Republish
Mayor Bass got some of LA’s homeless people indoors. Will it matter to voters?
We love that you want to share our stories with your readers. Hundreds of publications republish our work on a regular basis.
All of the articles at CalMatters are available to republish for free, under the following conditions:
-
- Give prominent credit to our journalists: Credit our authors at the top of the article and any other byline areas of your publication. In the byline, we prefer “By Author Name, CalMatters.” If you’re republishing guest commentary (example) from CalMatters, in the byline, use “By Author Name, Special for CalMatters.”
-
- Credit CalMatters at the top of the story: At the top of the story’s text, include this copy: “This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters.” If you are republishing commentary, include this copy instead: “This commentary was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters.” If you’re republishing in print, omit the second sentence on newsletter signups.
-
- Do not edit the article, including the headline, except to reflect relative changes in time, location and editorial style. For example, “yesterday” can be changed to “last week,” and “Alameda County” to “Alameda County, California” or “here.”
-
- If you add reporting that would help localize the article, include this copy in your story: “Additional reporting by [Your Publication]” and let us know at republish@calmatters.org.
-
- If you wish to translate the article, please contact us for approval at republish@calmatters.org.
-
- Photos and illustrations by CalMatters staff or shown as “for CalMatters” may only be republished alongside the stories in which they originally appeared. For any other uses, please contact us for approval at visuals@calmatters.org.
-
- Photos and illustrations from wire services like the Associated Press, Reuters, iStock are not free to republish.
-
- Do not sell our stories, and do not sell ads specifically against our stories. Feel free, however, to publish it on a page surrounded by ads you’ve already sold.
-
- Sharing a CalMatters story on social media? Please mention @CalMatters. We’re on X, Facebook, Instagram, TikTok and BlueSky.
If you’d like to regularly republish our stories, we have some other options available. Contact us at republish@calmatters.org if you’re interested.
Have other questions or special requests? Or do you have a great story to share about the impact of one of our stories on your audience? We’d love to hear from you. Contact us at republish@calmatters.org.
Mayor Bass got some of LA’s homeless people indoors. Will it matter to voters?
Share this:
Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass staked her political future on a promise: As a candidate
in 2022, she vowed to make homelessness her top priority and to make dramatic
reductions in the city’s population of unhoused people.
She won the campaign. To deliver on that promise, her first act as mayor was to sign Executive Directive 1, which was intended to streamline the construction of affordable housing and to signal the new administration’s urgency on the issue. She also rolled out Inside Safe, a program that breaks up homeless encampments and offers a safe alternative to those living inside them.
Three years later, as she enters the final year of her first term and embarks on her
campaign for re-election, Bass can point to real achievements in the homeless area, but she
battles a difficult perception problem: What if the number of homeless people in Los Angeles is down but not enough so that most Angelenos feel the problem is being solved?
There is evidence of progress. According to the mayor’s office, Inside Safe has
conducted 117 operations since Bass launched it, and it has brought 5,496 people in
from the streets. Of those, 1,321 have made their way to permanent housing. Others
have found temporary shelter or, sadly, have returned to the streets.
How much progress?
Against a citywide homeless population of more than 40,000 people, those
numbers may seem incremental, but they are helping to reverse years of neglect. The
number of unsheltered homeless people — the focus of Bass’s work — has declined by
17.5% since the mayor took office, according to the county’s annual count.
Austin Beutner, the former Los Angeles Unified School District superintendent who so
far is Bass’s most serious challenger in the mayor’s race, questions the numbers and
claims of progress.
(Disclosure: I worked as a senior editor and columnist for the L.A. Times when Beutner was its publisher in 2014-15.)
Beutner points to a recent study by the RAND Corp. that sounded skeptical about Los Angeles County’s annual homeless count, suggesting it may significantly underestimate the extent of the area’s unhoused population.
The RAND study pointed to a rise in the number of so-called “rough sleepers,” people
who sleep on the street without even a tent or car which, it said, has caused the county’s
annual homeless count to become increasingly inaccurate. That’s in part because rough sleepers are difficult to find and include in official tallies.
RAND attempted to check the county’s numbers by focusing on three areas — Venice,
Hollywood and Skid Row — and comparing its count to the one produced by the Los
Angeles Homeless Services Agency.
READ NEXT
Crime is down and kids are back, but drugs still plague Los Angeles’ MacArthur Park
The results, according to RAND, suggest that LAHSA is missing large numbers of unsheltered people. But even the RAND report noted that the number of people without shelter in its study areas was falling, sometimes dramatically.
In 2024, RAND found, the number of people without housing in its study area dropped by 15%.
In Hollywood, the decline was 49%.
That’s not enough to declare victory against the scourge of homelessness, but it’s
hardly the basis for declaring failure.
Complicating matters further are the relentless facts of politics and the strains they
put on any holder of the LA mayor’s office. No matter how much a mayor sets out to
concentrate on a single issue, life intervenes, throwing up new challenges and
distractions.
In Bass’s case, the past year sent two big ones her way: the wildfires that destroyed
large swaths of the Pacific Palisades, within Bass’s area of responsibility, and Altadena,
outside it. And then there was President Donald Trump’s decision to turn Los Angeles
into the testing ground for his demonization of immigrants and militarization of American
life.
A shifting focus
Either of those could have upended Bass’s focus on homelessness, and it’s true that news
coverage of the mayor has largely moved off the issue that brought her to office.
As she enters her re-election campaign, critics are more likely to focus on her halting reply to
the fires, while supporters point most eagerly to her dogged resistance to Trump.
In political terms, both issues may prove offsetting, as the fires highlighted what some
regard as the mayor’s administrative weaknesses while the Trump assault reminded
voters she has served as a bulwark against a deeply reviled president and his
legion of not-very-bright minions.
As 2026 opens, the Palisades are rebuilding, and the troops dispatched by Trump to put
down non-existent riots have returned to homes and bases.
Homelessness persists.
That then frames a central question of this mayor’s race: Has Bass done enough to
address the shameful reality of a city that boasts extravagant wealth and yet tens of thousands of its people sleep without shelter?
That, too, is politically complicated, in part because measuring the problem is only one
piece of its politics. It may not be enough for Bass to tell voters that they should be
happy with the city’s progress, because the annual count shows the problem slowly
ebbing or because RAND found huge progress in Hollywood.
What really matters is how most people come into contact with homelessness. In that sense, homelessness as a political issue resembles inflation. It does little good for a politician to tell voters that they should be happy with the economy if they’re not.
Joe Biden learned that the hard way, and Trump is busy learning it today. Every
time President Trump dismisses “affordability” as a “hoax” or a Democratic scheme, it backfires with voters who feel pressed by rising prices or stagnant wages.
Hence Trump’s march into the dark abyss of public disapproval.
Similarly, it’s not enough for Bass to insist that fewer people are homeless than were
three years ago, if voters don’t sense that for themselves. If there’s an encampment on
the corner, it hardly matters that there are 49% fewer unhoused men and women in
Hollywood. Homelessness still feels present.
That may turn out to be this campaign’s wildcard. If voters feel that their own
neighborhoods are better, it will land as proof that Bass is making headway and
deserves four more years to complete the work she began with Executive Directive 1.
If not, Beutner or some other candidate may get the chance to finish what she started.
READ NEXT
In L.A. mayor’s race, Karen Bass is vulnerable but she’ll be tough to topple
For many Californians, reducing homelessness comes down to the encampment next door
Jim NewtonCalMatters Contributor
Jim Newton is a veteran journalist, best-selling author and teacher. He worked at the Los Angeles Times for 25 years as a reporter, editor, bureau chief and columnist, covering government and politics.... More by Jim Newton