Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass has ordered flags in Los Angeles to fly at half-staff Thursday in memory of Nate Holden, who represented the 10th District on the City Council for 16 years.
Holden died Wednesday at age 95, his family told Supervisor Janice Hahn.
“Nate Holden leaves behind a legacy of service and strength,” Bass said in a statement. “Throughout his life, he put the South Los Angeles community front and center. As an organizer, I learned from the way he served — always working to ensure vital services were delivered directly to the residents he represented. For decades, he was a trusted advisor.”
Born June 19, 1929, in Macon, Georgia, Holden moved with his mother and brothers to Elizabeth, New Jersey, when he was 10 after his parents separated. He quit high school at age 16, when he enlisted in the Army in 1946, despite being underage. He was deployed to Germany, where he served as a military policeman.
Following his military service, Holden sought to become a draftsman. Holden told the Los Angeles Times one of his teachers purposely gave him a bad grade to discourage him, telling him such a job was out of reach for a Black man.
When he applied for a training program for veterans, he was again denied and told he was wasting his time, that it would never lead to a job.
“I served God and country, I’m gonna get into that training program,” Holden said he told them. “If I don’t get it, I’m gonna go to Washington and knock on that president’s door.”
Holden was finally admitted and studied design and engineering at night while finishing high school. He eventually worked for several aerospace companies, which led him to California.
Holden made his first foray into politics as a member of the left-leaning California Democratic Council. Holden made his first run for office in 1968, challenging then-Rep. Tom Rees, D-Beverly Hills, in a Democratic primary and losing by a more than 3-1 margin.
Then-Assistant Chief Deputy Nate Holden, left, with LA County Supervisor Kenneth Hahn (Courtesy photo)Holden became a member of the staff of LA County Supervisor Kenneth Hahn, and was then elected to the state Senate in 1974. Holden authored and co-authored more than 70 bills that became law in his four years in the Senate, according to his website, nateholden.com.
Holden authored the bill establishing the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday as a state holiday, along with bills outlawing redlining on home mortgages, the Credit Denial Disclosure Act of 1976, increased funding for inner city schools, the creation of Baldwin Hills Regional Park, proliferation and control of liquor stores and property tax relief for senior citizens.
Holden ran for the Democratic nomination to succeed then-Rep. Yvonne Brathwaite Burke, D-Los Angeles, who gave up the 28th Congressional District seat to unsuccessfully run for attorney general in 1978. Holden lost to then-Assemblyman Julian Dixon, D-Culver City, who would go on to hold the seat until his death in 2000.
LA Mayor Tom Bradley, left, the Rev. Jesse Jackson and LA Councilman Nate Holden (Courtesy photo)Holden was elected to the Los Angeles City Council in 1987, serving until 2003, when he was barred from seeking re-election because of term limits.
Holden’s accomplishments as a councilman included a gun buyback program requiring all children’s toy guns be brightly colored so as to not be confused with actual weapons.
“You always knew where Nate stood,” frequent council foe Hal Bernson said on June 25, 2003, two days before Holden’s final council session in office, as fellow council members paid tribute to him. “He always kept his word. … The city is going to be better for his having served.”
Then-Council President, now Sen. Alex Padilla, observed that when “they made Nate Holden, they broke the mold. When he gives his word, you can take it to the bank … I am a better leader because of some of the hoops (Holden) put me through.”
Then-Mayor Jim Hahn used words like “great partner” and “big brother” in describing Holden.
Whether it was intentional or unintentional, Holden often made headlines.
He was sued — unsuccessfully — for alleged sexual harassment of three female staffers, criticized for being entertained by a stripper during a city mission to Korea and fined for exceeding campaign-contribution limits.
He outraged many of his Koreatown constituents in the 10th District when he defended his socializing with scantily clad dancers during the 1991 trip to Seoul by saying: “That’s the way you do official business there.”
He later apologized for the remark.
Holden also made headlines last year when Donald Trump appeared to confuse him with former San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown.
“I call Willie Brown. ‘Donald Trump has problems. He is saying you were in the helicopter ride that required an emergency landing.’ Willie said, ‘No, no.’ So, then he must be talking about me then,” Holden told City News Service.
Holden told CNS that he met Trump at Trump Tower for a trip to Atlantic City, where they were going to tour the Taj Mahal casino.
Holden had been in communication with Trump and his staff regarding a proposal to build the world’s tallest building on the site of the Ambassador Hotel, which was in his district.
He said the pilot reassured everyone on the flight, which included Trump’s late brother, Robert, attorney Harvey Freedman and Barbara Res, Trump’s former executive vice president of construction and development. He also recalled the helicopter shaking and some mechanical issues.
Once it safely landed at an airport in New Jersey, the flight crew began repairing the aircraft. Holden told CNS that they should have used another helicopter, and he felt upset that his life was in jeopardy.
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“Nate Holden was a legend here in Los Angeles,” Supervisor Janice Hahn said in a statement. “He was a lion in the state Senate and a force to be reckoned with on the Los Angeles City Council.
“I learned a lot sitting next to him in the chambers as a new councilmember. He was a valued member of my father’s staff for years and my dad relied on his unique brand of wisdom. I always referred to him as Uncle Nate because to me he was part of the Hahn family.”
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