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Ron Kaye: The Gatto plot thickens

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  • Ron Kaye: The Gatto plot thickens

    Ron Kaye: The Gatto plot thickens
    By Ron Kaye

    http://www.glendalenewspress.com/opinion/tn-gnp-0203-ron-kaye-the-gatto-plot-thickens,0,1738833.story
    February 2, 2013 | 4:05 p.m.


    The clumsy statements by Assemblyman Mike Gatto's political team
    denying that he ran a slate of delegates for the 43rd Assembly
    District's seats at the state Democratic Party convention - and that
    challengers were threatened and intimidated - also contained a direct
    attack on a single individual.

    `I also heard too that one gentleman in particular was being watched
    because he has a reputation of busing in elderly Republicans from the
    day-care facility that he owns,' Gatto campaign political director
    Stacey Brenner wrote in an email response to questions about racial
    profiling of Armenians at the Jan. 12 election.

    She continued: `These folks often have no idea where they are. I
    hesitate to call this elder abuse, but you are free to draw your own
    conclusions. The same guy has a history of being investigated by the
    state for other improprieties.'

    Serious specific allegations, so it didn't take long to find someone
    who fit the bill.

    `She must be referring to me. I don't know who else she could be
    referring to,' said Berdj Karapetian, a soft-spoken businessman who
    denied ever having `been investigated for anything ... or being found
    guilty of anything.'

    Karapetian heads the state Adult Day Health Care Assn. that has
    protested steep cuts in state funding that provides services to so
    many frail elderly people. He's highly regarded in the community for
    his activism on behalf of Armenians and underserved minorities.

    He brought two people from his center to vote at the delegate event,
    and both were challenged. A man suffering from Parkinson's disease was
    credentialed, but the other was rejected - though Karapetian says his
    Democratic Party voter registration later turned up in official
    records.

    I went searching for Karapetian because I thought the enmity toward
    him, and the Armenian community's toward Gatto, was symptomatic of
    just how deep the rift had become - something that clearly was
    unhealthy for the party, the Armenian community, Gatto and the
    Glendale-Burbank region.

    Karapetian traces the breakdown in relations to his role as chairman
    of an Armenian National Committee task force that organized support
    for Democrat Nayiri Nahabedian in the April 2010 primary special
    election to succeed Paul Krekorian, who had resigned when elected to
    the L.A. City Council.

    `When Mike won, I helped introduce him to the Armenian community and
    got volunteers for him. I was under the impression he would do
    something appropriate and give more representation to the Armenian
    community. We thought he would do that and were critical when he
    didn't.'

    At the delegate selection event, the phrase `good Democrat' was
    bandied about with the apparent meaning that it required blind loyalty
    to the party - or specifically to Gatto - something that was difficult
    for many in the community when an Armenian candidate, Democrat or
    Republican, was challenging the assemblyman.

    So I wondered what Karapetian took the phrase `good Democrat' to mean.

    `To me, government is supposed to be there to help those that are less
    fortunate, that have more difficulty, to also have a voice. It
    shouldn't be only those who are powerful, wealthy, to be able to get
    services and get benefits. There has to be a process of fairness and
    equality. Those beliefs are close to what our Democratic Party stands
    for. That's why I'm a Democrat.

    `But the dilemma that many of us Democrats feel exists is this: An
    elected official gets to a point that they are a councilman, an
    assemblyman, a congressman, and they start using their position to use
    strong-arm tactics. It's like the old-style politics in Chicago where
    the elected officials were dictating what was going to happen. I
    thought we were done with that, where we were going to let the
    individuals themselves decide who were going to be the delegates in
    this case, not the assemblyman.

    `Why did he have to force his people on us? He's allowed to get away
    with it because the Democratic leadership is not telling Mr. Gatto,
    `Behave like an assemblyman and don't turn this into a system where
    you can control everybody and dictate terms to them.' They have
    allowed this situation to exist. They should rein him in and stop
    turning a deaf ear when the Armenian community approaches and says
    things need to change.'

    So where does the party's leadership stand?

    Eric Bauman, chairman of the county Democratic Party and vice chairman
    of the state party, said he learned there were problems on the day of
    the event, and was deeply concerned about the situation.

    `I believe that a formal complaint was filed with party officials, and
    it will be thoroughly investigated. If what is alleged happened, I can
    tell you that is not acceptable behavior by any stretch. Though I
    don't know the exact facts, the perception of the situation is one
    that does not comport with the big D-Democrat values or the Mike Gatto
    I know.'

    The bigger issue is the anger that exists within the party, he acknowledged.

    `As the chair of the county Democratic Party, if I can help people get
    through this and come together, I am absolutely willing to do that. It
    is important,' Bauman said.

    It remains to be seen whether Gatto's role goes beyond boasting that
    the `Gatto slate' won all 12 seats or whether he in fact threatened
    school board candidate Steve Ferguson to abandon his teacher slate for
    delegate slots - as claimed - or whether he had a hand in singling out
    Armenian voters for challenges at the delegate selection event.

    A politician as ambitious as Gatto needs to fix this if he expects to
    win other offices and, more importantly, he and the party leaders need
    to get to work to restore their credibility in the community.

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