I don’t really have a horse in the possibly upcoming race between Miguel Pulido and David Benavides for Santa Ana Mayor. [Note: spelling of “Benavides” corrected. Thanks to Art Pedroza for catching it.] I’d be glad to see a race of any kind. With uncompetitive Congressional and Assembly races, it might be the only thing that can stir Santanans to come out and vote — hopefully armed by both campaigns with instructions to also vote Yes on 30 and No on 32. So I welcome the news of a serious challenger.
Benavides and Pulido are both, in different ways, too conservative for my taste (which would probably please both of them.) Benevides hasn’t been publicly preparing for this; were I of a conspiratorial bent, I would suspect that he may simply be in the race to keep Claudia Alvarez from jumping in by splitting the anti-Pulido vote with her. (If I were hyper-conspiratorial, I’d wonder if Sal Tinajero, who reportedly also took out papers on Monday but did not have a press release and the rest of the trimmings, may be considering running to split the vote and prevent Benavides from winning — something that we may have to start calling a “Martinez maneuver.”
I know that Benavides is a probable longshot, especially given his political alliance with disgraced Republican Carlos Bustamante. It’s tempting to dismiss his chances summarily. But just to play out the scenario, I can think of one sentence that Benavides could utter that might actually give him a fighting chance in November:
“I pledge not to run for re-election in 2014.”
That, potentially, could upend the game. (Benavides could run for re-election to his Council post that year, or for some other office — maybe SD-34, where if he lost in the primary he could still run for Council? — or he’s young enough that he could bide his time. See my suggestion below.) What it does do, though, is get the jackals salivating. If Benavides served just a single term — not ruling out running again in 2016 but pledging not to run in 2014 — it would mean an open seat in 2014. How many people would be interested in that? Pulido might well run again as well, but then he’d run saddled with his having lost the seat in 2012, along with the losing patina of invincibility that he has long enjoyed.
What’s the point of serving for one term? He could fumigate the place. He could direct teams of staff (chosen to include people from factions that don’t like each other) to go through all of the filing cabinets and closets, and the locked computer files and ledger books, and direct the Audit to End All Audits to get a sense of just how Santa Ana has been run for the past couple of decades.
People have told me since I first alighted at the Drinking Liberally table in early 2007 that Pulido was hopelessly corrupt, but I don’t actually know that he is. People seem to say that about almost everyone in Orange County politics, perhaps in part to blunt the impact of such charges if ever made against them, and there were some people at that table whose dedication to the impartial truth I’ve since come to question. So I come to no firm conclusions about how Pulido has run the city since first becoming its first Latino Mayor in 1994. I’d like to think that he’s run it honestly and well, not for his personal enrichment. But — I’d also like to, you know, know.
I don’t think that I (or anyone outside of the inner reaches of City Hall) will ever really know what the past 18 years of Santa Ana City Government have been like while Miguel Pulido remains Mayor. This doesn’t say anything sinister about him; it just means that people working in City Hall who actually know what’s going on seem to keep their mouths shut and discourage poking around. (I don’t know this from personal experience, but I have heard it often.) Maybe Santa Ana City Government is actually as transparent as it possibly could be — I really can’t say.
But maybe it isn’t. A lot of people might show up in anonymous comments and assume us all that it is corrupt — or that it isn’t corrupt — and I don’t believe either of them without further proof. But I do know that there’s a sense afoot that all is not right — and that that creates problems for trust in government whether it’s true or not.
One solution, therefore, is to send Pulido on a two-year vacation and give the city a checkup. Benavides is actually well-placed to do this. Maybe I’m out of the loop, but while I hear people slam his decision-making sometimes — he alone on the Council has not yet called for Bustamante to resign — my sense is that there’s a general respect for his intelligence and honesty. (Those of you who might be snorting at that, the comments section is just below. Say what you think you must.) He might be a good choice to shake the dirt loose from the city so we can see what’s underneath. I don’t think he’d do too much damage, either, in two years — Lord knows he’d be watched carefully enough.
But that “I won’t run two years from now” provision is key. If his fellow Council members, or other ambitious figures, think that he is trying to climb out of the crab pot and set himself up as the long-term successor to Pulido, they will pull him back into the pot and he’s going to lose. (You can already go to Art Pedroza’s blog and see the sharpened knives in action against him.) But there’s another model of public service to employ, that of Cincinattus.
Cincinnatus, after whom the Ohio city of Cleveland was named (joke!), was an aristocratic hero of early Rome. He suffered a political setback when his son was convicted of a capital crime, whereupon he retired to his modest farm. Rome was invaded and its leaders called him in to serve as its dictator. Once he had defeated the rival tribes, he resigned his office and returned to his plow.
As Wikipedia puts is (so you know it must be true), “his immediate resignation of his absolute authority with the end of the crisis has often been cited as an example of outstanding leadership, service to the greater good, civic virtue, lack of personal ambition and modesty.”
That certainly seems to be how the deeply religious (and evangelical) Benavides sees himself. He’s a lot younger than Cincinnatus was; he still has a political career ahead of him. If he implements reforms and transparency in one two-year term, he’d be seen as heroic; maybe he’d be well-placed for 2016, facing off against Pulido or whoever succeeded in him 2014. There would still be more or less on open seat in 2014 for which a lot of people have been waiting. If he wants to win, he just needs to be clear that he’s going to give others a fair shot at it too.
Chances are that he’s not going to beat Pulido anyway — but this strikes as his best chance to win and his best path to lose, if he does, with dignity and honor. Can he utter this fateful sentence — and, if he did so, would it matter? I’m fairly confident that we’ll see some opinions on these and other matters below.
I think that the plan is for Santa Ana to institute mayoral term limits through a referendum which the SA City Council will approve tomorrow at a special called council meeting. Pulido will run and win again this year. Those who plan to run for mayor in 2014 will run this year and therefore will have greater name recognition on the ballot in 2014.
Oh yeah .. forgot to mention that the term limits will be designed such that Pulido will be termed out in 2014.
And your political whimsies are quite humorous Greg.
Thanks, skally (sort of, I think.) I stand by my whimsy!
So you think that they’re going to cut the Mayoral position off at two consecutive decades? Makes some sense. I wonder if Pulido is going along with this special meeting’s plan? The vote will be very, very interesting. I wonder if Bustamante will show up this time.
The idea that everyone who wants to run runs this time for the exposure has some flaws, though. Tinajero and Benevides both have to run for re-election next year, as does Martinez, and all three can be re-elected to a third consecutive term in 2014. Sarmiento and whoever replaces Bustamante (who I presume will lose) and whoever replaces Alvarez are the ones who would have a free pass to run — as of course would Alvarez and others.
“I wonder if Pulido is going along with this special meeting’s plan? The vote will be very, very interesting. I wonder if Bustamante will show up this time.”
Interesting comment, with the need of 4 votes to move and the mayor maybe recusing himself, that would leave 6, and maybe the two councilmembers who pulled papers to run for the office of mayor, maybe recusing themselves, that leaves 4, if ward 3 councilmember is a no show, then only 3 remains and there be “no quorum” and there be no meeting. Also if less than 4 members show for the special meeting, no quorum no meeting.
I remember that happened with a special meeting some years back, only 3 of the 7 showed up.
You misspelled David’s last name.
Thanks — I will fix that throughout.
So is Tinajero actually running for certain — and did you know about it before hand? I noticed that in your Benavides-bashing column you said that you’d support Pulido over Benavides, but Tinajero over Pulido. One indicator I’d consider as to how seriously Sal is about this run is how strongly your blogs start bashing Pulido. If you don’t bash Pulido, Tinajero is obviously not making a serious run.
Pedroza just spent several months calling Julio Perez a “liberal union hack” and he’s made no bones about his views on unions in general.
Yet when Tinajero steps up, Pedroza writes that “Tinajero is also loyal to organized labor – so loyal that when his own union asked him to endorse Julio Perez for the 69th Assembly District, he did it.” There’s no criticism, no consistency, no objectivity. Suddenly, being a union guy on par with Perez doesn’t seem to matter…and as you point out, he apparently could support Tinajero over Pulido.
Can such a person really be taken seriously? Is EVERYTHING with this guy simply about supporting his flavor of the month, consistency of thought and belief be damned?
If ANY of these challengers is in the race at Pulido’s behest, then it just shows how pathetically fearful and paranoid Pulido’s become. And THAT is the kind of leader the good citizens of Santa Ana want?
If he’s such a shoe-in to win, as his supporters say, why even bother with shenanigans like this? It says a lot about the man.
anon,
Your questions should be answered in the outcome of the SA special council meeting today (Wed. 8/1/12) dealing with a possible change in the SA mayoral election regs.
You’ve read the Register story? http://www.ocregister.com/news/mayor-366521-council-elected.html
Sarmiento is on the ad hoc committee making the proposal. He usually seems like someone who knows exactly what he’s doing.
A four member city council voted unanimously to put to the voters a four term limit of 2 years each for the office of mayor.
Was Pulido there? That’s potentially up to eight years starting in 2012, i.e. through 2020, right? I guess that passing the 25-year mark must be of some sentimental value.