Los Gatos Weekly Times

Poll has Supervisor Chavez in early lead

She has yet to announce her candidacy for mayor

- By Maggie Angst mangst@bayareanew­sgroup.com

She may not have officially announced her candidacy yet, but Santa Clara County Supervisor Cindy Chavez already is polling well in the race for San Jose’s next mayor.

A new poll commission­ed by the San Jose Police Officers’ Associatio­n shows Chavez as an early front-runner in San Jose’s 2022 mayoral race, though many voters still remain undecided. The primary election to replace Mayor Sam Liccardo, who will be termed out, will take place in June.

Colorado-based research company New Bridge Strategy interviewe­d 400 likely San Jose voters from June 28 to July 1, asking them about whom of four potential candidates they’d like to see become the city’s next mayor.

Those candidates included San Jose Council members Raul Peralez and Dev Davis, who both announced their candidacy in April, as well as Chavez and San Jose Council member Matt Mahan, both of whom are expected to run but have not yet made any official announceme­nts.

A committee called Chavez for Mayor 2022; Cindy has registered with the California secretary of state despite Chavez’s hesitancy to confirm her candidacy publicly. A phone number listed under the committee belongs to the Sacramento-based company Deane & Company, which provides profession­al political reporting and campaign treasurer services, according to its website.

Results from the poll concluded that Chavez currently maintains the highest favorable rating from voters with 33%. She was followed by Peralez with a favorable rating of 18%, Davis with 14% and Mahan with 13%. Support for Chavez was driven

largely by Democrats and women ages 45 and older, according to the results.

When asked whom they would vote for if the election took place on the day of their interviews, 23% of those polled said Chavez and 7% indicated Peralez, 5% for Mahan and 4% for Davis.

Nearly 3 in 5 — 59% — of likely voters who were polled said they were undecided.

Peralez’s campaign consultant Maggie Muir, who also has managed the campaigns of San Francisco Mayor London Breed and state Sen. Scott Weiner, said Thursday that the poll “clearly shows” that nine months before the election “this race is wide open.”

“Council member Peralez looks forward to talking with voters about what’s working in San Jose and what’s clearly not so that we can emerge from this pandemic stronger and more resilient than before,” Muir wrote in a statement.

Lori Weigel, principal at New Bridge Strategy, echoed a similar sentiment that it was still very early in the campaign process but added that Chavez was “on the most solid footing” at this point.

“She’s definitely the most establishe­d of any potential candidate at this time, which really means the others have some work to do,” Weigel said.

Chavez, who has served on the Santa Clara County Board of Supervisor­s for the past eight years, has had the longest career of the four potential candidates in South Bay politics. Before her time on the Board of Supervisor­s, Chavez worked as the executive director of the South Bay Labor Council and Working Partnershi­ps USA and was a San Jose councilwom­an from 1998 to 2006, including serving two of those years as vice mayor.

Pending her official announceme­nt, it will be Chavez’s second time launching a campaign to become

the city’s top elected official. In 2006, Chavez was overwhelmi­ngly defeated by Chuck Reed, who served as the mayor of San Jose for eight years prior to Liccardo.

Chavez did not return multiple requests for comment Thursday, but earlier in the week she participat­ed in a mayoral candidate forum conducted by the Silicon Valley Democratic Club.

During the forum, she spoke about some of the priorities she would have as mayor, including setting aside apartment units for domestic violence victims, building better relationsh­ips between police officers and the community and speeding up the production of permanent supportive affordable housing.

“I’m looking forward to a conversati­on because a mayor’s race is all about getting to know what is on people’s minds, what are their hopes, what are their aspiration­s, what is it that they most want to see most happen in the world and how can they help do it,” she said during the forum.

Chavez and Peralez both have been historical­ly backed by the city’s labor groups and likely will be jockeying against each other for their endorsemen­t in this race. A labor-backed candidate has not occupied the city’s mayor seat since 2006, when Ron Gonzales vacated the role.

Davis and Mahan, on the other hand, both have the support of the city’s business organizati­ons. If Mahan makes his candidacy official, they also will be battling against each other for support from the city’s business faction.

When asked about the poll results, Davis said that she was not surprised, as Chavez was also ahead in some early polls ahead of the 2006 election, which she then lost.

“Things can change,” Davis said in a text. “There’s a long time between now and June.”

Mahan confirmed Thursday that he was still “very much considerin­g” entering the mayor’s race as well.

“I am having conversati­ons with residents across the city about the solutions we need to end street homelessne­ss, clean up our city and create a great place to live for all San Joseans,” he wrote in a text message.

The San Jose Police Officers’ Associatio­n, which commission­ed the study, has not yet announced which candidate it will endorse, though a statement issued Thursday indicated it likely would be Chavez. In the 2014 mayoral race, the union endorsed labor leader Dave Cortese over Liccardo.

“As the POA begins to evaluate candidates for mayor, it appears that likely voters in San Jose are looking for steady leadership from an individual that can bring people together to solve problems and address our pressing needs,” Police Officers’ Associatio­n President Sean Pritchard said in a statement. “and these poll results indicate that most voters support Supervisor Chavez to do those things.”

 ?? NHAT V. MEYER —STAFF ARCHIVES ?? Santa Clara County Board of Supervisor­s President Cindy Chavez speaks during a news conference for a Revised Risk Reduction Order outside of the county building in San Jose October 2020.
NHAT V. MEYER —STAFF ARCHIVES Santa Clara County Board of Supervisor­s President Cindy Chavez speaks during a news conference for a Revised Risk Reduction Order outside of the county building in San Jose October 2020.

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