Biden calls for the resignations of LA council members caught making racist remarks on tape

Despite rising calls for their resignations, the three councilmembers have not stepped aside.

Biden calls for the resignations of LA council members caught making racist remarks on tape

President Joe Biden called for the resignation of three Los Angeles City Council members Tuesday after leaked recordings captured them using racist language and plotting to consolidate power.

“He believes that they all should resign,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters at a briefing. “They should all step down.”

The president’s condemnation is the latest and loudest call from a broad swath of public officials demanding the members, all Democrats, relinquish their seats in light of the shocking comments captured on tape. The city has been rocked by details of a recording, first published Sunday morning, of then-City Council President Nury Martinez, City Council members Kevin de Léon and Gil Cedillo, and then-labor leader Ron Herrera using racist language to mock a Black child, criticize colleagues, and influence the city's redistricting process to their benefit.

Herrera and Martinez have since stepped down from their leadership roles. Outraged members of the public shouted down council members de Léon and Cedillo, who were the only people in the recorded conversation attending Tuesday's public meeting.

Jean-Pierre framed Biden’s call for resignation as the difference between Democrats and “MAGA Republicans.”

“When a Democrat says something racist or antisemitic, we hold Democrats accountable,” she said. “When a MAGA Republican says something racist or antisemitic, they are embraced by cheering crowds.”

Elected officials have reacted with revulsion and calls for the council members to resign. The fallout led Herrera to resign Monday from his position leading the powerful Los Angeles County Federation of Labor. Martinez stepped down from presidency of the city council on Monday and followed up on Tuesday by saying she would "take some time to have an honest and heartfelt conversation with my family, my constituents, and community leaders."

That step was unlikely to mollify the many elected officials who have called for Martinez to leave office. It meant she would be absent from a planned Tuesday city council meeting.


A growing swath of city and state Democratic officials demanded Martinez, de Léon and Cedillo relinquish their seats. The list includes both the state and county Democratic parties, several Los Angeles city council members, numerous state lawmakers and Congress members representing Los Angeles, and U.S. Sen. Alex Padilla – a Los Angeles native who is a longtime ally of Martinez.

“At a time when our nation is grappling with a rise in hate speech and hate crimes, these racist comments have deepened the pain that our communities have endured,” Padilla said in a statement. “Los Angeles deserves better.”

The recorded conversation rocked Los Angeles and conjured a painful history of racism that coexists with the city’s celebrated diversity. Rep. Karen Bass, who followed fellow mayoral candidate Rick Caruso in calling for the members’ resignations, said in a statement she had spent Sunday “speaking with Black and Latino leaders about how to ensure this doesn’t divide our city.”

“As President Biden has said, we need to heal the soul of America, and now is the time for us to heal the soul of Los Angeles,” Los Angeles Democratic Party leaders said in a statement Monday.

The three members had not stepped aside as of Tuesday morning, about 48 hours after the Los Angeles Times first published the contents of the recordings. That raised the prospect of a deeply divided city council in which two serving members would be profoundly alienated from their colleagues. While Cedillo is on his way out after losing a primary, Martinez and de Léon are not up for re-election until 2024.

In the recordings — which were posted anonymously to Reddit but whose authenticity has not been disputed — the council members refer to another council member’s Black son as a “little monkey” in Spanish and liken him to an “accessory” who deserves a “beatdown.”

The conversation also veers into the raw power politics of redistricting and competition between ethnic groups. They talk about distributing “assets” to “Latino districts,” undermining a colleague by putting her district “in a blender” and using new lines to “create districts that benefit you all.” The four Latinos deride Los Angeles District Attorney George Gascón as “for the Blacks,” argue white council members ignore Latinos, and warn African-American council members could “come after us” in an act of political reprisal.

Christopher Cadelago and Lara Korte contributed to this report.