District Attorney George Gascón will face 11 challengers in the March 5 primary election, including five members of his office and two Los Angeles County Superior Court judges.
The field includes Eric Siddall, a violent crimes prosecutor who has been endorsed by the Association for Deputy District Attorneys, the union representing deputy district attorneys; Maria Ramirez, the head deputy district attorney; supervising district attorney John McKinney; and fellow prosecutors Jonathan Hatami and Lloyd “Bobcat” Masson, according to the final list of
qualified candidates released Saturday by the Los Angeles County Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk.
Nathan Hochman, a former U.S. assistant attorney general who was the Republican candidate for state attorney general in the 2022 general election; Jeff Chemerinsky, an assistant U.S. attorney; and criminal defense attorney Dan Kapelovitz are among the other candidates.
Los Angeles County Superior Court judges Debra Archuleta and Craig J. Mitchell have also qualified for the ballot. Under the California Constitution, judges are eligible to run for office as long as they take a leave of absence without pay, Rob Oftring, the communications director of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County told City News Service.
David S. Milton, who retired as a Superior Court judge March 25, 2014, will also appear on the ballot.
Gascón has been under fire since taking office in December 2020, when he issued a series of directives critics have blasted as being soft on crime. The directives include a rule against seeking the death penalty, a ban on transferring juvenile defendants to adult court and prohibitions on filing sentencing enhancements in most cases.
“This campaign is not about me, this is a community movement,” Gascón said Nov. 21 as he began his campaign for a second term. “This is about looking at the criminal justice system of the 21st century not with a rearview mirror but looking forward.”
If, as expected, no candidate receives a majority, the top two finishers will meet in a runoff Nov. 5, like all nonpartisan races on the primary ballot.
The March 5 primary also includes races for three seats on the county Board of Supervisors.
Supervisor Kathryn Barger has drawn four challengers in her bid for a third and final term to represent the Fifth District, including Assemblyman Chris Holden, D-Pasadena, and Burbank Mayor Konstantine Anthony.
Perry Goldberg, who listed “nonprofit leader/entrepreneur” as his occupation, and Marlon Marroquin, who did not list an occupation, are also Running.
Former Los Angeles County Sheriff Alex Villanueva and Rancho Palos Verdes Mayor John M. Cruikshank are running against Fourth District Supervisor Janice Hahn, who is also seeking her third and final term.
Supervisor Holly Mitchell has drawn three challengers in her bid for a second term representing the Second District — educator Daphne D. Bradford, CEO/nonprofit director Clint D. Carlton and CEO Katrina Williams.
The March 5 ballot will also include primaries for president, all of California’s 52 congressional seats, 20 of the 40 state Senate seats and all 80 seats in the Assembly.
It will also include several Long Beach City Council races.