2017 Los Angeles elections

Last updated

2017 Los Angeles election
Flag of Los Angeles, California.svg
  2015 March 7, 2017
May 16, 2017
2019 (special)  

8 out of 15 seats in the City Council
8 seats needed for a majority
 Majority partyMinority party
 
Party Democratic Republican
Seats before141
Seats won80
Seats after141
Seat changeSteady2.svgSteady2.svg

The 2017 Los Angeles elections were held on March 7, 2017, in Los Angeles, California. Voters elected candidates in a nonpartisan primary, with runoff elections scheduled for May 16, 2017. Eight of the fifteen seats in the City Council were up for election, as well as the offices of Mayor, City Attorney and City Controller. Four ballot measures were also on the ballot.

Contents

Municipal elections in California are officially nonpartisan; candidates' party affiliations do not appear on the ballot.

Mayor

2017 Los Angeles mayoral election
Flag of Los Angeles, California.svg
  2013 March 7, 2017 2022  
Turnout20.1%
  Eric Garcetti in Suit and Tie (1).jpg
Candidate Eric Garcetti Mitchell Schwartz
First round331,310
81.37%
33,228
8.16%

Mayor before election

Eric Garcetti

Elected Mayor

Eric Garcetti

2017 Los Angeles mayoral election [1]
Primary election
CandidateVotes %
Eric Garcetti (incumbent)331,31081.37
Mitchell J. Schwartz33,2288.16
David Hernandez13,3463.28
Diane Harman5,1151.26
David Saltsburg4,8091.18
Dennis Richter4,5581.12
YJ Draiman3,7050.91
Frantz Pierre3,3860.83
Eric Preven3,0230.74
Yuval Kremer2,4360.60
Paul E. Amori2,2310.55
Total votes407,147 100.00

City Attorney

2017 Los Angeles City Attorney election
Flag of Los Angeles, California.svg
  2013 March 7, 2017 2022  
  Los Angeles City Attorney Mike Feuer speaks at South L.A. rally to end gun violence.jpg
Candidate Mike Feuer
First round306,867
100.00%

City Attorney before election

Mike Feuer

City Attorney

Mike Feuer

2017 Los Angeles City Attorney election [1]
Primary election
CandidateVotes %
Mike Feuer (incumbent)306,867100.00
Total votes306,867 100.00

City Controller

2017 Los Angeles City Controller election
Flag of Los Angeles, California.svg
  2013 March 7, 2017 2022  
  Ron Galperin Profile Pic.jpg
Candidate Ron Galperin
First round291,321
100.00%

City Controller before election

Ron Galperin

City Controller

Ron Galperin

2017 Los Angeles City Controller election [1]
Primary election
CandidateVotes %
Ron Galperin (incumbent)291,321100.00
Total votes291,321 100.00

City Council

District 1

2017 Los Angeles's 1st City Council district election
Flag of Los Angeles, California.svg
  2013 March 7, 2017 and May 16, 2017 2022  
  Gil Cedillo 2014 front (cropped).jpg Joe Bray-Ali, 2016.jpg Giovany Hernandez, 2017.jpg
Candidate Gil Cedillo Joe Bray-AliGiovany Hernandez
First round10,396
49.34%
8,000
37.97%
1,798
8.53%
Runoff 11,415
71.63%
4,521
28.37%
Eliminated

City Councilmember before election

Gil Cedillo

City Councilmember

Gil Cedillo

The 1st district covered mostly Northeast Los Angeles, including MacArthur Park, Koreatown, Mount Washington and Cypress Park. The incumbent was Gil Cedillo, who was first elected in 2013 and was seeking a second term. [2] Cedillo nearly won election outright in the primary, but support for community activist and former bike store owner Joe Bray-Ali forced him into a runoff. [3]

Bray-Ali's campaign collapsed after a series of scandals involving him surfaced. [4] In April 2017, it was revealed by LAist that Bray-Ali had made racist, fat shaming, and transphobic comments Voat, which prompted councilmember Mitch O'Farrell and the Los Angeles Times to pull their endorsements. [5] Despite calls on Bray-Ali to drop out, he refused to do so and apologized for the comments. [6] [7] Bray-Ali also admitted to having extramarital affairs and failing to pay taxes. [8]

In the runoff election, Cedillo defeated Bray-Ali in a landslide. [9]

Candidates

  • Gil Cedillo, incumbent councilor [10]
  • Joe Bray-Ali, cycling activist [10]
  • Giovanny Hernandez, community organizer [10]
  • Jesse Rosas, resident [10]
  • Luca Barton (write-in) [10]

Endorsements

Joe Bray-Ali

City Councilmembers

Newspapers and other media

Results

2017 Los Angeles's 1st City Council district election
Primary election
CandidateVotes %
Gil Cedillo (incumbent)10,39649.34
Joe Bray-Ali8,00037.97
Giovany Hernandez1,7988.53
Jesse Rosas8754.15
Luca Barton (write-in)280.13
Total votes21,097 100.00
General election
Gil Cedillo (incumbent)11,41571.63
Joe Bray-Ali4,52128.37
Total votes15,936 100.00

District 3

2017 Los Angeles's 3rd City Council district election
Flag of Los Angeles, California.svg
  2013 March 7, 2017 2022  
  Bob Blumenfield.jpg
Candidate Bob Blumenfield
First round19,063
100.00%

City Councilmember before election

Bob Blumenfield

City Council member

Bob Blumenfield

The 3rd district encompassed southwestern San Fernando Valley neighborhoods of Los Angeles, including Canoga Park, Reseda, Tarzana, Winnetka, and Woodland Hills. The incumbent was Bob Blumenfield, who was elected in 2013 and was seeking a second term. He ran unopposed and won election outright in the primary.

Results

2017 Los Angeles's 3rd City Council district election
Primary election
CandidateVotes %
Bob Blumenfield (incumbent)19,063100.00
Total votes19,063 100.00

District 5

2017 Los Angeles's 5th City Council district election
Flag of Los Angeles, California.svg
  2013
2022  
  Los Angeles City Councilmember Paul Koretz (cropped).jpg 3x4.svg
Candidate Paul Koretz Jesse Max Creed
First round25,914
65.88%
11,986
30.47%

City Council before election

Paul Koretz

City Council

Paul Koretz

The 5th district covered most of the Mid-City West region, including Bel Air, Beverly Crest, Beverly Grove, Beverlywood, Carthay Circle, Century City, Cheviot Hills, Fairfax District, Holmby Hills, Melrose, Palms, Pico-Robertson, Westwood, Westside Village, and Encino.

The incumbent was Paul Koretz, who was first elected in 2009 and was seeking a third term. Koretz was re-elected over Jesse Max Creed and Mark Matthew Herd by a landslide.

Candidates

Results

2017 Los Angeles's 5th City Council district election
Primary election
CandidateVotes %
Paul Koretz (incumbent)25,91465.88
Jesse Max Creed11,98630.47
Mark Matthew Herd 1,4353.65
Total votes39,335 100.00

District 7

2017 Los Angeles's 7th City Council district election
Flag of Los Angeles, California.svg
  2013 March 7, 2017 and May 16, 2017 2022  
  Monica Rodriguez, 2019.jpg Karo Torossian, 2017.jpg 3x4.svg
Candidate Monica Rodriguez Karo TorossianMónica Ratliff
First round6,091
27.82%
3,603
16.46%
3,104
14.18%
Runoff 9,588
53.64%
8,287
46.36%
Eliminated

 
CandidateArthur MinerDale GibsonVenessa Martinez
First round1,775
8.11%
1,351
6.17%
1,160
5.30%
Runoff EliminatedEliminatedEliminated

City Council before election

Vacant

City Council

Monica Rodriguez

The 7th district covered Northern Los Angeles, including Sunland-Tujunga, Lake View Terrace, Pacoima and Shadow Hills. The district was the only open seat due to the resignation of Felipe Fuentes on September 11, 2016, in order to start working as a lobbyist. Former Los Angeles Board of Public Works Commissioner Monica Rodriguez and City Council staffer Karo Torossian advanced to the runoff. [14] In the runoff election, Rodriguez defeated Torossian by seven points with the help of labor spending. [15] Torossian did not concede the race until ten days later after results showed Rodriguez's margin of victory widening. [16]

Candidates

  • Monica Rodriguez, former Public Works commissioner
  • Karo Torossian, City Council planning director for Paul Krekorian
  • Mónica Ratliff, Los Angeles Unified School District board member
  • Dale Gibson, stuntman
  • Nicole Chase, Boys & Girls Club development director
  • Arthur Miner, pub owner and engineer
  • Venessa Martinez, state Deputy Attorney General
  • Olga Ayala, community organizer
  • Terrence Gomes, financial adviser
  • Fred A. Flores, veterans advocate
  • John T. Higginson, equestrian center owner
  • Constance Saunders, lender mortgage subservicer
  • Mike Schaefer, public interest advocate

Results

2017 Los Angeles's 7th City Council district election
Primary election
CandidateVotes %
Monica Rodriguez 6,09127.82
Karo Torossian3,60316.46
Mónica Ratliff3,10414.18
Arthur Miner1,7758.11
Dale Gibson1,3516.17
Venessa Martinez1,1605.30
Olga Ayala9314.25
Fred A. Flores8543.90
Nicole Chase5962.72
Carlos Lara3141.43
Krystee Clark2901.32
Mark Reed2751.26
Mike Schaefer 2661.21
Connie Saunders2581.18
Franki Marie Becerra2261.03
David Jesse Barron2181.00
John T. Higginson1690.77
Terrence Gomes1490.68
José G. Castillo1390.63
Bonnie D. Corwin1270.58
Total votes21,896 100.00
General election
Monica Rodriguez 9,58853.64
Karo Torossian8,28746.36
Total votes17,875 100.00

District 9

2017 Los Angeles City Council District 9 election [1]
Primary election
CandidateVotes %
Curren Price (incumbent)6,56562.96
Jorge Nuño2,40023.02
Adriana Cabrera1,46214.02
Total votes10,427 100.00

District 11

2017 Los Angeles City Council District 11 election [1]
Primary election
CandidateVotes %
Mike Bonin (incumbent)31,86571.00
Mark Ryavec7,04715.70
Robin Rudisill4,96713.30
Total votes43,879 100.00

District 13

2017 Los Angeles City Council District 13 election [1]
Primary election
CandidateVotes %
Mitch O'Farrell (incumbent)17,05359.26
Sylvie Shain4,33815.07
Jessica Salans3,90213.56
David de la Torre1,5345.33
Doug Haines1,1233.90
Bill Zide8292.88
Total votes28,779 100.00

District 15

2017 Los Angeles City Council District 15 election [1]
Primary election
CandidateVotes %
Joe Buscaino (incumbent)12,49774.85
Caney Arnold2,75016.47
Noel Gould1,4498.68
Total votes16,696 100.00

Ballot measures

Measure M

Cannabis Regulation After Citizen Input, Taxation and Enforcement
ChoiceVotes %
Check-71-128-204-brightblue.svg Yes319,01780.45
No77,52319.55
Total votes396,540100.00
Source: [1]

Measure N

Cannabis Activity Permits, Regulation and Taxation
ChoiceVotes %
Light brown x.svg No250,89665.05
Yes134,78734.95
Total votes385,683100.00
Source: [1]

Measure P

Maximum Term of Harbor Department Leases
ChoiceVotes %
Check-71-128-204-brightblue.svg Yes251,39868.42
No116,05931.58
Total votes367,457100.00
Source: [1]

Measure S

Building Moratorium; Restrictions on General Plan Amendments; Required Review of General Plan
ChoiceVotes %
Light brown x.svg No288,01270.40
Yes121,10129.60
Total votes409,113100.00
Source: [1]

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References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 "Consolidated Municipal and Special Elections, March 7". results.lavote.gov. Los Angeles County Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk. March 20, 2017.
  2. "LA City Council District 1 Runoff: Meet the candidates". LAist . April 27, 2017.
  3. Carroll, Rory (May 17, 2017). "Outsider energized LA politics – until his 'ignorant' online comments surfaced". The Guardian .
  4. Chou, Elizabeth (April 26, 2017). "LA City Council candidate slammed after online slurs insult black, transgender, obese people". Los Angeles Daily News .
  5. 1 2 3 Wick, Julia (April 26, 2017). "Joe Bray-Ali Says He's Still In The Race Despite Revoked Endorsements". LAist .
  6. Smith, Dakota (April 26, 2017). "L.A. City Council candidate Joe Bray-Ali apologizes for comments on provocative website".
  7. Regardie, Jon (April 28, 2017). "Joe Bray-Ali's Big Fall". Los Angeles Downtown News .
  8. Chou, Elizabeth (April 28, 2017). "Joe Bray-Ali admits extramarital affairs, tax woes, but vows to fight on". Los Angeles Daily News .
  9. Smith, Dakota (May 17, 2017). "City Council winners: Gil Cedillo, Monica Rodriguez, labor". Los Angeles Times .
  10. 1 2 3 4 5 Plummer, Mary (February 28, 2017). "In LA City Council District 1, incumbent Cedillo faces serious challenge". KPCC .
  11. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Chou, Elizabeth (April 6, 2017). "LA councilman endorses Gil Cedillo's opponent in District 1 runoff". Los Angeles Daily News .
  12. "2017 Endorsements". Los Angeles County Young Democrats .
  13. "March 7 2017 Los Angeles Municipal Election Endorsements". March 7, 2017.
  14. "LA City Council District 7 Runoff: Meet the candidates". LAist . April 27, 2017.
  15. Smith, Dakota (May 17, 2017). "City Council winners: Gil Cedillo, Monica Rodriguez, labor". Los Angeles Times .
  16. "Torossian concedes in L.A. City Council District 7 race". Los Angeles Times . May 26, 2017.