/ May 25, 2025
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In the November 2024 California state legislative races, voters in Los Angeles County went to the polls to elect candidates to two dozen Assembly seats.
Results are still trickling in, but we know that at least eight — one-third — of those seats will be won by non-incumbents because the current officeholders in Sacramento aren’t seeking reelection. The initial round of results were composed entirely of vote-by-mail ballots that arrived before Election Day.
LIVE ELECTION RESULTS: See a chart of the latest vote counts
Below is a snapshot of where the races stood after the early round of results from the California Secretary of State’s office. The initial round of results were composed entirely of vote-by-mail ballots that arrived before Election Day. These results are preliminary. The election won’t be certified until early next month.
Results are as of 9:07 p.m. Tuesday. (Percentages are rounded to the nearest whole number.)
District 34: Incumbent Republican Assemblymember Tom Lackey had a solid lead over Democratic challenger Ricardo Ortega, a peer advocate with the Children’s Law Center of California. The two previously went head-to-head during the primary election in what was a two-person race, with both then advancing to the general election. Whoever wins will represent a district that includes parts of L.A., San Bernardino and Kern counties, including communities like Barstow, Palmdale, Lancaster and Needles.
Lackey had about 60%, while Ortega had about 40%.
District 39: Incumbent Democratic Assemblymember Juan Carrillo was leading Republican challenger Paul Marsh. The candidates also faced each other in a two-person race during the primary. A former Palmdale city council member, Carrillo was elected to the Assembly in 2022. Marsh, a member of the Victorville Planning Commission, previously served in the U.S. Army. The winner will represent constituents in L.A. and San Bernardino counties, including residents in Victorville, Palmdale and Lancaster.
Carillo had 58%, while Marsh had 52%.
District 40: Incumbent Democratic Assemblymember Pilar Schiavo pulled ahead of Republican challenger Patrick Gipson, a former L.A. County sheriff’s deputy. Schiavo was first elected to the Assembly in 2022. Gipson, now retired from the county Sheriff’s Department, previously worked as a lifeguard for both the city and county of Los Angeles. The winner will represent Santa Clarita Valley and northwestern San Fernando Valley.
Schiavo had52%. Gipson had 48%.
District 41: Former Altadena City Councilmember Michelle Del Rosario Martinez, a Republican, was ahead of Democrat John Harabedian, former mayor of Sierra Madre. The winner will replace termed-out Democratic Assemblymember Chris Holden. This district represents voters in Pasadena, Altadena, La Cañada Flintridge, Monrovia and Sierra Madre in L.A. County and Rancho Cucamonga, Wrightwood and San Antonio Heights in San Bernardino County.
Del Rosario Martinez had 61%, while Harabedian had 39%.
District 42: Incumbent Assemblymember Jacqui Irwin, a Democrat was leading Republican challenger Ted Nordblum. Irwin was previously mayor of Thousand Oaks and was first elected to the Assembly in 2014. Nordblum is a businessman who started his own medical device business. The winner of this race will represent portions of Ventura and L.A. counties, including Simi Valley, Thousand Oaks, Calabasas and Pacific Palisades.
Irwin had 55% to Nordblum’s 45%.
District 43: San Fernando Mayor Celeste Rodriguez, a Democrat, had an early lead over San Fernando City Councilmember Victoria Garcia, a Republican. The current officeholder of this seat, Democratic Assemblymember Luz Rivas, is running for a U.S. House seat this November. Assembly District 43 represents residents in Pacoima, Mission Hills, Sylmar, Arleta, Sun Valley, Panorama City, Lake View Terrace, Valley Glen, Van Nuys and the city of San Fernando.
Rodriguez had 65% to Garcia’s 35%.
District 44: Burbank Mayor Nick Schultz, a Democrat, was ahead of Republican construction manager Tony Rodriguez. The two beat out six other candidates in the primary to advance to the November runoff election. Whoever wins will represent eastern San Fernando Valley. The current officeholder of this seat, Democratic Assemblymember Laura Friedman, is running for Congress this year.
Schultz had 67%, while Rodriguez had 37%.
District 46: Incumbent Democratic Assemblymember Jesse Gabriel had a strong lead over teacher Tracey Schroeder, a Republican. Gabriel was first elected to the Assembly in 2018. Schroeder ran for a seat on the Los Angeles Unified school board in 2022. The winner of the District 46 race will represent residents in western San Fernando Valley.
Gabriel had 62%, while Schroeder had 38%.
District 48: Incumbent Democratic Assemblymember Blanca Rubio, first elected in 2016, was ahead of Republican real estate business owner Dan Tran. The winner will represent a swath of the San Gabriel Valley including West Covina, Baldwin Park, Glendora, Covina, Azusa, Duarte and Monrovia.
Rubio had 59%. Tran had 41%.
District 49: Incumbent Democratic Assemblymember Mike Fong had a lead over Republican attorney Long “David” Liu. The candidates are vying to represent communities in the San Gabriel Valley including Alhambra, Arcadia, El Monte, Monterey Park, Rosemead, San Gabriel, San Marino, South Pasadena and Temple City.
Fong had 60%, while Liu had 40%.
District 51: Incumbent Democratic Assemblymember Rick Chavez Zbur had a commanding lead over Republican entrepreneur Stephan Hohil. The winner will represent Hollywood, Franklin and Beachwood canyons, West Hollywood, Beverly Hills and Santa Monica.
Zbur had 74%. Hohil had 26%.
District 52: In a Democrat v. Democrat race, women’s rights advocate Jessica Caloza pulled ahead of justice advocate Franky Carrillo. This seat is currently held by Democratic Assemblymember Wendy Carrillo, who did not seek reelection. The winner of this race will represent East Los Angeles including the neighborhoods of Lincoln Heights, Highland Park, Glassell Park, Eagle Rock, Los Feliz, Silver Lake and Echo Park.
Caloza had 68%, while Carrillo had 32%.
District 53: Republican law enforcement educator Nick Wilson was trailing Democrat Michelle Rodriguez, a commissioner for the California Police Officer Standards and Training Commission. The two advanced to the runoff after beating out three other candidates in the primary. The winner will represent parts of L.A. and San Bernardino counties, including Pomona, Ontario, Chino, Upland and Montclair. This Assembly seat is currently held by Democrat Freddie Rodriguez, who is termed out.
Wilson had 42% to Rodriguez’s 58%.
District 54: Mark Gonzalez, district director for Democratic Assemblymember Miguel Santiago, had an early lead over nonprofit executive director John Yi. Both candidates are Democrats seeking to replace Santiago, Gonzalez’s boss, who is termed out. The winner will represent a district that includes L.A.’s Koreatown, Westlake, Chinatown, Little Tokyo and Boyle Heights, as well as the cities of Vernon and Montebello.
Gonzalez had 55%, while Yi had 45%.
District 55: Incumbent Democratic Assemblymember Isaac Bryan had a commanding lead over Republican software developer Keith Cascio. Before his election to state office in 2021, Bryan at one point advised then-L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti. Cascio is chair of the Republican Committee for the 55th District and treasurer of the L.A. County Republican Party. The winner will represent residents in Crenshaw, Culver City, Ladera Heights, Mar Vista, Del Rey, Palms, Pico-Robertson, Beverly Grove and Mid-Wilshire.
Bryan had 81%, while Cascio had 19%.
District 56: Incumbent Democratic Assemblymember Lisa Calderon, who was first elected in 2020, had a solid lead over Whittier City Councilmember Jessica Martinez, a Republican. Calderon was a legislative aide to then-Assembly Speaker Willie Brown early in her career, while Martinez’s time on the Whittier City Council included a stint as mayor pro tem. The winner of this race will represent southeastern parts of L.A. County and San Gabriel Valley, including El Monte, Hacienda Heights, La Habra Heights, La Puente, Pico Rivera and Whittier.
Calderon had 55%, while Martinez had 45%.
District 57: Small business owner Efren Martinez was trailing community organizer and educator Sade Elhawary. The two Democrats beat out three other candidates in the primary to advance to the runoff election. The winner will replace termed out Democratic Assemblymember Reggie Jones-Sawyer. This district represents South Central and Downtown Los Angeles.
Martinez had 61%, while Elhawary had 39%.
District 61: Incumbent Democratic Assemblymember Tina Simone McKinnor had a sizable lead over Republican restaurateur Alfonso Hernandez. The winner will represent Inglewood, Westchester, Lennox, Hawthorne, Westmont and Lawndale.
McKinnor had 77%. Hernandez had 23%.
District 62: Democratic Lynwood Mayor Jose Luis Solache pulled ahead of Republican Paul Jones, a retired Marine. Both candidates hope to be the one to replace termed out Democratic Assemblymember Anthony Rendon. This district represents voters in Bellflower, Huntington Park, Lakewood, Lynwood, Maywood, Paramount, South Gate and Walnut Park.
Solache had 63%. Jones had 37%.
District 64: Incumbent Democratic Assemblymember Blanca Pacheco was leading Raul Ortiz Jr., a Republican minister and business leader. The two are battling it out to represent Southeast L.A. including Bell, Bell Gardens, Cudahy, Downey, East Whittier, La Mirada, Norwalk, Santa Fe Springs, South Whittier and La Habra.
Pacheco had 60%. Ortiz Jr. had 40%.
District 65: Incumbent Democratic Assemblymember Mike Gipson pulled way in front of teacher Lydia Gutiérrez, a Republican. Before being elected to the Assembly in 2014, Gipson served on the Carson City Council. Gutiérrez has served on the Coastal San Pedro Neighborhood Council. The winner will represent a district that stretches from the Port of Los Angeles up to Compton and includes parts of Carson and Long Beach.
Gipson had72%, while Gutiérrez had 28%.
District 66: Democratic Assemblymember Al Muratsuchi had an early lead over former Hermosa Beach Mayor George Barks, a Republican. The two also ran against each other in 2022. Muratsuchi was first elected to the Assembly in 2012, lost his bid for reelection in 2014, but then was reelected in 2016. Barks, a small business owner, served on the Hermosa Beach City Council from 1974 to 1986. Whoever wins will represent most of the South Bay.
Muratsuchi had 60%. Barks had 40.
District 67: Incumbent Democratic Assemblymember Sharon Quirk-Silva was leading retired entrepreneur Beth Culver, a Republican. Whoever wins will represent Cerritos in L.A. County as well as the Orange County cities of Brea, Fullerton and Buena Park.
Quirk-Silva had 59%, while Culver had 41%.
District 69: Incumbent Democratic Assemblymember Josh Lowenthal had a sizable lead over Republican Joshua Rodriguez, a police officer. The winner will represent parts of southern L.A. County including Avalon, Carson and Long Beach.
Lowenthal had 67%, while Rodriguez had 37%.
Originally Published:
In the November 2024 California state legislative races, voters in Los Angeles County went to the polls to elect candidates to two dozen Assembly seats.
Results are still trickling in, but we know that at least eight — one-third — of those seats will be won by non-incumbents because the current officeholders in Sacramento aren’t seeking reelection. The initial round of results were composed entirely of vote-by-mail ballots that arrived before Election Day.
LIVE ELECTION RESULTS: See a chart of the latest vote counts
Below is a snapshot of where the races stood after the early round of results from the California Secretary of State’s office. The initial round of results were composed entirely of vote-by-mail ballots that arrived before Election Day. These results are preliminary. The election won’t be certified until early next month.
Results are as of 9:07 p.m. Tuesday. (Percentages are rounded to the nearest whole number.)
District 34: Incumbent Republican Assemblymember Tom Lackey had a solid lead over Democratic challenger Ricardo Ortega, a peer advocate with the Children’s Law Center of California. The two previously went head-to-head during the primary election in what was a two-person race, with both then advancing to the general election. Whoever wins will represent a district that includes parts of L.A., San Bernardino and Kern counties, including communities like Barstow, Palmdale, Lancaster and Needles.
Lackey had about 60%, while Ortega had about 40%.
District 39: Incumbent Democratic Assemblymember Juan Carrillo was leading Republican challenger Paul Marsh. The candidates also faced each other in a two-person race during the primary. A former Palmdale city council member, Carrillo was elected to the Assembly in 2022. Marsh, a member of the Victorville Planning Commission, previously served in the U.S. Army. The winner will represent constituents in L.A. and San Bernardino counties, including residents in Victorville, Palmdale and Lancaster.
Carillo had 58%, while Marsh had 52%.
District 40: Incumbent Democratic Assemblymember Pilar Schiavo pulled ahead of Republican challenger Patrick Gipson, a former L.A. County sheriff’s deputy. Schiavo was first elected to the Assembly in 2022. Gipson, now retired from the county Sheriff’s Department, previously worked as a lifeguard for both the city and county of Los Angeles. The winner will represent Santa Clarita Valley and northwestern San Fernando Valley.
Schiavo had52%. Gipson had 48%.
District 41: Former Altadena City Councilmember Michelle Del Rosario Martinez, a Republican, was ahead of Democrat John Harabedian, former mayor of Sierra Madre. The winner will replace termed-out Democratic Assemblymember Chris Holden. This district represents voters in Pasadena, Altadena, La Cañada Flintridge, Monrovia and Sierra Madre in L.A. County and Rancho Cucamonga, Wrightwood and San Antonio Heights in San Bernardino County.
Del Rosario Martinez had 61%, while Harabedian had 39%.
District 42: Incumbent Assemblymember Jacqui Irwin, a Democrat was leading Republican challenger Ted Nordblum. Irwin was previously mayor of Thousand Oaks and was first elected to the Assembly in 2014. Nordblum is a businessman who started his own medical device business. The winner of this race will represent portions of Ventura and L.A. counties, including Simi Valley, Thousand Oaks, Calabasas and Pacific Palisades.
Irwin had 55% to Nordblum’s 45%.
District 43: San Fernando Mayor Celeste Rodriguez, a Democrat, had an early lead over San Fernando City Councilmember Victoria Garcia, a Republican. The current officeholder of this seat, Democratic Assemblymember Luz Rivas, is running for a U.S. House seat this November. Assembly District 43 represents residents in Pacoima, Mission Hills, Sylmar, Arleta, Sun Valley, Panorama City, Lake View Terrace, Valley Glen, Van Nuys and the city of San Fernando.
Rodriguez had 65% to Garcia’s 35%.
District 44: Burbank Mayor Nick Schultz, a Democrat, was ahead of Republican construction manager Tony Rodriguez. The two beat out six other candidates in the primary to advance to the November runoff election. Whoever wins will represent eastern San Fernando Valley. The current officeholder of this seat, Democratic Assemblymember Laura Friedman, is running for Congress this year.
Schultz had 67%, while Rodriguez had 37%.
District 46: Incumbent Democratic Assemblymember Jesse Gabriel had a strong lead over teacher Tracey Schroeder, a Republican. Gabriel was first elected to the Assembly in 2018. Schroeder ran for a seat on the Los Angeles Unified school board in 2022. The winner of the District 46 race will represent residents in western San Fernando Valley.
Gabriel had 62%, while Schroeder had 38%.
District 48: Incumbent Democratic Assemblymember Blanca Rubio, first elected in 2016, was ahead of Republican real estate business owner Dan Tran. The winner will represent a swath of the San Gabriel Valley including West Covina, Baldwin Park, Glendora, Covina, Azusa, Duarte and Monrovia.
Rubio had 59%. Tran had 41%.
District 49: Incumbent Democratic Assemblymember Mike Fong had a lead over Republican attorney Long “David” Liu. The candidates are vying to represent communities in the San Gabriel Valley including Alhambra, Arcadia, El Monte, Monterey Park, Rosemead, San Gabriel, San Marino, South Pasadena and Temple City.
Fong had 60%, while Liu had 40%.
District 51: Incumbent Democratic Assemblymember Rick Chavez Zbur had a commanding lead over Republican entrepreneur Stephan Hohil. The winner will represent Hollywood, Franklin and Beachwood canyons, West Hollywood, Beverly Hills and Santa Monica.
Zbur had 74%. Hohil had 26%.
District 52: In a Democrat v. Democrat race, women’s rights advocate Jessica Caloza pulled ahead of justice advocate Franky Carrillo. This seat is currently held by Democratic Assemblymember Wendy Carrillo, who did not seek reelection. The winner of this race will represent East Los Angeles including the neighborhoods of Lincoln Heights, Highland Park, Glassell Park, Eagle Rock, Los Feliz, Silver Lake and Echo Park.
Caloza had 68%, while Carrillo had 32%.
District 53: Republican law enforcement educator Nick Wilson was trailing Democrat Michelle Rodriguez, a commissioner for the California Police Officer Standards and Training Commission. The two advanced to the runoff after beating out three other candidates in the primary. The winner will represent parts of L.A. and San Bernardino counties, including Pomona, Ontario, Chino, Upland and Montclair. This Assembly seat is currently held by Democrat Freddie Rodriguez, who is termed out.
Wilson had 42% to Rodriguez’s 58%.
District 54: Mark Gonzalez, district director for Democratic Assemblymember Miguel Santiago, had an early lead over nonprofit executive director John Yi. Both candidates are Democrats seeking to replace Santiago, Gonzalez’s boss, who is termed out. The winner will represent a district that includes L.A.’s Koreatown, Westlake, Chinatown, Little Tokyo and Boyle Heights, as well as the cities of Vernon and Montebello.
Gonzalez had 55%, while Yi had 45%.
District 55: Incumbent Democratic Assemblymember Isaac Bryan had a commanding lead over Republican software developer Keith Cascio. Before his election to state office in 2021, Bryan at one point advised then-L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti. Cascio is chair of the Republican Committee for the 55th District and treasurer of the L.A. County Republican Party. The winner will represent residents in Crenshaw, Culver City, Ladera Heights, Mar Vista, Del Rey, Palms, Pico-Robertson, Beverly Grove and Mid-Wilshire.
Bryan had 81%, while Cascio had 19%.
District 56: Incumbent Democratic Assemblymember Lisa Calderon, who was first elected in 2020, had a solid lead over Whittier City Councilmember Jessica Martinez, a Republican. Calderon was a legislative aide to then-Assembly Speaker Willie Brown early in her career, while Martinez’s time on the Whittier City Council included a stint as mayor pro tem. The winner of this race will represent southeastern parts of L.A. County and San Gabriel Valley, including El Monte, Hacienda Heights, La Habra Heights, La Puente, Pico Rivera and Whittier.
Calderon had 55%, while Martinez had 45%.
District 57: Small business owner Efren Martinez was trailing community organizer and educator Sade Elhawary. The two Democrats beat out three other candidates in the primary to advance to the runoff election. The winner will replace termed out Democratic Assemblymember Reggie Jones-Sawyer. This district represents South Central and Downtown Los Angeles.
Martinez had 61%, while Elhawary had 39%.
District 61: Incumbent Democratic Assemblymember Tina Simone McKinnor had a sizable lead over Republican restaurateur Alfonso Hernandez. The winner will represent Inglewood, Westchester, Lennox, Hawthorne, Westmont and Lawndale.
McKinnor had 77%. Hernandez had 23%.
District 62: Democratic Lynwood Mayor Jose Luis Solache pulled ahead of Republican Paul Jones, a retired Marine. Both candidates hope to be the one to replace termed out Democratic Assemblymember Anthony Rendon. This district represents voters in Bellflower, Huntington Park, Lakewood, Lynwood, Maywood, Paramount, South Gate and Walnut Park.
Solache had 63%. Jones had 37%.
District 64: Incumbent Democratic Assemblymember Blanca Pacheco was leading Raul Ortiz Jr., a Republican minister and business leader. The two are battling it out to represent Southeast L.A. including Bell, Bell Gardens, Cudahy, Downey, East Whittier, La Mirada, Norwalk, Santa Fe Springs, South Whittier and La Habra.
Pacheco had 60%. Ortiz Jr. had 40%.
District 65: Incumbent Democratic Assemblymember Mike Gipson pulled way in front of teacher Lydia Gutiérrez, a Republican. Before being elected to the Assembly in 2014, Gipson served on the Carson City Council. Gutiérrez has served on the Coastal San Pedro Neighborhood Council. The winner will represent a district that stretches from the Port of Los Angeles up to Compton and includes parts of Carson and Long Beach.
Gipson had72%, while Gutiérrez had 28%.
District 66: Democratic Assemblymember Al Muratsuchi had an early lead over former Hermosa Beach Mayor George Barks, a Republican. The two also ran against each other in 2022. Muratsuchi was first elected to the Assembly in 2012, lost his bid for reelection in 2014, but then was reelected in 2016. Barks, a small business owner, served on the Hermosa Beach City Council from 1974 to 1986. Whoever wins will represent most of the South Bay.
Muratsuchi had 60%. Barks had 40.
District 67: Incumbent Democratic Assemblymember Sharon Quirk-Silva was leading retired entrepreneur Beth Culver, a Republican. Whoever wins will represent Cerritos in L.A. County as well as the Orange County cities of Brea, Fullerton and Buena Park.
Quirk-Silva had 59%, while Culver had 41%.
District 69: Incumbent Democratic Assemblymember Josh Lowenthal had a sizable lead over Republican Joshua Rodriguez, a police officer. The winner will represent parts of southern L.A. County including Avalon, Carson and Long Beach.
Lowenthal had 67%, while Rodriguez had 37%.
Originally Published:
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It is a long established fact that a reader will be distracted by the readable content of a page when looking at its layout. The point of using Lorem Ipsum is that it has a more-or-less normal distribution of letters, as opposed to using ‘Content here, content here’, making it look like readable English. Many desktop publishing packages and web page editors now use Lorem Ipsum as their default model text, and a search for ‘lorem ipsum’ will uncover many web sites still in their infancy.
The point of using Lorem Ipsum is that it has a more-or-less normal distribution of letters, as opposed to using ‘Content here, content here’, making
The point of using Lorem Ipsum is that it has a more-or-less normal distribution of letters, as opposed to using ‘Content here, content here’, making it look like readable English. Many desktop publishing packages and web page editors now use Lorem Ipsum as their default model text, and a search for ‘lorem ipsum’ will uncover many web sites still in their infancy.
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