United States | Black and blue

Leaked audio from LA’s city council holds a warning for Democrats

A crude discussion recalls the history of fraught racial politics in the city

Los Angeles, CA - October 04: Councilman Kevin de León, left, and Los Angeles City Council President Nury Martinez confer at city council meeting on Tuesday, Oct. 4, 2022 in Los Angeles, CA. (Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
|Los Angeles

IT IS ONE thing to think that politicians probably behave differently behind closed doors. It is quite another to hear the crude strategy deployed by America’s power brokers to get what they want. Sound from one such smoke-filled room was unearthed this week. A leaked recording revealed three Hispanic Los Angeles City Council members and a labour leader making racist and disparaging remarks about African-Americans, Jews, Armenians and indigenous people as they discussed local redistricting efforts. Nury Martinez, who was City Council president at the time, was the ringleader. At one point she refers to the black son of a fellow council member as a “changuito”, or little monkey.

This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Black and blue”

The world China wants

From the October 15th 2022 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from United States

Incoming "border czar" and former acting U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement director Tom Homan speaks during a visit to Camp Eagle, Eagle Pass, Texas, USA.

Tom Homan, unleashed

America’s new border tsar spent decades waiting for a president like Donald Trump

Voters in North Carolina

An unfinished election may shape a swing state’s future

A Supreme Court race ended very close. Then the lawyers arrived.


Migrants from Mexico and Guatemala are apprehended by U.S. Customs and Border Patrol officers after crossing a section of border wall into the U.S.

Donald Trump cries “invasion” to justify an immigration crackdown

His executive orders range from benign to belligerent


To end birthright citizenship, Donald Trump misreads the constitution

A change would also create huge practical problems

Ross Ulbricht, pardoned by Donald Trump, was a pioneer of crypto-crime

His dark website, the Silk Road, was to crime what Napster was to music

Two presidents compete over the worst abuse of the pardon power

Donald Trump and Joe Biden have both made indefensible decisions