East Bay Times

Outside funding drives race in District 7

Battle for East Bay state Senate seat is most expensive so far, with $4 million already spent

- By Kate Talerico and Harriet Blair Rowan

More than $4 million in outside money has already been spent in the race for the District 7 state Senate seat representi­ng the East Bay, making it the most expensive Senate race in the state so far this year.

First the money came from the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees

(AFSCME) Local 3299, representi­ng 30,000 service workers in the University of California system. The union formed an independen­t committee to support its past president, Kathryn Lybarger, and backed it up with nearly $2 million, along with some cash from other labor groups. That committee has spent at least $1.9 million so far blanketing local stations with TV ads.

Lybarger's own committee, with a fraction of the cash, is running

digital ads.

The television ads were an early boon for a relatively unknown candidate up against several longtime East Bay politician­s in the race, including Berkeley Mayor Jesse Arreguín, former Assemblyme­mber Sandré Swanson,

Richmond City Councilwom­an Jovanka Beckles and Oakland City Councilman Dan Kalb.

But now ads opposing Lybarger, and supporting Arreguín are hitting local airwaves, funded and sponsored to the tune of over $1 million by Uber, the ride-hailing app giant. And another group called “Housing Providers for Responsibl­e Solutions,” has also put their money in the race, opposing Lybarger and supporting Arreguín.

These “independen­t expenditur­e committees,” similar to PACs, are allowed to accept unlimited amounts of money and spend it on whichever candidates they like — so long as they do not coordinate with the candidates' committees, which are limited to contributi­ons of up to $900.

Lybarger, who served as immediate past president of her union, said that she has not been involved in her union's decisions on campaign spending or endorsemen­ts.

“I'm honored that medical assistants, X-ray techs, cooks and janitors have the belief in me to do this work in the state Senate, enough to put their hard-earned dues to help me get elected,” she

said in an interview.

This isn't the first time that AFSCME has spent big in support of a state Senate race. In 2022, the union spent more than $1 million to help Hayward City Councilmem­ber Aisha Wahab win the District 10 Senate seat over Fremont Mayor Lily Mei. The spending in that race — $7.7 million — made it the most expensive state Senate race in the area's history.

In January, the California Dental Associatio­n spent $160,000 on mailers for Arreguín's campaign. In a statement, the CDA told this news organizati­on they support candidates committed to “solving the challenges experience­d by the dental profession and their patients.”

Arreguìn, who said he didn't know about the mailers until he received one at his home last weekend, said the California Dental Associatio­n has supported him because of his work on public health issues, like Berkeley's 2014 soda tax.

But the associatio­n was also a major donor to the senator currently holding the seat, Nancy Skinner, who introduced and helped pass legislatio­n sponsored by the dental associatio­n to increase transparen­cy around dental insurance plans.

No other candidates in the race have received any independen­t expenditur­es. The top two candidates will continue to the November general election.

Arreguín's campaign has so far brought in the most contributi­ons, including thousands from different building and trades unions around the East Bay, for a total of $637,387 through Jan. 20. The candidates with second largest war chest is Lybarger, with $484,303 in donations, followed by Oakland City Councilman Dan Kalb, with $321,356.

In total, over $5.8 million has been poured into the race, into candidate committees and independen­t expenditur­es. That would work out to almost $13 per vote, for each of the roughly 450,000 votes counted in the last election when Nancy Skinner won re-election in 2020. And with three weeks left before the election, that figure is sure to grow.

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