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DWP Raises Your Utility Rates Then Raises Big Money for Greuel, Says James

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The speedily blossoming personalized duel between Los Angeles mayoralty candidates Kevin James and Wendy Greuel sharpened today when he responded to a story in this morning’s Los Angeles Times reporting the City Controller’s new Super PAC.

Curiously, however, the term “Super PAC,” heretofore liberally used, especially to characterize Republican campaigns, and Mr. James is a Republican, was not employed in the Greuel story. 

Mr. James’s response to the story: 

“In September 2012, the Dept. of Water and Power raised your utility rates by 11.1 percent.

“The DWP union is now raising big political money to support Wendy Greuel for Mayor. 

“They’ve even hired Mayor Villaraigosa’s top political advisors to run it proving that Wendy Greuel is the ultimate insider’s choice. 

“Angelenos can expect more of the same if Wendy Greuel is elected.
 
“The Super PAC is made up of wealthy entertainment elites, the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 18, which represents Department of Water and Power (DWP) employees, and last but not least Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa’s campaign consultants Ace Smith and Sean Clegg.”

Ms. Greuel’s campaign has been swinging back at Mr. James for a week, since he exposed Ms. Greuel’s alleged ethical violations by using her staff to work on her campaign.

By Michael Finnegan and Maeve Reston, Los Angeles Times

January 15, 2013

Entertainment industry executives and labor unions — including one representing city utility workers — are joining forces to mount an independent TV ad campaign to promote the Los Angeles mayoral candidacy of City Controller Wendy Greuel, a top advisor to the group said Monday.

The group, Working Californians, has hired two of Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa's former campaign consultants, Ace Smith and Sean Clegg, to run the campaign, according to Clegg, a former deputy mayor.
If the group succeeds in raising a substantial sum of money, it could play a significant role in the fiercely competitive March 5t mayoral primary.

Greuel's leading rivals are City Council members Eric Garcetti and Jan Perry, and Kevin James, an entertainment lawyer and former talk-radio personality.

Greuel, a former government relations executive at the DreamWorks movie studio, has drawn strong financial support from the entertainment industry. Company co-founders Jeffrey Katzenberg, Steven Spielberg and David Geffen are three of the Democratic Party's top donors and fundraisers in Hollywood.
Greuel has raised $3.5 million, just shy of the $3.6 million collected by Garcetti. But even with matching funds provided by the city, that will be too little to buy more than a few weeks of saturation TV advertising in the city's expensive media market. Donations to mayoral candidates are capped at $1,300, but independent committees like Working Californians are not subject to those limits.

Clegg said the group's labor supporters include the powerful International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 18, which represents more than 8,600 Department of Water and Power employees. “We're looking at a significant campaign,” Clegg said. Brian D'Arcy, the business manager of IBEW Local 18, did not return calls for comment.

Working Californians said in a statement that it hired Clegg and Smith to run a campaign to elect officials “with the leadership, strength and courage to rebuild L.A.'s struggling economy.” The group will support Greuel for mayor, City Councilman Dennis Zine for controller and four candidates for City Council.

D'Arcy and his union-affiliated groups have helped Greuel and other city candidates in the past. An IBEW-related group was a major player in Greuel's 2009 race for controller, spending $112,490 on mailings supporting her, according to city ethics filings. In 2008, Working Californians, with D'Arcy as its co-chairman, pushed a ballot measure backed by Villaraigosa that would have installed 100,000 rooftop solar panels on buildings across the city. Greuel was among those who argued for it, but voters rejected the measure. The consulting firm headed by Smith and Clegg played a leading role in electing Villaraigosa, San Francisco Mayor Edwin Lee and Gov. Jerry Brown.