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CITY BLUES - In the 1939 classic Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, a wide-eyed outsider enters a chamber of seasoned insiders armed with nothing but a stubborn commitment to the truth. In 2026 Los Angeles, that role is being played by City Controller Kenneth Mejia. But instead of a dramatic Senate filibuster, Mejia’s weapons are spreadsheets, geocoded maps, and the unflinching logic of a Certified Public Accountant (CPA).
To some in City Hall, Mejia’s approach is a disruption to the status quo. To the rest of us, the taxpayers who are tired of backroom deals and budgets hidden behind red tape, his friction with the powers-that-be isn’t a bug in the system. It is the system finally doing its job. When the establishment gets uncomfortable, it’s usually because someone finally started asking the questions they don't want to answer.
Friction as a Performance Metric
In L.A. politics, you only try to change the rules of the game when the other person is winning. The current maneuvers by the City Council and the Charter Reform Commission to streamline functions or restrict the Controller’s subpoena power are not about efficiency, they are about containment.
The Controller’s office is designed to be the independent check on the city’s machinery, yet Mejia now faces a modern barrage of legal maneuvers from the City Attorney’s office. These tactics, ranging from blocking access to documents to questioning the scope of performance audits, are clearly designed to keep a professional CPA lens away from the city’s books.
When the City Attorney acts as a legal brake on the Controller, it is the ultimate backhanded compliment. It is a clear signal that the audits are hitting home, uncovering the very things the establishment would prefer to keep hidden. In short: if he weren't finding anything, they wouldn't be trying so hard to stop him.
Sunshine Is The Best Disinfectant
Mejia’s straight talk isn't just political rhetoric; it is backed by the neutrality of mathematics. In recent months, his office has provided the kind of rigorous oversight L.A. has lacked for decades. His CPA lens has brought several critical issues into focus:
Uncovering Fraud: His Fraud, Waste, and Abuse unit recently exposed a vendor that defrauded the city of nearly $500,000 for equipment that was never delivered.
Finding Lost Money: In April 2026, Mejia identified $80 million sitting idle in obscure city special funds, money that could be immediately redirected to housing, transportation, and public works.
A Reality Check on Homelessness: His office revealed that the city failed to spend nearly $473 million of its allocated homelessness budget in 2025, exposing a massive gap between what City Hall promises and what it actually delivers.
Fiscal Accountability: While others offer optimistic generalities, Mejia’s March 2026 Revenue Forecast was a sobering truth-telling moment, warning that current overspending is creating a structural deficit that threatens the city's future.
Elected, Not Appointed: The Voters' Watchdog
The most critical takeaway is this: The Controller is elected, not appointed. Unlike a department head who serves at the pleasure of the Mayor, Mejia answers only to the voters. This independence is what allows him to tell the truth without fear of being fired.
The 2026 push to move the Fraud, Waste, and Abuse unit under City Council control, coinciding with the current Charter Reform Commission deliberations, represents a clear attempt to strip the office of its independent authority. Such actions disenfranchise the voters who demanded a watchdog rather than a cheerleader.
In a city facing a crisis of public trust, we don’t need a politician who plays along. We need an auditor who counts the beans exactly as they are. Kenneth Mejia is treating the City Charter as a mandate, not a suggestion. The louder the establishment protests his work, the more certain we can be that he is doing exactly what we elected him to do.
On June 2nd, the choice belongs to the taxpayers: do we want a partner for City Hall, or a protector of our purse?
Closing Note for the Voter: Keep a close eye on your mailbox starting May 4, 2026, which is the deadline for the county to begin mailing out vote-by-mail ballots. Make sure your voice is heard early!
(Ziggy Kruse Blue and Bob Blue are frequent contributors to CityWatchLA. They can be reached at [email protected])
