Los Angeles Times - 24.02.2020

(Nandana) #1

CALIFORNIA


MONDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2020:: LATIMES.COM/CALIFORNIA


B


During a
third-grade
lesson on
Latino cul-
ture, my
teacher
assigned me
a Spanish
name: Fran-
cisco.
I never thought that
information would be of use
to anyone, so I’ve never
shared it. But Democratic
presidential candidate Amy
Klobuchar thought differ-
ently last week when she
proudly told a group of
workers from the Nevada
culinary union that, when

she was in the fourth grade,
“Me llamo Elena.”
In the video, the largely
Latino audience responded
with deafening silence.
Pundits and social media
posters quickly accused
Klobuchar of pandering to
Hispanics, or “Hispander-
ing.” It was the latest exam-
ple of what has become a
familiar political tradition
among people of color:
laughing at the cultural
blunders of presidential
candidates.
Over the years, candi-
dates’ attempts to reach
people of color have gifted
us with a long and hilarious
highlight reel of cultural

FORMER VICE PRESIDENTJoe Biden visits Koreatown’s Oaxacan culinary mainstay Guelaguetza in
December. To young nonwhite voters, such campaign stops can seem hackneyed and hollow.

Allen J. SchabenLos Angeles Times

These photo ops fall flat


Candidates think tacos and boba win nonwhite voters. Not exactly.


FRANK SHYONG

SEN.Amy Klobuchar, who touted her fourth-
grade “Spanish” name last week to Latinos in Ne-
vada, speaks at Jethro’s BBQ restaurant in Iowa.

Tom BrennerGetty Images

[SeeShyong,B6]

SACRAMENTO — Vot-
ers in California, like others
across the country, have
long assumed that only one
candidate can win an elec-
tion. And in most cases,
they’re right.
But most presidential
primaries work differently —
a fact obscured in years past
when the race was all but
over by the time Californians
cast ballots. On March 3, the
Democratic presidential
campaign will be far from
over and the arcane rules for
winning in the Golden State
will come into play.

There are 54 Democratic
primaries in California.
California will send 494
delegates to the Democratic
National Convention in Mil-
waukee this July. Most of
them — 271 delegates — will
represent one of the state’s
53 congressional districts.
In essence, the March 3
primary is made up of one
statewide election and 53
district-level elections. Can-
didates will be awarded dele-
gates based on how they do
in each of these contests,
and the remaining delegates
will be divided by the top
statewide vote-getters.
Not all of these 54 races
will award the same number
of delegates. The statewide
results decide who wins 90 of
California’s “at-large” con-
vention delegates, the single
largest subset, as well as 54
delegates representing
party leaders and elected of-

Not so


easy to


win the


state


On March 3, arcane


rules for California’s


presidential primary


will come into play.


By John Myers

[SeePrimary,B5]

Gov. Gavin
Newsom may
be piloting a
lifeboat that
will rescue the
sinking Cali-
fornia Delta. Or
he may be in
water over his
head on a doomed mission.
The governor gets angry
with skeptics who say he’s
being delusional. But his-
tory sides with the doubters.
“I love reading all that,
‘Hey, he’s naive. He’s being
misled,’ ” Newsom recently
told a forum sponsored by
the nonpartisan Public
Policy Institute of Cali-
fornia, his voice rising with a
touch of sarcasm.
“It means we’re doing
something a little different.”
No California water hole
has been fought over more
than the Sacramento-San
Joaquin River Delta. It’s
right up there with the
Owens Valley and the state’s
share of the Colorado River.
The delta supplies water
for 27 million people and
irrigates 3 million acres.
California’s economy de-
pends, in large part, on its
health.
But the delta’s ecology
has been declining, primari-
ly because water from rivers
has been diverted for agri-
culture before it reaches the
West Coast’s largest es-
tuary. And the water that
does make it there has been
overpumped through fish-
chomping monstrosities
into southbound aqueducts.
This has devastated
native fish — salmon,
steelhead, smelt — and
prompted courts to occa-
sionally tighten the spigots
on water pumped to San
Joaquin Valley farms and


CAPITOL JOURNAL


Newsom


chasing


a ‘white


whale’?


GEORGE SKELTON
in sacramento


[SeeSkelton,B4]

In 2002, daredevil “Mad
Mike” Hughes successfully
jumped a Lincoln Town Car
stretch limousine 103 feet at
the Perris Auto Speedway in
Riverside County.
The stunt landed him in
the Guinness World Records
for the longest limousine
ramp jump, beating a previ-
ous 75-foot jump Hughes
made in Las Vegas. He seri-
ously injured his back when
a mountain of car tires in-
tended to cushion his land-
ing separated, and he
crashed into a wall.
But Hughes was not de-
terred.
The next year, he tried for
a new record of 125 feet, cov-
ering his body in bubble
wrap and gunning his 3-ton
white Cadillac limousine up
a ramp at 65 mph at the Or-
ange Show Speedway in San
Bernardino. He flipped over
before reaching a cushion of
tires but was unhurt.
“Sometimes, I feel like
the cartoon character Wile
E. Coyote, when he suddenly


runs off a cliff,” Hughes told
The Times ahead of the
jump. “But it’s the price I pay
for a life that’s not boring.”
After years of close calls,
the 64-year-old Hughes met
his end Saturday when he
was killed during the launch
of a homemade rocket gone
awry outside Barstow. It’s
unclear what went wrong.
Dramatic video of the
botched stunt posted on so-
cial media appears to indi-
cate that there was a prob-
lem with his parachute.
“Like any daredevil, I
think they’re driven by a
sense of that need to do
something incredible but
also to risk their life,” said
Toby Brusseau, who di-
rected “Rocketman,” a 2019
documentary about
Hughes.
Hughes, originally from
Oklahoma City, started at-
tending car races with his fa-
ther at 2 months old and be-
gan racing motorcycles at
the age of 12, according to an
author biography for his
2007 self-published book,
“What Does A Limo Driver

“MAD MIKE” HUGHES’final flight. The daredevil
and self-taught engineer died Saturday in a crash.


Mercedes Blackehart

‘Rocketman’


pushed limits


By Alex Wigglesworth


[SeeDaredevil,B2]

Quarantine
plan is assailed
in Costa Mesa
Residents and
officials back a filing
for a restraining order
to block coronavirus
patients. B

Stay away from
Staples Center
Bryant fans should
avoid the area unless
they hold a ticket for
the service. B

Investigation in
bus crash grows
Federal agency sends
a team to San Diego
County to scrutinize
the wreck scene. B

FANSgather at a makeshift memorial for Kobe Bryant this month at L.A. Live. Lottery......................B

Christina HouseLos Angeles Times

F


or decades, Beverly Cassirer
and her husband chased after
the elusive Impressionist
painting that had been taken
from the family by the Nazis during
the dawn of World War II, a madden-
ing hunt that came up empty again
and again.
The evocative Parisian street
scene by Camille Pissarro had van-
ished into the mists of the war and
then resurfaced decades later in
Madrid, hanging for all the world to
see in the Museo Nacional Thyssen-
Bornemisza, a treasured work by an
Impressionist master valued at
roughly $30 million.
Cassirer and her husband,
Claude, pursued the painting in the
courts of Los Angeles, arguing that it
had essentially been stolen by the Na-
zis, who had

BEVERLY CASSIRER, 1920 - 2020


Fought to regain Nazi-looted art


By Steve Marble

Allen J. SchabenLos Angeles Times
LOCKED IN LEGAL BATTLE
Beverly and Claude Cassirer sued to reclaim a Pissarro that the
[SeeCassirer,B5] Nazis confiscated and that now hangs in a Madrid museum.
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