President of the Los Angeles City Council explained

Post:President
Body:the
Los Angeles City Council
Insignia:Seal of Los Angeles.svg
Insigniasize:140px
Insigniacaption:Seal of the City of Los Angeles
Flag:Flag_of_Los_Angeles,_California.svg
Flagcaption:Flag of Los Angeles
Incumbent:Paul Krekorian
Acting:no
Incumbentsince:October 18, 2022
Member Of:Los Angeles City Council
Appointer:Elected by members of the City Council
Formation:1919
Inaugural:Boyle Workman
Deputy:Marqueece Harris-Dawson (President pro tempore)
Website:City Council

The President of the Los Angeles City Council is the presiding officer of the Los Angeles City Council. The president presides as chair over meetings of the council and assignments to City Council committees and handles parliamentary duties like ruling motions in or out of order. The president automatically becomes an acting mayor when the mayor is out of state. Since 2020, the president has been elected at the first scheduled council meeting in January of even-numbered years.[1]

The current president is Democrat Paul Krekorian, who was elected on October 18, 2022.[2]

History

Early history

The office of the President was created with the introduction of the Los Angeles Common Council in 1850, with one of the members of the Council serving as the President.[3] [4] The first president of the Common Council was pioneer David W. Alexander, who was elected in 1850 before resigning a year later.[5] In 1889, the Los Angeles City Council was created under the first city charter, though the office stayed relatively the same.[6]

New city charter

In 1965, the job of President Pro Tempore was created to preside during the absence of the President, with the first officer being councilman Thomas D. Shepard. Shepard presided when L. E. Timberlake became acting mayor due to mayor Sam Yorty traveling outside the country.[7] The assistant pro tempore was created in 1977 with councilman Ernani Bernardi as the officer, who presided over meeting if both the President and the President Pro Tempore are out.

Councilman John Ferraro is the longest serving president, serving for 20 years in two terms. The first woman to be elected as the City Council president was Pat Russell, who held the title until 1987 when she was defeated in the City Council elections.[8] The first Latino elected was Alex Padilla in 2001 after defeating incumbent Ruth Galanter; he served as acting mayor days after the 9/11 attacks as mayor James Hahn traveled out of the city.[9] [10] The first African-American president was Herb Wesson, who was elected in 2012 and served until 2020. The first Latina president was Nury Martinez, who was elected in 2020 and served until 2022.[11]

Responsibilities

List of presidents (1919–present)

PortraitOfficeholderTenure startTenure endPro Tem.Assistant Pro Tem.Mayor
1data-sort-value="Workman" Boyle Workman
data-sort-value="Snyder" Meredith P. Snyder
2data-sort-value="Criswell" Ralph Luther Criswell
George E. Cryer
3Boyle Workman
4data-sort-value="Bonelli" William G. Bonelli
5data-sort-value="Sanborn" Winfred J. Sanborn
John Clinton Porter
6data-sort-value="Randall" Charles H. Randall
7data-sort-value="Davis" Howard W. Davis
Frank L. Shaw
8Robert L. Burns
Fletcher Bowron
9data-sort-value="Bennett" G. Vernon Bennett
10data-sort-value="Burns" Robert L. Burns
11data-sort-value="Moore" George H. Moore
12Harold A. Henry
13John S. Gibson Jr.
Norris Poulson
14data-sort-value="Henry" Harold A. Henry
Sam Yorty
15L. E. Timberlake
data-sort-value="Shepard" Thomas D. Shepard
data-sort-value="Gibson" John S. Gibson Jr.
16John S. Gibson Jr.
Billy G. Mills
data-sort-value="Stevenson" Robert J. StevensonTom Bradley
data-sort-value="Ferraro" John Ferraro
17John Ferraro
Joel WachsErnani Bernardi
18data-sort-value="Wachs" Joel Wachs
Peggy Stevenson
19Pat Russell
data-sort-value="Flores" Joan Milke Flores
20John Ferraro
Marvin Braude
Joan Milke Flores
data-sort-value="Alatorre" Richard AlatorreRichard J. Riordan
Joel Wachsdata-sort-value="Alatorre" Mike Hernandez
data-sort-value="Galanter" Ruth Galanter
data-sort-value="Galanter" Rudy Svorinich
21data-sort-value="Galanter" Ruth Galanter
Mark Ridley-Thomas
22Alex Padilla
data-sort-value="Miscikowski" Cindy MiscikowskiJames Hahn
data-sort-value="Miscikowski" Cindy Miscikowskidata-sort-value="Garcetti" Eric Garcetti
Wendy GreuelTony CárdenasAntonio Villaraigosa
23Eric Garcetti
Jan Perry
Jan PerryDennis Zine
24Herb Wesson
Ed ReyesTom LaBonge
Mitchell EnglanderEric Garcetti
Nury Martinez
Nury MartinezJoe Buscaino
25Nury Martinez
Joe BuscainoDavid Ryu
rowspan=7
Mitch O'Farrell
26Paul Krekorian
December 12, 2022Curren Price
December 12, 2022June 13, 2023Karen Bass
June 13, 2023June 20, 2023
June 20, 2023IncumbentMarqueece Harris-DawsonBob Blumenfield

Notes and References

  1. Web site: What Do City Council Members Do?. LA 101 Guide.
  2. Web site: L.A. City Council elects new president after racist audio leak. Knutson, Jacob. October 18, 2022. Axios.
  3. Book: Ordinances and Regulations of Los Angeles 1832-1888: Part I. 30. 1. 26–41. University of California Press.
  4. Chronological Record of Los Angeles City Officials,1850-1938, 1868-1869 section, page 11
  5. http://dbase1.lapl.org/webpics/calindex/documents/03/190790.pdf Clare Wallace, Los Angeles Public Library Reference File, April 26, 1939, with sources as listed there
  6. Web site: The Road to Reform: Los Angeles' Municipal Elections of 1909: Part II. Stevens, Mark H.. December 1, 2004. University of California Press.
  7. https://search.proquest.com/docview/156161962 "Council President Timberlake Plans Retirement July 1," May 15, 1969, page B-1
  8. Web site: The Women of the Los Angeles City Council: Part Two. March 15, 2021. Los Angeles Public Library.
  9. Web site: Ca - Officials. November 9, 2020. Allgov.com. December 23, 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20201223011849/http://www.allgov.com/usa/ca/officials/california_padilla_alex?officialid=29980. live.
  10. News: 2020-12-22. Alex Padilla has been rising political star since his 20s, when he became L.A.'s youngest councilmember. KTLA.
  11. Web site: New LA City Council president Nury Martinez outlines her vision. Los Angeles Daily News. January 14, 2020.