Rep. Karen Bass, who has represented Los Angeles at the state level and in Congress, will be the first woman and the second Black person to serve as the city’s mayor, with the Associated Press projecting her Wednesday to outlast developer Rick Caruso, who quickly conceded defeat.

Caruso spent more than $100 million on his campaign — much of it from his own fortune — to propel him into contention. Caruso held the lead in the vote count after Election Day, but as updates slowly trickled in over the next week, Bass surpassed him and then gradually extended her lead.

“The results are in, and it is the honor of my life to be elected as your mayor,” Bass wrote in an email to supporters. “Angelenos came together, across every neighborhood and all walks of life, to be heard — and I hear you.”

She added: “Now, it’s time to get to work and move our city in a new direction. It’s time to house people immediately, increase safety and opportunity in every neighborhood, and create a new standard of ethics and accountability at City Hall.”

Caruso, in a statement, said the voters had spoken, but he was proud of his campaign.

“There will be more to come from the movement we built, but for now, as a city we need to unite around Mayor-elect Bass and give her the support she needs to tackle the many issues we face,” Caruso said. “Congratulations, Karen, and God-speed.”

Caruso made reference to what was at times a contentious race between the two candidates.

“And although at times, we’ve been disheartened by the nature of politics, the baseless, untrue attacks in search of victory, not values — more than anything, my family and I are inspired by the good, decent, hard-working people of Los Angeles,” Caruso said.

According to updated vote totals released Wednesday from last week’s election, Bass led Caruso by more than 46,500 votes, opening up a 53% to 47% advantage. The last six vote-counting updates after Election Day have all resulted in gains for Bass.

“This victory sends a clear message about the kind of Los Angeles we want and see for ourselves,” said Mark Gonzalez, chair of the Los Angeles County Democratic Party. “We’ve always said this race is about the soul of Los Angeles and voters clearly spoke up to reject an attempt to buy this race.”

The race tightened in the weeks before Election Day, with Caruso closing the gap in several polls after trailing by as many as double-digits among likely voters as late as October, according to a Los Angeles Times/UC Berkeley Institute of Governmental Studies poll. Heading into Election Day, several experts described Bass as the favorite, though they were uncertain how much Caruso’s spending would sway the race.

But Bass, who positioned herself as the authentic, pro-abortion rights Democrat in the race, won over an electorate that experts said favored her. Caruso was a Republican until 2019 and donated to anti-abortion politicians, allowing Bass to contrast herself as a “lifelong, pro-choice Democrat” in a city that leans heavily Democratic.

“Sometimes I feel like I can’t love the city any more than I do, and then the people show up and do this!” Councilman Marqueece Harris-Dawson wrote on Twitter. “Congratulations Mayor Bass!”

City Attorney Mike Feuer said: “Another glass ceiling, another first, another historic turn. Congratulations to my longtime friend and colleague on this hard-fought victory. What a spectacular moment for the City of Los Angeles!”

Bass was also endorsed by nearly every major figure in the Democratic Party, including President Joe Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Barack Obama.

“People do vote the party line now more than ever, in this very hyper-polarized state we’re in,” Mindy Romero, director of USC’s Center for Inclusive Democracy, said to City News Service.

Romero added that Bass’ mainstream endorsements, name recognition and lengthy history in Los Angeles made a difference.

Fernando Guerra, professor of political science at Loyola Marymount University, called Bass the “establishment” candidate. Voters did not take a chance on Caruso, who has never held elected office.

“She represents what L.A. aspires to be,” Guerra said to CNS. “She was able to keep the L.A. coalition together. She was able to keep the optimism that we can continue to be who we think we are and we want to be.”

Bass inherits leadership of a city grappling with a scandal that has embroiled City Hall for the past month, after three council members and a top county labor official took part in a recorded conversation in October 2021 that included racist comments and attempts to manipulate redistricting.

Combined with concerns over homelessness, crime, quality of life and cost of living, “people are just the most pessimistic I’ve seen Angelenos in basically a decade and a half — since the Great Recession,” according to Guerra.

Bass, 69, grew up in the midst of the Civil Rights Movement with three brothers in the Venice and Fairfax neighborhoods. She was drawn to community activism after watching the movement on television, volunteering for Robert F. Kennedy’s presidential campaign when she was 14.

Her organizing career began in 1990, when she founded Community Coalition, a South Los Angeles social justice group in response to the crack cocaine crisis.

In 2004, Bass was the only Black woman in the state Legislature when she was elected to the state Assembly. Four years later, she became the first Black woman to lead the chamber. Bass was elected to the House of Representatives in 2010.

Bass was considered by Biden to serve as his running mate when he was running for the presidency in 2020, a position that eventually went to Harris.

“From her activist days on the ground leading the Community Coalition from a storefront in South LA, to making waves in Sacramento and Washington D.C.,” said Councilman Curren Price, the council’s president pro tempore. “Whether fighting to protect the rights of women, children and families, immigrants, students, businesses, workers or veterans, she has raised her powerful voice on behalf of our most vulnerable populations and has earned this historical title.”

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