Robert Hertzberg

Robert M. Hertzberg

Robert Hertzberg photographed by Christopher Michel in 2014
Member of the California State Senate
from the 18th district
Assumed office
December 1, 2014
Preceded by Alex Padilla (redistricted)
64th Speaker of the California State Assembly
In office
April 13, 2000  February 6, 2002
Preceded by Antonio Villaraigosa
Succeeded by Herb Wesson
Member of the California State Assembly
from the 40th district
In office
1996–2002
Preceded by Barbara Friedman
Succeeded by Lloyd Levine
Personal details
Born (1954-11-19) November 19, 1954
Los Angeles, California
Political party Democratic
Residence Van Nuys, Los Angeles, California
Alma mater University of Redlands,
Hastings College of the Law
Profession lawyer, politician, green entrepreneur
Religion Jewish

Robert Myles Hertzberg (born November 19, 1954) is an American politician currently serving in the California State Senate. He is a Democrat representing the 18th district, encompassing parts of the San Fernando Valley. Prior to being elected to the state senate, he was a lawyer, former Speaker of the California State Assembly, and former candidate for Mayor of Los Angeles.

Early life

Hertzberg was born on November 19 in Los Angeles, California to Harrison W. Hertzberg and Antoinette"Bunny" Taussig Hertzberg. He was a graduate of Palm Springs High School. He graduated Magna Cum Laude from the University of Redlands with a Bachelor of Arts double major in History and English in 1976.While in college, he wrote a 400-page handbook, entitled A Commonsense Approach to English. Three years, later Hertzberg earned his Juris Doctor from Hastings College of the Law.[1] He has been an active member of the California State Bar since 1979.[2]

Legal career and early political work

After graduating law school in 1979, Hertzberg was an associate at the Beverly Hills law firm of Fulop, Rolston, Burns, & McKittrick. In 1983, he co-authored a manual on real estate law, California Lis Pendens Practice, published by the University of California, with a second edition in 1994.[2] He was then a full partner in several small Los Angeles-area law firms until running for the State Assembly in 1996. In 2007, the Los Angeles Business Journal named Hertzberg in the article "Best of the Bar: Who's Who In L.A. LAW." The Los Angeles Business Journal also named him one of the top ten lawyers in Los Angeles. Hertzberg has been repeatedly listed by the Daily Journal as one of the top 100 lawyers in California. In 2004, 2006, and 2008-2013, he was listed in Super Lawyers as top lawyer.

Hertzberg's first political job was a driver for Lt. Governor Mervyn Dymallyin 1973 and 1974,[3] which ended in Dymally's election as the first African-American Lt. Governor in California history. He then did a part-time stint as an advance man in the White House under President Jimmy Carter in 1977–80. From the 1970s through the 1990s, he worked for numerous California Democrats, including LA County Supervisor Gloria Molina,U.S Representatives Dennis Cardoza (Campaign Chair), Brad Sherman,Julian Dixon,Xavier Becerra (Campaign Co-chair), Lucy Roybal-Allard & Hilda Solis,LA City Council Members Mike Hernandez(Co-chair) & Herb Wesson (Chair), and also State Assembly members Antonio Villaraigosa (Campaign Treasurer), Hersh Rosenthal, and Richard Alatorre,[2] among many others.

Election to State Assembly

In 1996, Democratic Assemblywoman Barbara Friedman of the 40th Assembly District encompassing North Hollywood, Studio City, Van Nuys and Woodland Hills in the "San Fernando Valley" section of Los Angeles was forced to retire due to term limits. Hertzberg ran for the seat and was opposed in the Democratic primary in March 1996 by Fran Oschin, an aide to Los Angeles Councilman Hal Bernson. According to the California Political Almanac, Hertzberg "racked up a sheaf of endorsements and raised well over $200,000 for the primary." He won the primary by 72–28%. In the November general election, Hertzberg had a 59–31% victory over Republican Ron Culver.[4] Hertzberg's know-how and connections from over 100 local campaigns gave him the edge over the less-experienced Assembly Members who were coming into the Legislature due to the new "term limits" law. In 1998 and 2000, Hertzberg was re-elected by successively greater margins, 69% and 70%, respectively.[5][6]

Speaker of the Assembly – 2000–2002

On April 13, 2000, Hertzberg was unanimously elected by a voice vote as the 64th Speaker of the California State Assembly. In 1996, when Hertzberg first ran for the Assembly, the Democrats had 38 of 80 seats. By November 2000, when Speaker Hertzberg was directing the Assembly Democratic campaigns, his party was up to 50 seats and he was the last Speaker to gain seats until the Obama landslide of 2008.[6] As Speaker, his principle priorities were:

The non-partisan California Journal rated Hertzberg as the best Member in the Assembly for being a successful coalition-builder, for working the hardest and having "serious brain wattage."[7]

During his time in the Assembly, Hertzberg helped open up discussion with local business leaders, sponsored legislation to make state government more accessible to the public via the Internet, to make it easier to vote, to create more "Criminal Scene Investigations (CSI) laboratories, to cut $1.5 billion in taxes, and worked with Senate President Pro Tem John Burton & State Senator Deborah Ortiz to increase funds to revamp public education through the "Cal-Grant" Program.[8][9] The Cal-Grants Program was "hailed by educators as a turning point that will give poor students unprecedented access to California's colleges and universities" and Hertzberg commented upon the bill's passage, "California is back."[8] (Hertzberg believed deeply in community colleges, seeing them as the key to growth in "New Economy"). Under Hertzberg's Speakership, the state also began to rebuild public transportation, and Hertzberg co-sponsored the legislation creating CLEAR, an anti-gang program, which Los Angeles County District Attorney Steve Cooley called "the most successful gang prevention program in California history."[10] (More specifics are listed immediately below).

On the issue of international terrorism, two years before September 11, 2001, Hertzberg was issuing warnings and sponsoring legislation to thwart terrorism. (See AB140 below). After the attacks of September 11, 2001, Hertzberg temporarily shut down the State Assembly and created the Bi-partisan Legislative Task Force on Terrorism to combat potential threats to California's food and water supplies.[11]

Hertzberg’s strong support was also essential to successful legislation to reduce greenhouse gases from motor vehicles by requiring "Low Carbon" fuels, a bill passed by Assemblywoman Fran Pavley as AB1493.[12]

His longest-lasting accomplishment was being the architect of a compromise that allowed numerous school bond measures to go forward. His negotiations with State Senator Betty Karnette (D-Long Beach) allowed the State Legislature to break a decade-long legislative logjam and place school bonds on the 1998 and 2000 ballots. In 2002, he sponsored another school bond, AB16,[13] to place an additional $25.35 billion worth of school bonds on the ballot in November 2002 and then successfully campaigned to pass the bond. Using the framework designed by Hertzberg, California was able to pass over $70 billion in school bonds. For nearly two decades, California state government had been deadlocked with a Democratic State Legislature facing Republican Governors George Deukmejian and Pete Wilson. Hertzberg and Senate President Pro Tem John Burton broke the gridlock to pass the most progressive social legislation since the 1960s. (See below).

State Senate (2014-Present)

In 2014, Bob Hertzberg ran successfully in his bid to represent the 18th District in the California State Senate. In the June primary, he won with 63.1% of the vote and went onto the general election where he secured 70.2% of the vote in to a decisive victory.

After being sworn in, Hertzberg was appointed by Senate President Pro Tempore Kevin de León to the Senate Committee on Governance and Finance, where he was also made chairman; the Committee on Elections and Constitutional Amendments; the Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communications; the Committee on the Judiciary; and the Committee on Natural Resources and Water.

Hertzberg has introduced the following legislation already: Senate Bill (SB) 8, the Upward Mobility Act, which would broaden the tax base by imposing a sales tax on services to increase revenues. Health care and education services would be exempted from the tax, as well as small businesses with under $100,000 gross sales. SB 134 is a plan to help attorneys pay off student debt from law school, if they agree to work in public-interest areas of law, because such work is usually low-paying compared to private practice and thus chronically understaffed. SB 155 is a plan to streamline the court proceedings when addressing the disposition of assets in deceased peoples’ last will and testaments, which also could ease the bereaved beneficiaries of those wills. SB 163 is an attempt to improve voter turnout across the state by automatically ensuring that all registered voters receive an absentee "vote-by-mail" ballot for every single election, while enabling voters to still vote in-person if they so choose. SB 272 would require all state and county government agencies to make public all the data that they have gathered, with the goal of enabling that data to be used to spur innovative growth strategies in both the public and the private sector and improve government coordination, efficiency, and delivery of public services. SB 306 would force local governments throughout the state to maximize federal food aid to go towards unemployed able-bodied adults without dependents. [14]

Assembly Legislative accomplishments (1996-2002)

AB206 – "Citizens' Complaint Act." (1997) Requires state agencies, with web sites, to provide a form on the web site for individuals to register complaints or comments regarding the agency's performance.[15]

AB513 – Meth Sentence Enhancement (1997) increases criminal penalties for selling methamphetamine.[16]

AB853 – Gang Prevention Programs (1997) establishes the Community Law Enforcement and Recovery (CLEAR) Demonstration Project to combat gangs in Los Angeles County.[17]

AB856 – CA Witness Protection Program (1997) creates a state witness protection program run by the Attorney General.[18]

AB880 – Elder Financial Abuse (1998) expands criminal penalties for financial abuse of the elderly and dependent populations.[19]

AB2011 – Gun control (1998) requires that a serial number must be on a non-antique modern gun as a condition for transfer of ownership and requires law enforcement tracing of all seized guns.[20]

AB2351 – Electronic threats (1998) adds threats made by electric communications, such as the Internet, to the list of prohibitions.[21]

AB39 – Contraceptives (1999) Requires health care plans to pay for contraceptive services.[22]

AB140 – Anti-Terrorism (1999) makes illegal the possession, use, manufacture, attempt or threat to use weapons of mass destruction.[23]

AB185 – San Fernando Valley re-organization (1999) allows the San Fernando Valley section of Los Angeles to request a citywide vote on secession.[24]

AB187 – Grant Information (1999) allows state agencies to make available on their web sites a list of all grants administered by that agency.[25]

AB925 – Conservators (1999) creates a Statewide Registry for conservators and guardians.[26]

AB1094 – Voter Registration (2000) reduces the deadline for registering to vote from 29 to 14 days before the election.[27]

AB1391 – Forensic Laboratories (1999) authorizes the construction and remodeling of forensic laboratories.[28] This bill eventually led to the creation of the Hertzberg-Davis Forensic Science Center of Los Angeles in 2007.[29]

AB1473 – Infrastructure plans (1999) requires the Governor to submit annual five-year construction spending plans.[30]

AB1665 – Cal-OSHA Funding (1999) extends the funding for the California Occupational Safety and Hazard Administration inspection program.[31]

AB1717 – Gun Control (2000) requires the Department of Justice to evaluate ballistic identification systems and report back to the Legislature.[32]

ACR181 – California History Month (2000) designates September as "California History Month.[33]

AB16 – Education Bonds (2002) authorized spending of $25.35 billion in future education bond funds.[34] Voters passed school bonds in 2002 and 2004.

AB56 – Voting Modernization Bonds (2001) authorizes a $200 million bond to update and repair California's voting equipment.[35]

AB423 – Farm Labor Contracts (2001) enhances enforcement of farm labor contracts and the payment of back wages owed.[36]

AB669 – State Non-emergency phone number (2001) authorizes local public agencies to establish a "311" non-emergency phone number.[37]

AB865 – Credit Cards (2001) requires credit card companies to detail the time and cost of paying off credit card debts by only making the monthly minimum payments.[38]

AB935 – Public Interest Attorneys (2001) helps lawyers who work in the public interest or indigent defendant field to pay off their student loans.[39]

AB1657 – LA County Healthcare (2001) requires the State Auditor to evaluate the financial capacity of the LA County Department of Health Services to meet its responsibilities.[40]

AB1781 – Instructional materials funding (2002) provides funding for school districts to purchase instructional materials.[41]

AB1838 – Terrorism – W.M.D. (2002) makes use of weapons of mass destruction murder in the first degree and a capital crime.[42]

AB2321 – Court claims (2002) creates rules for personal injury claims against California State and local courts.[43]

AB2717 – Water Desalination (2002) requires the Department of Water Resources to report to the Legislature by 2004 on the possibility of seawater desalination in California.[44]

State Senate Legislation (2014-Present)

SB 8: Upward Mobility Act (2015): SB 8, the Upward Mobility Act, would broaden the tax base by imposing a sales tax on services to increase revenues. Health care and education services would be exempted from the tax, as well as small businesses with under $100,000 gross sales. [45]

SB 134 (2015): SB 134 is a plan to help attorneys pay off student loans (on average ranging between $85,000 and $125,000 per law school graduate) if they agree to practice in key areas of public-interest law. There is often little incentive to work in public-interest areas of law since the pay often is substantially lower than in private practice. Funding would come from donations to a special fund. [46]

SB 155 (2015): SB 155 is an effort to save time and money for both the bereaved and taxpayers. It would introduce a State Bar-sponsored plan to streamline certain court proceedings when addressing disposition of the assets of someone who has died.

As introduced, SB 155 would simplify required legal procedures for the types of wills referred to as ‘pour-over wills,’ where assets to be transferred, as well as beneficiaries, are specified within well-defined legal parameters. [47]

SB 163 (2015): SB 163 is a plan to ensure every registered voter statewide has an easy choice between either voting by mail or voting at their polling place during primary, special and general elections.

SB 163 seeks to ensure that every registered voter statewide receives a vote-by-mail-, or "absentee," ballot prior to an established election. Voters would still have the option of voting in person at their designated polling location. [48]

SB 272 (2015): SB 272 would require local government agencies to conduct system-wide inventories of collected data and make the inventories publicly available under the California Public Records Act.

Specifically, SB 272 would require California local government agencies at the city and county level to inventory the information they collect and make the inventories accessible to the public. These inventories would include who maintains the information and how often that data is collected. The goal for SB 272 is to better harness the power of locally generated data to help spur economic growth, tackle major infrastructure issues and set millions of Californians on a path toward upward mobility. Properly gathered and clearly understood, data could also help empower local agencies and encourage the agencies to work together more effectively and to intelligently allocate resources to better deliver public services. [49]

SB 286 (2015): Gives commercial and industrial customers options to buy more renewable energy and to separate from the local utility company. The bill encourages competition and reduces prices for electricity, which will make California more business friendly while providing new options to meet renewable energy and greenhouse gas reduction goals. [50]

SB306 (2015): SB 306 would require all counties to maximize federally funded food aid for able bodied adults without dependents who have no work opportunities. The bill also would require each county to guarantee a placement in CalFresh Employment and Training programs for able bodied adults without dependents, subject to a three-month time limit. SB 306 establishes that, during a federally declared recession, months on aid should not be counted toward the 48-month lifetime limit in CalWORKs, provided the adult has not exceeded 60 months on aid allowed by federal law. The goal is to prevent hunger and hardship among Californians when jobs are not available. [51]

SB 405 (2015): This bill returns suspended driver’s licenses to anyone who enters a payment plan and makes a commitment to pay agreed-upon fines. The program would only apply to minor violations such as expired tags, failure to report a change of address, etc. [52]

SB 500 (2015): Allows out-of-state employees who work in California for fewer than 20 days in a year, as part of their training, or for conferences, etc., to pay income taxes only in their home state. [53]

SB 540 (2015): Creates a taxpayer advocate at the state Franchise Tax Board. The advocate ensures that taxpayers who are overcharged or otherwise penalized for administrative mistakes made by the FTB can receive assistance and refunds. [53]

SB 621 (2015): Allows counties to apply for funds from the Mentally Ill Offender Crime Reduction (MIOCR) Grant program to be used in diversion programs in an effort to provide a cost-effective strategy to reduce the rate of recidivism and re-incarceration of mentally ill offenders. This will grant an alternative treatment option for offenders with a mental illness and it also furthers prison realignment efforts. [54]

SB 791 (2015): Requires California’s tax-advantage 529 college savings plan (called "Scholarshare") to make a credit card available that allows the automatic deposit of credit card reward points into the 529 savings account. [55]

Personal style

Warm and outgoing, Hertzberg has been given the nicknames "Huggy" and "Hugsberg" for his habit of offering embraces to colleagues, employees, voters and even opponents.[56] Staffers also know to be on call whenever the Speaker would get a new idea. Republican consultant Tony Quinn described Hertzberg as the "Energizer Bunny with a 150 I.Q. – always willing to discuss policy."

Legacy as Speaker

With Republican Assemblyman Bill Leonard, Hertzberg worked to create the Robert M. Hertzberg Capital Institute to train new legislators and employees in state ethics rules and computer systems. After his tenure as Speaker ended, the Legislature under successor Speaker Herb Wesson named the Capitol Institute after Hertzberg.[57][58] Hertzberg also created the Speaker's Office of International Relations and Protocol, a forward-thinking move in light of the "globalization" economic trends and the fact that if California were a separate nation, it would be among the world's 10 largest economies.[59] The non-partisan magazine California Journal, gave Hertzberg high marks for working hard, being intelligent, having high ethical standards and for being a successful coalition-builder.[7]

Criticism of Hertzberg

Veteran Los Angeles Times columnist George Skelton said of Hertzberg’s tenure as Speaker: "Reviews are mixed. Hertzberg is an intense bundle of energy, an all-night negotiator, an affable, incessant hugger. But critics contend there’s often more motion than forward movement." [60] However, Skelton noted Hertzberg’s string of legislative accomplishments and ended the column with "Hertzberg cared. He tried. And he’s leaving the house in better shape than he found it."[60] In the California Journal, Sherry Jeffe criticized what she called Hertzberg’s "micro-management" and giving Republican "porky bribes" to ensure passage of the budget. She also complained that he was "rolled on redistricting by Senate pro tem John Burton" and commented that "the low point for this speaker – with his penchant for organization, structure and fastidious to detail – came the last night of the 2000 legislative session when, argued one Capitol insider, ‘as a result of disorganization, a great number of bills which would have been enacted fell through the cracks."[61] Conservative Sacramento Bee columnist Dan Walters said Hertzberg’s promise of legislative oversight of the executive branch "faded, particularly when the subjects were the energy crisis and the performance of his fellow Democrat, Governor Gray Davis."[62]

Private law practice and alternative energy ventures, 2002 to current

Mayer-Brown Firm

After retiring from the State Assembly in 2002, Hertzberg joined Mayer Brown LLP, formerly Mayer, Brown, Rowe & Maw as a full partner. At the firm, Hertzberg has specialized in government affairs, providing strategic advice to companies doing business in California and nationally. He has been particularly interested in the fields of the environment, climate-change, energy, water and Indian related issues.[2][63]

Glaser Weil

In 2014, Hertzberg left Mayer Brown LLP, after being sworn in as a State Senator. He then joined the law firm Glaser Weil. [64]

Career and Recognitions in the Green Energy Sector

Besides his law practice, Hertzberg has also been very active in the alternative energy business. During his Speakership in the legislature, Hertzberg was critical in passing the Low Carbon Fuel standards. The Pavley law has now become the law across the nation

He co-founded Solar Integrated Technology in 2003, which was the first solar manufacturing facility ever in Los Angeles. (He sold his interests to run for Mayor of Los Angeles while the company won the Wall Street Journal Award for Innovation and went on the public market in the United Kingdom).[10][65]

After the Mayor’s race, he co-founded Renewable Capital[66] in 2006 to do research and development of electronic vehicle in the U.K. and co-founded G24 Innovations Limited in 2006, an innovative flexible low light solar company in Cardiff, Wales. G24i became a well-regarded award-winning company.[67]

G24 produces a new type of lightweight and flexible solar cell that generates power in low, ambient and even indoor conditions. G24 has won numerous awards in recent years: in January 2008, CNBC European Business chose the company as one of its "Top 100 Low-Carbon Pioneers and The Guardian (UK) named Hertzberg as one of the "50 People Who Could Save the Planet." G24 is also the recipient of the "NESTA Rushlight Award" (for leading British achievement in the environmental field) as well as winning the World Bank’s "Award for Lighting Africa."

Most recently, G24 won the prestigious "Business Commitment to the Environment Leadership Award" and Prince Charles invited CEO Hertzberg to join the "Business Leader’s Group on Climate Change." Additional awards include: "Welsh Innovative Company of the Year 2008," and Heidrick & Struggles "Force for Good Pioneers" Award. In 2012, G24 won the "Green Manufacturer of the Year Award" at the Insider Made in Wales Awards.[68]

On the CBS Evening News, Katie Couric stated in a news profile that Hertzberg knew "the difference between talking about global warming and actually doing something about it."[69]

Hertzberg traveled the world as a "green-tech" innovator lecturing and working in many countries, all while he often returned to California to pursue his deep interest in public policy. He has been interviewed by the BBC, CNN and CBS on his work in alternative energy.[70]

Public Policy Activism after Leaving the State Assembly

He continued to teach each year new members of the California State Legislature, both inside and outside the Hertzberg Institute.

With the Late Nancy Daly Riordan (the Former First Lady of Los Angeles) and Hollywood Director Rob Reiner, Hertzberg co-chaired for two years the First 5 preschool program to bring pre-school programs to the 150,000 4 year-olds in LA County without pre-school.[71]

He also currently serves on the Board of Advisors at former Governor Schwarzenegger’s Institute for State and Global at U.S.C. along with former Mexican President Vicente Fox, former New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson, former Indiana Senator Evan Bayh, former San Antonio Mayor and Housing & Urban Development Secretary Henry Cisneros, former New Jersey Governor Christie Todd Whitman, Austrian Chancellor Werner Faymann and Rajendra Kumar Pachauri, who is the Chair of the Nobel Peace Prize-winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.[72]

California Forward/Think Long Committee

California Forward

In 2009, Hertzberg replaced future Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta as the Chair of California Forward whose self-declared mission is "to work with Californians to help create a "smart" government – one that’s small enough to listen, big enough to tackle real problems, smart enough to spend our money wisely in good times and bad, and honest enough to be held accountable for results." [73]

The web site of California Forward states that they are seeking "A Comprehensive Solution" to California’s problems, including:

1) Fiscal reforms (performance-based budgeting, a more rational tax system and pay-as-you-go rules.

2) Structural reforms where more power is returned from Sacramento to local governments, pension reforms and a revitalized education system.

3) Democracy reforms, including non-partisan redistricting and voting systems.

While at California Forward, Hertzberg strongly supported the redistricting reforms that assigned the decennial task of re-drawing legislative district lines to an independent Citizen’s Commission and the "Open Primary" initiative (where voters can choose candidates regardless of partisan registration), all of which California voters passed via the ballot box in 2008 and 2010.

In conjunction with Chairing California Forward, Hertzberg has also been a member of the Think Long Committee of California since 2009. This Committee is a non-partisan civic group focused on fixing California’s dysfunctional state and local government structures. The Think Long Committee promotes a vision of 21st Century government in California that is more efficient and "user-friendly" to ordinary California citizens.[73]

Hertzberg completed his service at California Forward in October 2012.

Think Long Committee of California

In 2009, Hertzberg joined the Think Long Committee of California, a bi-partisan collection of public and private sector leaders, including former Secretaries of State George Schultz & Condi Rice, former Assembly Speaker Willie Brown, businessmen Eli Broad & David Bonderman, and former State Supreme Court Chief Justice Ronald George. The Committee describes its mission to "Advocate a comprehensive approach to repairing California’s broken system of governance while proposing policies and institutions vital for the state’s long-term future."[74]

The Think Long Committee’s platform to "Re-boot California’s Democracy" includes:

Los Angeles Economic Development Corporation

Hertzberg has twice served as Chair of the L.A.E.D.C., in 2004 and 2011, the largest economic development agency in the country. As Chair, Hertzberg lead successful trade missions to China, Japan, and Korea among other nations, helping to create bi-lateral investments and trade.[76]

During his first term as LAEDC Chair, he co-founded the Southern California Leadership Council, which includes former California Governors Deukmejian, Wilson and Davis, to work on consumer goods movement and infrastructure, among other issues.[77]

2005 Campaign for Mayor of Los Angeles

Assemblyman Hertzberg retired from the Assembly in 2002. At the time, he said he had no plans to run for any other office, expressing a desire to "take care of my kids."[2]

But a steady series of fundraising scandals where members of Mayor James Hahn's Administration were investigated by a grand jury for allegedly awarding city contracts to campaign contributors[78] and the general drift of Hahn (some critics called him "Mayor Yawn") created an opening. In a LA Times poll, only 48% of voters considered Hahn honest.[79]

Antonio Villaraigosa, who lost to Mayor Hahn in 2001, had been elected to the Los Angeles City Council in 2003 while promising not to run for mayor, something he quickly reconsidered when Hahn proved vulnerable. Bernard Parks, the African-American City Councilman who had not been rehired as Police Chief by Hahn and State Senator Richard Alarcon also jumped in, as did a number of minor candidates. Hertzberg's allies convinced him to run, and in 2004, he started a web site ChangeLA.Com to promote his candidacy.

Hertzberg advocated a "boroughs" system to make city government smaller, more efficient and more accountable to the grassroots, plus giving the Mayor's office more power, especially over the school system. He also opposed raising taxes, while favoring synchronizing traffic lights to ease congestion. Hertzberg's campaign platform consisted of four main planks:

He told the LA Times that it was more than ambition that caused him to run, but a sense of duty as well:

"Could I go out and make a ton of money in my businesses and law firm? Sure. But when I'm 70 years old, I look in the mirror and I watched this place crumble

and knew I could have done something about it. I just couldn't let that happen. Believe me; otherwise I wouldn't have done it. The sacrifices to me and to my

family are extraordinary."[2]

Over half of LA city voters did not know much about Hertzberg.[79] To boost his public standing, he launched a TV campaign that featured a giant image of him towering over a city full of problems.[80] He also unveiled an endorsement from former Mayor Richard Riordan.[81] The LA Times expressed a preference for a Villaraigosa-Hertzberg run-off,[78] while the Los Angeles Daily News endorsed Hertzberg.[82] The African-American newspaper, The Los Angeles Sentinel, also endorsed Hertzberg, the first time they had ever endorsed a white candidate against a serious black candidate.

Hertzberg’s efforts paid off as a second LA Times poll found the primary too close to call.[83] Meanwhile, Hahn's supporters fought back with a hardball negative campaign through the mail.[84]

Analysis by the LA Times showed that Hertzberg ran best in the San Fernando Valley and West LA, among white middle class voters and Jews. Hertzberg also won twice as many precincts as Hahn, but fell short when Hahn's negative ads decreased his support in the Valley.[85] A switch of just 3,278 votes would have put Hertzberg in the run-off with Villaraigosa.[86] A lead editorial after the primary election in the LA Times, "Paging Bob Hertzberg," claimed a dull debate between Hahn and Villaraigosa made them "miss Bob Hertzberg and his outsized ideas."[78]

After just missing the run-off, Hertzberg endorsed the eventual winner Villaraigosa, helping the first Latino Mayor in the San Fernando Valley, plus the Jewish and business communities where Hertzberg had run particularly strong in the primary.[86] Villaraigosa ended up winning the run-off by 59–41%.

Political advisory roles

Since Arnold Schwarzenegger's election as California Governor in the 2003 recall election, Hertzberg has served as both a formal and informal advisor to the "Governator." In 2003, Schwarzenegger appointed him to his Transition Committee and Hertzberg helped guide the passage of the new Governor's "Economic Recovery Package" through the Legislature that allowed the state to weather the financial crisis of 2003–04. According to The People's Machine by Joe Matthews, Schwarzenegger then offered Hertzberg the position of Chief of Staff, nicknaming him "Hertzie."[87] Hertzberg chose to stay in the private sector, but did advise Arnold to "build a thoroughly bipartisan government." Hertzberg wrote in the LA Daily News that his advice was: "Take the initiative to go and meet with members of the Legislature, Democrats and Republicans alike. Sit in their offices, meet with them as human beings, and learn to work with them."[87]

Assemblyman Darrell Steinberg commented on Hertzberg’s role as a link between Governor Schwarzenegger and the State Legislature, saying that Hertzberg would report "what the Democratic legislative line was -- where we couldn't go and where we were willing to go. And he had the trust of the principals on both sides, which helped quite a bit."[88]

After finishing a close third in the 2005 Mayoral Election, Hertzberg also served as the Chair of Mayor-elect Villaraigosa's Transition Team.[10] In 2009, Hertzberg also served as the co-chair of the Transition Team for newly elected Los Angeles City Attorney, Carmen Trutanich. Despite being out of office for a decade, the journal Capitol Weekly has repeatedly named him one of the Top 100 influential people in Sacramento, writing in 2011: "Bob Hertzberg is one of those hyper-kinetic, Type-A personalities who love politics for its own sake. He’s a former Assembly speaker, an L.A. lawyer and a go-to guy for his ideas on political reform. Amazingly, he was a sort of adviser to former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, and he continues to be an insider Democrat with his fingers in lots of pies."[89]

Civic affairs/public policy activism

Hertzberg has stayed involved in policy debates and formulation through his service on numerous boards of public policy committees and several universities,[10] including:

Political vision/ideals

Hertzberg calls himself a "New Democrat" in the mold of Bill Clinton, who is both pro-business and pro-labor.[93] He told the Los Angeles Business Journal that education is the key to the future and "we're trying to pave the way for what's coming next in California; intellectual property, not low-wage jobs."[58] And Hertzberg told the Speaker's Commission on Regional Government: "The winners in the New Economy will be the regions that learn to work together to relieve traffic congestion, build affordable housing, preserve open space and promote economic development. If government is going to be effective in this new age, it is going to have to start thinking regionally. This Commission is an important first step."[94]

In his autobiography Total Recall, Arnold Schwarzenegger relates how he went to meet with Speaker Hertzberg in 2002 to seek support for his successful "After-school" initiative:

"One of my first stops was Bob Hertzberg, the Speaker of the Assembly. Bob is a smart, ebullient from the San Fernando Valley, about the same age as Maria.

He’s so friendly that his nickname is Huggy. Within two minutes, we were swapping jokes. ‘What’s not to like?’ he said about our ballot proposition. But he

warned me not to expect support from the Democratic Party itself. ‘God forbid we should endorse a Republican initiative,’ he wisecracked."[95]

When he was running for Mayor, Hertzberg told the LA Weekly: "Get it done or get the heck out of the way is my philosophy. I start out as a holistic thinker. I'm the big picture, holistic thinker... It really boils down to the issue of getting the work done. I am sick and tired of the noise. Sick and tired of the empty promises."[72]

References

  1. "State Bar of CA :: Robert Myles Hertzberg". members.calbar.ca.gov. Retrieved 2016-01-11.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Rabin, Jeffrey L. (February 10, 2005). "Man Of Contrasts". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved May 22, 2010.
  3. "Ex-Assembly Speaker Bob Hertzberg heads to Senate with long-term goals". latimes.com. Retrieved 2016-01-11.
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  5. California Secretary of State: Statement of the Vote, November 1998 General Election. http://www.sos.ca.gov/elections/elections_elections.htm
  6. 1 2 California Secretary of State: Statement of the Vote, November 2000 General Election
  7. 1 2 "The Minnies," by A.G. Block, California Journal, July 2002, p.8. "Legislators of the Year," California Journal, June 2000.
  8. 1 2 http://www.csac.ca.gov/doc.asp?id=568^http://www.leginfo.ca.gov/pub/99-00/bill/sen/sb_1601- http://keynotespeakers.com/speaker_detail.php?speakerid=4621
  9. http://www.assembly.ca.gov/acs/newcomframeset.asp?committee=7
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