Imperial Valley Press

Ex judge who spent least on primary will face incumbent AG

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LOS ANGELES (AP) — Retired Republican Judge Steven Bailey, once seen as a longshot in his attorney general campaign, will now face the incumbent in the November election after a solid second-place finish over a much better-funded and well-known Democrat and a Republican rival.

Bailey emerged from Tuesday’s race with 25 percent of the vote — a long way behind Attorney General Xavier Becerra, a Democrat who led with 45 percent of votes — but enough to make the runoff. Insurance Commission­er Dave Jones, a Democrat twice elected to state office, and GOP attorney Eric Early each got less than 15 percent. Bailey and his two other rivals hammered at Becerra’s fixation on challengin­g President Donald Trump.

Becerra, a longtime congressma­n appointed last year to fill the seat vacated when Kamala Harris was elected to the U.S. Senate, has filed dozens of lawsuits against the Trump administra­tion.

Bailey said in a statement that he would lay out a vision challengin­g “the aggressive­ly partisan posture of the current attorney general.” “I’m confident that California­ns understand justice,” Bailey said, “and will vote to elect a voice for crime victims, an advocate for our first responders, and the only candidate with a background and expertise in criminal law.” Bailey spent the smallest amount of the four candidates, with just over $235,000 and had less than $9,000 remaining in his account. Becerra spent $3 million and had $1.5 million remaining. Jones spent $2.4 million and had $2.3 million left in his account. Bailey, 66, started his career as a legislativ­e assistant and was later deputy legislativ­e director for the state Department of Social Services. He has touted his criminal and administra­tive law experience during 19 years in private practice and more than eight years as El Dorado County Superior Court judge. However, his time on the bench has landed him in ethical troubles with the state’s judicial watchdog, including accusation­s of steering business to an electronic monitoring company where his son worked.

Bailey denied the allegation­s by the state Commission on Judicial Performanc­e, which scheduled a September hearing to see if sanctions were warranted for improperly accepting gifts and using his office to advance his bid for attorney general.

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