Thu. Nov 21st, 2024
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Los Angeles City Councilmember Marqueece Harris-Dawson won his bid for the council’s top leadership post on Tuesday, saying he intends to use the presidency to focus heavily on homelessness.

The council voted 14-0 to select Harris-Dawson to replace Paul Krekorian, who has held the position since October 2022, following the audio leak scandal that spurred the resignation of Council President Nury Martinez.

Harris-Dawson, 54, is slated to take over the presidency on Sept. 20. After Tuesday’s vote, he said homelessness would be the council’s “number one, two and three” issues under his leadership.

“There’s no issue more important than the tens of thousands of people sleeping in the street every night, so we need to zero in on that as much as possible,” he said. “I don’t think there any other business that supersedes that for the council.”

Krekorian, who must leave city office at the end of the year due to term limits, is set to continue as president for the next four months. Councilmember Monica Rodriguez was absent from Tuesday’s vote.

Harris-Dawson, first elected in 2015, represents a South Los Angeles district that includes all or a portion of Baldwin Hills, Hyde Park, Park Mesa Heights and several other neighborhoods.

As president, he will have the power to determine the makeup of council committees dealing with public safety, homelessness, the city budget and many other high-profile issues. A close ally of Mayor Karen Bass, he will likely set the tone for the council’s relationship with the mayor, who has been focused on moving unhoused Angelenos into hotels, motels and other types of temporary housing.

Harris-Dawson told The Times earlier this month that he had spoken with each of his colleagues about what they want in a president. On Tuesday, while fielding questions from reporters, he declined to say whether he had asked Councilmember Kevin de León, a major figure in the 2022 audio scandal, to support his bid for the leadership post.

“I’m happy that it was a unanimous vote,” Harris-Dawson said.

Harris-Dawson had sought De León’s resignation nearly two years ago, after The Times reported that De León, Martinez, then-Councilmember Gil Cedillo and a high-profile labor leader took part in a secretly recorded conversation that featured racist and derogatory remarks. De León has issued multiple apologies since then, saying he is sorry for what he did and did not say during the recorded meeting.

De León voted for Harris-Dawson on Tuesday. In an interview before the vote, he said Harris-Dawson had spoken with him about the presidency — and did seek his support.

“I think we had a good discussion on a whole variety of issues that impact the city,” De León said.

Harris-Dawson will take over the council’s leadership post in a year when city leaders have been working to erase a major budget shortfall. Last week, council members voted to eliminate about 1,700 vacant positions in an effort to rein in spending.

City leaders also have begun preparations for the 2028 Olympic Games. In the coming months, the council will decide whether to push ahead with an expensive modernization of the city’s Convention Center in the run-up to the Games.

Harris-Dawson told his colleagues that he will have more to say about his plans once he has assumed his post.

“Until September, expect to see me with my head down, studying as hard as we can so we can be as prepared as possible when we take leadership of this council,” he said.

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