Eric M. Garcetti
Los Angeles City Council President
"Canvassing helped teach me that democracy is something
that is best practiced face-to-face. My experience prepared me for
reaching out to people who tune out television ads and mailings, but
who will engage with a direct interaction at their door. I am certainly
a better and more effective public servant because of this
experience." -Eric M Garcetti
Mr. Garcetti won a
hotly-contested election to the Los Angeles City Council in 2001,
becoming one of the youngest city councilmembers in the city's history.
Over 100 languages are spoken on the streets of his district, from
Hollywood to Downtown and across the Los Angeles River. The
neighborhoods he represents constitute the beating heart of Los Angeles.
Council President Garcetti chairs the Rules and Elections Committee.
He also serves as Vice-Chair of the Energy and the Environment
Committee and sits on the Housing, Community, and Economic Development
Committee, which he chaired for four and a half years. He is also the
Vice-Chair of the Ad Hoc River Committee and the Ad Hoc Homelessness
Committee, and serves on the Ad Hoc Stadium Committee. He was unopposed
for re-election and began his second term in office in July 2005.
During his first term in office, Garcetti led the effort to fund the
nation's largest Affordable Housing Trust Fund, oversaw the economic
and cultural revitalization of Hollywood, wrote and championed
Proposition O to clean up our local water, won passage of a plan that
eliminated the city’s business tax for 60% of all businesses, and
helped bring thousands of new high wage jobs to Los Angeles and his
district. In his district, he doubled the number of parks, ensured the
availability of an after-school program in every school in the
district, and reduced graffiti by more than 60 percent.
Councilmember Garcetti's work has been recognized in dozens of
awards, including a Green Cross Millennium Award from former President
Mikhail Gorbachev for his environmental leadership, a "Tiger Award"
from the Valley Industry and Commerce Association for his work on
business tax reform, and the first Olson Award from Human Rights Watch
for his human rights activism. The Los Angeles Times writes that
Garcetti is "smart” and “imaginative” and offers the city “refreshing
idealism.” He was featured in LA Weekly's Best of Los Angeles issue and
the Los Angeles Alternative Press readers named him "L.A.'s Favorite
Elected Official" of 2003. In 2004, The Los Angeles Business Journal
named him one of the 25 Angelenos who stand out for their potential to
shape lives in Los Angeles. A profile in Los Angeles magazine in 2006
called him "a rising star".
Prior to his election, Garcetti taught public policy, diplomacy and
world affairs at Occidental College and the University of Southern
California. In 1998, the Rockefeller Foundation selected him as a Next
Generation Leadership Fellow. Garcetti studied urban planning and
political science at Columbia University, where he received his B.A.
and M.A. in International Relations. He studied as a Rhodes Scholar at
Oxford University and the London School of Economics. Council
President Garcetti canvassed with the Fund during college.