{"id":887527,"date":"2022-11-17T18:30:46","date_gmt":"2022-11-17T18:30:46","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/theintercept.com\/?p=414527"},"modified":"2022-11-17T18:30:46","modified_gmt":"2022-11-17T18:30:46","slug":"how-housing-activism-powered-kenneth-mejias-los-angeles-election-victory","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/2022\/11\/17\/how-housing-activism-powered-kenneth-mejias-los-angeles-election-victory\/","title":{"rendered":"How Housing Activism Powered Kenneth Mejia\u2019s Los Angeles Election Victory"},"content":{"rendered":"

On election night<\/u> in Los Angeles last week, as it became clear that Kenneth Mejia, a 32-year-old activist and accountant, had been elected the city’s controller in a landslide, his campaign manager, Jane Nguyen, told a group of young campaign volunteers who had been criticized for taking part in protests during the campaign that she had their backs.<\/p>\n

Mejia, the first Filipino American elected to citywide office in Los Angeles, ran an innovative campaign that made use of old and new media, including educational billboards<\/a> with bar charts showing how the city’s spending on policing compares to other priorities, and TikTok videos<\/a> featuring the candidate dancing with Gen Z volunteers or in a Pikachu costume. But the campaign was powered by harnessing the energy young activists usually pour into protests \u2014 and redirecting it into electoral politics.<\/p>\n


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WHAT?!?! Where did this billboard come from telling all of Los Angeles where our budget priorities are?!<\/p>\n

It's like whoever put it up wants Angelenos to know where their taxes are being spent!<\/p>\n

Olympic & Crenshaw pic.twitter.com\/TjF4XzEM88<\/a><\/p>\n

— Kenneth Mejia, CPA (@kennethmejiaLA) August 23, 2022<\/a><\/p><\/blockquote>\n