state, race hustlers are preparing law suits against the last all white political bodies in Southern California. Latino and Asian immigrants are pouring in and white and blacks are fleeing. However many city and county councils are still full of white incumbents who keep getting re-elected.

Race hustlers are demanding affirmative action elections tailored to help non-white candidates defeat those pesky white incumbents. Apparently democracy is only working when the percentage of white elected officials is equal to or less than their percentage in a given area.

The Sacramento Bee…

Particularly striking against this backdrop are the 14 cities in California where all-white councils preside over communities where either Latinos or Asians make up the majority of residents. Several are clustered in the Los Angeles area, like Whittier and Arcadia, but they range from Tulelake, on the Oregon border, to Holtville, near the Mexican border.

Another 20 cities have Latino majorities and only one minority on the city council.

“These are the cities that should recognize that they are low-hanging fruit for groups who might want to bring lawsuits,” said Paul Mitchell of Redistricting Partners, a Sacramento-based consulting firm that works with local governments to determine their vulnerability under the law.

California Watch was able to identify the 34 cities with data from Redistricting Partners and another consulting group, GrassrootsLab. But the cities represent one end of a spectrum. Numerous other communities, with smaller minority populations or more diversity on the city council, also could be subject to a suit under the California Voting Rights Act, which was signed by Gov. Gray Davis in 2002.

The law prohibits local governments from holding at-large elections – in which the entire community votes for a slate of candidates – if that system weakens the ability of minorities to elect candidates of their choice.

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Original source.


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