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Maggy Krell (Democratic), California deputy attorney general and former chief legal counsel for Planned Parenthood California [49] Kevin Olmar Martinez (Peace and Freedom), union representative [50] Carlos Marquez (Democratic), LGBTQ and civil rights lobbyist [51] Evan Minton (Democratic), nonprofit policy director [52]
The 2024 California Democratic presidential primary took place on March 5, 2024, as part of the Democratic Party primaries for the 2024 presidential election. 497 delegates to the Democratic National Convention were allocated to presidential candidates. [1] The contest was held on Super Tuesday alongside primaries in 14 other states and ...
Michael Bennet, Colorado (2009–present), 2020 candidate for the Democratic nomination for president [3] Richard Blumenthal, Connecticut (2011–present) [4] Cory Booker, New Jersey (2013–present), 2020 candidate for the Democratic nomination for president [5] Sherrod Brown, Ohio (2007–present) [6] Laphonza Butler, California (2023 ...
In California's 53rd Assembly District, incumbent Democrat Freddie Rodriguez must leave the Legislature due to term limits and is now running for mayor of Pomona, his hometown.
California has spent billions of dollars to alleviate homelessness, yet more than 100,000 people sleep on the street and a majority of Californians view homelessness as a big problem in their part ...
The primary results marked the second time since California transitioned to a nonpartisan blanket primary system in 2012 in which there was a second-place tie in a primary election and a potential three-candidate general election, the first being the 2016 election for California's 62nd State Assembly district.
Of California’s 496 representatives to the convention, 424 were pledged to support Biden, but are able to vote for anyone they want to now that he has decided to leave the race.
The most populous state in the union, California is considered a strong blue state, having voted Democratic in every presidential election since 1992. In these contests, it has supported Democratic candidates by double digits in each of them except for 2004, when John Kerry won it by 9.95 points.