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  • San Fernando Valley is no longer Reagan Country

    Contra Costa Times, CA

    San Fernando Valley is no longer Reagan Country
    By Tony Castro, Staff Writer

    Article Launched: 10/18/2008 12:00:00 AM PDT



    It is a shift that has turned what once was Reagan Country into
    Democratic territory in recent presidential campaigns, with this
    year's landmark Nov. 4 election expected to be no different.

    "The San Fernando Valley was historically conservative, and it was
    Reagan Country when Reagan was governor and later president," said
    Allan Hoffenblum, a Los Angeles-based Republican consultant and
    strategist. "Outsiders still think of it that way. But it's no longer
    true. It's an area that still has a lot of active Republicans, but
    they're by far the minority.

    "The Valley today is Latino. It's Jewish. It is almost the Westside of
    L.A."

    Once ethnically isolated from Los Angeles - from which it sought to
    secede just six years ago - the Valley today is far removed from the
    Valley of the 1980s, when it was known as "America's Suburb," the home
    of shopping malls, car dealerships, Valley Girls and Republican
    conservatism. Now, it has become a reflection of L.A.'s diversity.

    The locals in the sun-reddened hills above Chatsworth have long called
    a hillside rock formation "The 12 Apostles," but in the 1980s a few
    jokingly rechristened it "Ronnie and his Kitchen Cabinet."

    "It's Reagan Country," said Shep Woods, who grooms horses at one of
    the stables off Lake Manor Drive, which snakes through the hillside
    and becomes Box Canyon Road overlooking the Ronald Reagan Freeway on
    the way to Simi Valley. "Or used to be."

    In the generation since Reagan was president, the political landscape
    of the San Fernando Valley has undergone a dramatic shift shaped by
    demographic, racial, ethnic, religious, cultural and socioeconomic
    changes that have altered the reality, if not the perception, of the
    area. Population now diverse

    In 1950, non-Latino whites accounted for at least 90percent of the
    Valley's population, and in 1980, that figure was still 74percent.

    Today, the Valley is 42percent Latino, 10percent Asian and almost
    5percent African-American. And 25percent of the Valley falls under the
    Census Bureau data description that includes Armenians, Iranians and
    other Middle Eastern ethnic groups. More than 40percent of the
    Valley's residents are foreign-born.

    "Individually, as groups, the numbers are significant," said Daniel
    Blake, professor of economics and director of the San Fernando Valley
    Economic Research Center at California State University, Northridge.
    "As a whole, the numbers are staggering."

    Those statistics do not begin to include the role that religion and
    lifestyle play in the Valley. The Jewish population is significant,
    estimated by some analysts at 15-20percent. Muslims account for an
    estimated 5percent.

    Homayoon Hooshiarnejad, publisher of Asre Emrooz, a Valley-based daily
    Farsi-language newspaper, goes so far as to liken the Valley to the
    Middle East, where historically rival religions, cultures and people
    have forged a confluence of identities that no one individually
    controls.

    "It is hard to say what the cultural influence of Iranians, some of
    them Jewish and some of them Muslim, has been on the traditional San
    Fernando Valley, but it is important," he said. "By sheer presence
    there is influence. The culture, heritage, values."

    So, too, has been the quiet impact of alternative lifestyles, most
    noticeably by gays and lesbians, whose presence has come to the
    forefront this year. The first gay couple to marry in Southern
    California was from North Hills, and more marriages of same-sex
    couples from the Valley have followed.

    "Imagine all that in the Valley Girls days," said University of
    Southern California professor and author Elizabeth Currid, who
    specializes in the role of popular culture in shaping society.

    "You add more people into the mix with different ideas, different
    backgrounds, different values, it's just implicit that you're going to
    change the dynamics, and I would argue that more diversity is always
    better."

    The political impact is telling. By the 2004 presidential election,
    almost two-thirds of voters in the five City Council districts wholly
    within the Valley voted for Democratic nominee John Kerry. That
    exceeded how he did in Los Angeles County or California - or even in
    his home state of Massachusetts.

    Republicans say the changing of the guard in the Valley was the
    product both of the demographic shift of the last generation and the
    state party's own ultra-conservative positions of the 1990s.

    Possibly no one personifies that change more than Alex Wisner, 46, of
    Chatsworth, a one-time foot soldier in what became known as "The
    Reagan Revolution" in American politics.

    A small-business man and lifelong Republican, Wisner once registered
    Valley voters for Reagan and recalls that time fondly.

    "I was a Ronald Reagan Republican," he said. "I remember registering
    so many Democrats who were re-registering as Republicans, all because
    of Ronald Reagan. I still consider myself a conservative, but I'll be
    voting for Barack Obama. He's the new Ronald Reagan."

    Such words would seem like political blasphemy to most Republicans,
    especially when just to the west of the Valley earlier this year, all
    the GOP presidential hopefuls sought to out-Reagan one other and claim
    his legacy when they debated at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library
    in Simi Valley.

    Significantly, it is now Simi Valley and nearby Santa Clarita that
    have become what the Valley once was politically - the "New Reagan
    Country," said Raphael Sonenshein, a political science professor at
    California State University, Fullerton.

    "It's away from the midpart of Los Angeles ... and the Valley," he
    said. "And it's where Republicans all sort of worship at the shrine of
    Ronald Reagan."

    But Lynn Kissinger of Chatsworth remembers all too well when that
    shrine encompassed much of the Valley.

    Kissinger, 80, and her husband, Ed, are lifelong Republicans whose
    presidential voting history chronicles the GOP story of the past five
    decades: Dwight Eisenhower in the 1950s, Richard Nixon and Barry
    Goldwater in the 1960s, Nixon and Gerald Ford in the 1970s, down to
    Reagan in the 1980s and on to the Bushes.

    For the past half-century from her home just below Box Canyon,
    Kissinger has seen the West Valley bloom from an extended orchard to a
    suburban oasis whose occasional shifts of underground faults have been
    no match for the changes in the human landscape.

    "The Valley homestead after World War II was fairly simple with
    returning GIs, mostly white, looking for a nice safe space to live and
    raise their kids," said Elizabeth T. Adams, a professor of popular
    culture and folklore at CSUN. "What has happened is that a diversity
    of folks have moved to the Valley since then for a variety of reasons.

    "And over time, neighbors having normative experiences with people of
    different backgrounds and different religions realize that they
    actually do have a lot more in common than they have differences.

    "There comes a multicultural understanding that conquers irrational
    fears."

    Lynn Kissinger, for one, knows that something became different in the
    past few years, something that, while she can't put her finger on it,
    nonetheless has altered the way she views her world. Her children are
    grown, and she now has a family legacy in her grandchildren.

    What brought about her change is personal, and she is hesitant to talk
    about it publicly. But she has confided to her daughter, Holly Huff,
    57, of Santa Susana Knolls, who said her mother will soon be doing
    something that would have been anathema to Republicans of an earlier
    time.

    "She says she won't be voting for a Republican for president," Huff
    said. "It's the first time. She will be voting for Obama, and it has
    nothing to do with race. Race isn't an issue for her. What is an issue
    for her is the world and all the challenges we face. And she has had a
    change of heart as to who she has faith in to meet up to those
    challenges.

    "She has seen change, and it doesn't frighten her."

    [email protected] 818-713-3761
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