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Antonio Villaraigosa Will Always Be A Rising Star In The Eyes Of The National Media

Categories: Politics
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Still rising
For some reason, the national media never tires of writing about L.A.'s own "rising star," Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa.

There were a bunch of stories in that vein when Villaraigosa chaired the Democratic National Convention. And even though he turned in an unsteady, deer-in-the-headlights performance during a contentious floor vote, that hasn't stopped his star from rising in the eyes of the D.C. press.

The latest example is this story in Politico, which is full of the usual speculation about the mayor being appointed to the Obama cabinet.

In the story, Villaraigosa -- who, at 59, is a bit old to be a "rising star" -- is forced to do the usual humble thing about "finishing the job" as mayor.

"It's always nice to be talked about, but my only focus right now is finishing my job. And I want to finish it strong," he told Politico. "The best way to ensure a bright future is to make sure you're doing your job that you have now."

Yeah, about that. Where was Villaraigosa in the days leading up to the election, when Measure J -- his countywide transit tax extension -- hung in the balance? Florida.

And where was he on election night, when Measure J supporters gathered at Dodger Stadium to watch the tax go down to a narrow defeat? Chicago.

And where was he yesterday, while Richard Riordan runs around warning of imminent bankruptcy? Washington. (By the way, shouldn't Villaraigosa be challenging Riordan to a pension debate, instead of leaving it to the L.A. Police Protective League?)

Bottom line: While his mouth says one thing, his frequent flier miles say another.

Second, perhaps this remains an interesting story for the national media because Villaraigosa seems like a charismatic, exciting figure when you first encounter him. We remember his 2001 campaign -- the hope, the change, the threads of L.A. weaving together into an uplifting poly-ethnic tapestry.

But trust us, Politico, that stuff wears off fast. Pretty soon, you wind up with a thin-skinned opportunist who can barely remember his bromide-and-jargon-laden talking points whenever he's forced to give an extemporaneous talk.

None of that, of course, disqualifies him from serving as Secretary of Transportation. He might do an OK job, assuming he's got some staff who can tend to the details. (Governor is another matter, but Jerry Brown seems not to be going anywhere.) But forgive us if we can't get on board with the idea of Villaraigosa as the fresh face of a new America. 

Been there, done that, ready for something else.
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7 comments
RockLobster
RockLobster

If the LA Times ever had commentary like this, people might actually buy it instead of looking at loose copies on coffee house tables. 

 

Tony V has done irreversible damage.  But he's idolized by media and people who don't know that welfare is not a lifestyle, debt  has to be paid back, and union make-work projects kill cities eventually.   The same people that fluttered over self-absorbed lightweight John Lindsay, who "TV'd"  NY by adding a million people to its welfare rolls, running its debt to unpayable limits, and running businesses out of town.  Wow, what progressive policies!  We can only hope that TV goes out of state to add to someone else's debt.

 

To TV's limited credit, too late, he pushed back against LAUSD, and although not hard enough. He seems to have grasped that debt defaults are not good or progressive--at least not on his watch--and has pulled away from the "spend more" crowd.

 

I wonder: if someone not in the Union's pockets ran are there enough responsible people left to elect him? Or is the city going to fall on its debt  so hard, and so full of dependents now, that he'd be seen as a disruption? Oh wait...Caruso's decision not to run already answered that question.

 

 

briansays
briansays

his chance comes from being anyone but kamala or gavin

Sinecure
Sinecure

Good riddance Tony.  And take all your numb skulled, texting bimbos from the 13th floor with you.  I can't tell you how may times I've had to dodge a Mayor staffer as she was walking and texting at the same time.  

-paulc-
-paulc- topcommenter

Villa retardo checked out long time ago.  The backlash of him coming to the national stage will be very humbling for him.  Failing the bar 4 times, cheating, not using his real name, etc.  This guy is bad for latinos as a whole

tommydagun
tommydagun

Yeah... I think DC's female reporters are a little old for Tony Villar.  And there's nobody in DC to comp Lakers tickets.

remorseful
remorseful

On July 1, 2013 Antonio will fade into  the sunset. Politics will be over forever for him. We now know the real Antonio. An empty suit!

harrymurkin
harrymurkin

He really needs to  go away ...........ugh , he bugs! 

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