Porterville Recorder

Bonta, Hochman will face off in California’s AG race

-

SACRAMENTO — Republican Nathan Hochman will battle California’s Democratic attorney general in the November general election after garnering 18% of the vote in the primary, according to figures released Thursday.

Hochman, the Republican Party’s endorsed candidate, will face Rob Bonta in a state that overwhelmi­ngly favors Democrats. Bonta, the only Democrat in the five-way field, won 54.8% of the June 7 primary, according to the latest figures from California’s secretary of state.

Under state law, the top two vote-getters advanced to the November election, no matter their party affiliatio­n.

Conservati­ve Republican Eric Early was close behind Hochman with 16.4% of the vote but had no chance of catching up because there weren’t enough uncounted ballots to tip the balance.

Sacramento County District Attorney Anne Marie Schubert, running without party affiliatio­n, got 7.7% of the vote. Green Party candidate Dan Kapelovitz had 3.2%.

Hochman is a former federal prosecutor, defense lawyer, a former assistant U.S. attorney general. He and the other GOP candidates have focused on concerns by California­ns about rising rates of crime and other problems.

“California­ns are done tolerating fearless criminals, our downward spiraling homelessne­ss crisis, and fentanyl ravaging our cities,” Hochman said in a statement Thursday.

Hochman also had grounded his campaign on fighting human traffickin­g, including by backing a stalled bipartisan bill that would label it a violent felony. He also proposed to coordinate prosecutio­ns of trafficker­s statewide, seize their assets and begin a statewide human traffickin­g education campaign.

Bonta, who was appointed by Gov. Gavin Newsom last year to fill a vacancy, is expected to easily win the November election. California’s last Republican attorney general left office in 1999 and the party hasn’t won a statewide election since 2006.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States