Felipe Fuentes Explained

Felipe Fuentes
Office:Member of the Los Angeles City Council from the 7th district
Term Start:July 1, 2013
Term End:September 11, 2016
Predecessor:Richard Alarcon
Successor:Monica Rodriguez
State Assembly1:California
District1:39th
Term Start1:May 25, 2007
Term End1:November 30, 2012
Predecessor1:Richard Alarcon
Successor1:Raul Bocanegra
Birth Date:25 May 1971
Birth Place:Colorado Springs, Colorado, U.S.
Birthname:Felipe J. Fuentes III
Spouse:Lena Wu Fuentes
Children:1
Residence:Sylmar, California
Alma Mater:Pepperdine University
University of California, Los Angeles

Felipe J. Fuentes III (born May 25, 1971) is an American lobbyist, former politician, and businessman who served as a member of the Los Angeles City Council for the 7th district from 2013 until his resignation in 2016. Prior to serving on the Los Angeles City Council, Felipe Fuentes was a member of the California State Assembly, representing the 39th district from 2007 until 2010.

Starting his political career as a staffer for then-Councilmember Alex Padilla, Fuentes initially attempted a run for Padilla's city council seat in 2007. However, he withdrew in favor of Richard Alarcon, who won the seat. That same year, Fuentes was elected to Alarcon's vacated seat in the State Assembly. After being termed out of the Assembly, he successfully ran for City Council in 2013. Despite his win, Fuentes served only a partial term, resigning in 2016 to become a lobbyist.

Early life and education

Fuentes was born on May 25, 1971[1] in Colorado Springs, Colorado. The grandson of Mexican immigrants, he attended San Fernando High School, from which he graduated. He later earned a degree from the University of California, Los Angeles and at the Pepperdine Graziadio Business School at Pepperdine University.[2]

Early politics and State Assembly

He started becoming involved in politics in 1999, working as an aide to Los Angeles City Council member Alex Padilla and serving as the liaison for Mayor of Los Angeles James Hahn. After Padilla announced his resignation to be in the California State Assembly, Fuentes announced that he would be running for his seat.[3] By December 2006, however, Fuentes announced that he would be quitting the race after Richard Alarcon, who had previously represented the district from 1993 to 1999, launched his campaign. However, because of Alarcon's win in the special election, a vacancy was created, and Fuentes quickly emerged as the leading candidate to fill the position.[4] In the special election, he was supported by Alarcon and won the seat.[5] [6]

During his first term, Fuentes introduced a significant number of bills advocated by lobbyists, in which The Mercury News described it as "one of the highest totals" for any legislator in a session.[7] In 2011, while serving in the State Assembly, he was dubbed the "Worst Legislator in California" by LA Weekly, describing him as a poor legislator after an investigative report revealed that nearly half of the bills he introduced during his first term were ghostwritten by lobbyists or special interest groups.[8] After he termed out, Fuentes was succeeded by Raul Bocanegra, who later resigned during his second term in 2017 following sexual harassment allegations that stemmed from his time as a staffer for Fuentes.[9] Although he had termed out, he managed to stay on the payroll by working for Bocanegra until he was sworn in as a councilmember seven months later.[10]

Los Angeles City Council

In 2013, Alarcon had served a single term on the Los Angeles City Council, which made him term-limited. Felipe Fuentes then ran for the City Council seat again and won.[11] During his time in office, Fuentes fought with neighborhood councils on development projects and proposed routes for a high-speed rail plan. He also introduced a measure aimed at making the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power more efficient and played a role in vetting a city plan to increase the minimum wage over the next five years.[12] [13]

In January 2016, he announced that he would not run for a second term nor for any other office.[14] On August 14, 2016, Fuentes announced that he would be resigning from his council seat the following month to become a lobbyist for the Apex Group representing the Associated General Contractors of California.[15] [16] He officially resigned on September 11, 2016, and his seat was temporarily filled by Council President Herb Wesson of the 10th district.[17] In the next election, he was succeeded by Monica Rodriguez, who ran against Alarcon in 2007 and considered running in 2013 against Fuentes.[18]

Personal life

Fuentes is married to Lena Wu, and they have one daughter named Iliana Flor Fuentes.[19] They reside in Sylmar, Los Angeles.

Electoral history

Year! colspan="2" rowspan="2" style="background-color:#EAECF0;"
OfficePartyPrimaryGeneralResultSwing.
Total%.Total%.
2007California State Assembly39thDemocratic5,81950.82%1stHold[20]
2008Democratic6,52774.17%1st59,49573.73%1stHold[21]
2010Democratic7,828100.00%1st43,26778.42%1stHold[22]
2013Los Angeles City Council7thNonpartisan9,91251.38%1stN/A[23]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Newsletter: Essential California: Can the high desert become the Silicon Valley of pot?. May 22, 2017. Oreskes, Benjamin; Grad, Shelby. Los Angeles Times.
  2. Web site: The Honorable Felipe Fuentes California State Assembly, 39th District. Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce.
  3. Web site: The chosen ones. Los Angeles Times. March 27, 2007.
  4. Web site: At least six incumbents win reelection to L.A. City Council. March 7, 2007. Hymon, Steve. Los Angeles Times.
  5. Web site: Fuentes: Hard work got me elected . May 17, 2007. Los Angeles Daily News. Orlov, Rick.
  6. Web site: Assembly’s 39th goes to Fuentes . May 16, 2007. Abram, Susan. Los Angeles Daily News.
  7. Web site: Part 2: Term limits shift balance of power to special interests . August 13, 2016. The Mercury News.
  8. Web site: New LA City Councilman Once Dubbed 'Worst Legislator In California'. March 6, 2013. CBS News.
  9. Web site: As sexual harassment in politics investigations widen, California Assemblyman accused by six new women. November 20, 2017. Mason, Melanie; Smith, Dakota. Los Angeles Times.
  10. Web site: Termed-out Fuentes stays on Assembly payroll while running for council. March 22, 2013. Healey, Jon. Los Angeles Times.
  11. Web site: Sacramento veterans leading in council races. March 6, 2013. Zahniser, David. Los Angeles Times.
  12. Web site: Future uncertain for District 7 as city councilman says he'll exit in September . August 15, 2016. Plummer, Mary. LAist.
  13. Web site: L.A. Councilman Felipe Fuentes plans to step down early to become a lobbyist. August 14, 2016. Los Angeles Times. Zahniser, Daivd.
  14. Web site: L.A. Councilman Felipe Fuentes says he won’t run for reelection. January 8, 2016. Zahniser, David. Los Angeles Times.
  15. Web site: With Los Angeles City Councilman Felipe Fuentes leaving, who'll run the district?. August 28, 2017. Los Angeles Daily News.
  16. Web site: Fuentes Explains Early Resignation from LA City Council . Chou, Elizabeth Hsing-Huei. San Fernando Valley Sun. August 18, 2016.
  17. Web site: L.A. Council President Herb Wesson names himself temporary overseer of Valley district. September 15, 2016. Zahniser, David. Los Angeles Times.
  18. Web site: ELECTION 2017: Monica Rodriguez stayed in northeast LA, now she wants to lead it . Los Angeles Daily News. August 28, 2017. Chou, Elizabeth.
  19. Web site: Los Angeles Diversity Capital of the World. July 2, 2023. Tucker, Jan. LA Progressive.
  20. Web site: Special Election Results State Assembly, 39th District Special Primary Election, May 15, 2007: Official Canvass . 2008-05-18 . 2008-03-15 . PDF . Secretary of State of California.
  21. Web site: Statement of Vote November 4, 2008, General Election. Secretary of State of California.
  22. Web site: Statement of Vote November 2, 2010, General Election. Secretary of State of California. January 6, 2011.
  23. Web site: Certified Results 2013 Primary Nominating Election. Los Angeles City Clerk. March 26, 2013.