Elections Ryu was one of over a dozen candidates to replace Councilmember
Tom LaBonge, who was
term-limited. Ryu and Carolyn Ramsay advanced past the March 2015 primary. Ryu defeated Ramsay in the
general election, on May 19, 2015. He was ceremonially sworn in June 29, 2015, and took office on July 1. In the March 3, 2020 primary, Ryu faced
urban planner Nithya Raman and
screenwriter Sarah Kate Levy. Ryu received 32,298 votes (44.4%), Raman received 31,502 votes (40.8%), and Sarah Kate Levy received 10,860 votes (14.1%). Because no candidate received over fifty percent of the vote, Raman and Ryu advanced to the
runoff election, scheduled for November 3, 2020. In the November 2020 runoff election, Raman defeated Ryu by a 52.87% to 47.13% margin.
Developer campaign contributions In November 2019, the
Los Angeles Times reported that despite a
campaign pledge not to take money from
real estate developers, Ryu's campaign accepted campaign contributions from multiple developers. His campaign later said that it would return some of the donations.
Los Feliz Ledger ethics complaint In August 2020, the
Los Feliz Ledger filed an
ethics complaint with the
Los Angeles City Ethics Commission after Ryu's campaign office sent an email to 30,000 voters with an allegedly misleading "From:" field. The complaint indicated that the email's "from" field implied that the email was sent by the
Ledger itself. The campaign declined to issue a correction.
Tenure Eric Garcetti speaking at Ryu's inauguration in 2015 In 2016, Ryu, in partnership with the County of Los Angeles and the
Los Angeles Unified School District, supported the development of a children's
savings account program for Los Angeles called "Opportunity LA." In January 2017, Ryu, along with Councilmembers
Joe Buscaino and
Paul Krekorian, introduced a motion to ban contributions to city elected officials and candidates for city office from developers and their principals with development projects currently or recently before the city, as well as increase matching funds to 6:1 in primary and general elections. In December 2019, the law passed with a unanimous vote from the city council. Critics of the measure argued that the final language contained
loopholes, with groups such as the California Clean Money Campaign and California Common Cause arguing that passing it would be "worse than not passing anything at all." In 2018, Ryu pushed the
Los Angeles Police Department to make annual
hate crime data open to the public, and for more proactive
legislation to protect marginalized communities in Los Angeles. During Ryu's tenure and with his support, a 100-bed Bridge Housing shelter opened in Los Feliz in July 2020 as part of Mayor Eric Garcetti's "A Bridge Home" program. In 2015, David Ryu joined wildlife activists to preserve a 17-acre wildlife corridor in
Laurel Canyon, pledging to match dollar-for-dollar the money raised by
activists with city funds earmarked for parks and green space. The $1.6 million purchase was finalized in 2017 and is now managed by the Mountains Recreation & Conservation Authority. In 2019, Ryu helped to secure full funding for the Los Angeles LGBT Center's senior center. Following a protest on May 30, 2020, in the
Fairfax district just outside of Council District Four, where Los Angeles police officers were filmed clashing violently with
protestors, Ryu and council member
Curren Price introduced
legislation requesting a "thorough review" of police tactics used by LAPD as well as all complaints filed against LAPD for their use of force during the protest. Ryu also co-introduced legislation to establish an Office of Violence Prevention in Los Angeles to dispatch public health workers to certain situations rather than uniformed police officers.
COVID-19 pandemic In the early days of the 2020
COVID-19 pandemic, Ryu negotiated a $1.25 million international deal to bring
COVID-19 tests to Los Angeles from South Korean company Seegene, when the United States faced a national testing shortage. Ryu authored a ban on storage unit evictions during the pandemic, which was passed into law with an urgency clause in June 2020. The law protects storage unit leasees from losing their belongings even if they can't make monthly payments during the pandemic. In April 2020, Ryu and other councilmembers proposed a rent increase freeze on LA's rent-stabilized units. The freeze was passed into law, but a broader rent freeze on all LA apartments was narrowly voted down. ==References==