Los Angeles Times

Tense race for North Coast Assembly seat

Three Democrats emerge as leaders in a contentiou­s battle for rural District 2.

- By Hannah Wiley

SANTA ROSA — At first glance, the Sonoma County Democratic Party’s 36th annual Crab Feed seemed the political schmoozefe­st it has been for nearly four decades.

For $70, Sonoma County residents could “bump elbows with elected officials” over a North Coast meal of Dungeness crab, salad and pasta served with locally produced wines. But Democratic discord simmered beneath the pleasantri­es at the Feb. 23 dinner.

The intraparty squabble involves who will replace Assemblyme­mber Jim Wood (D-Healdsburg), who is retiring from his seat two years before expected. The November announceme­nt that Wood wouldn’t seek reelection for his final term after 10 years in the statehouse sent candidates scrambling to prop up campaigns with only a few months to raise money and support before Tuesday’s primary.

Three top candidates quickly emerged: California Democratic Party Chair Rusty Hicks, Healdsburg City Council member and nonprofit executive Ariel Kelley and Santa Rosa Councilman Chris Rogers.

Disagreeme­nt among Democratic leaders over who should represent Assembly District 2 — a leftleanin­g, geographic­ally diverse region stretching from Santa Rosa to the Oregon border — has transforme­d the race into one of the most expensive and divisive in local history.

The three Democrats are competing for a top-two placement in the March 5 primary, likely alongside the only Republican who conceivabl­y has enough votes in the district to send him to the November general election. A majority of the district’s voters are registered Democrats, so the Democratic candidate who makes it through the primary has a good chance of winning in November.

The rural district spans five counties — Mendocino, Trinity, Humboldt, Del Norte and part of Sonoma — a roughly seven-hour drive from top to bottom. It takes in 307,000 voters, many of them working-class. Residents contend with shortages of affordable housing, well-paying jobs and healthcare access. The region faces growing environmen­tal threats, including deadly wildfires.

The jockeying among candidates to gain traction with voters was evident at the crab event.

“Vote Chris Rogers” buttons competed with “Ariel” stickers, while Hicks sponsored a table prominentl­y positioned at the front of the hall, where he sat across from Wood and Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas (DHollister).

Much of the brouhaha revolves around Hicks, 44, who moved to the region from Los Angeles only a few years ago — a blip in time by local standards — but who brings with him considerab­le funding and clout. He is endorsed by Wood, Gov. Gavin Newsom, U.S. Sen. Laphonza Butler, veterans groups and a long list of powerful statewide labor organizati­ons, among others.

Hicks is proving a formidable candidate. A Texas native and Afghanista­n war veteran, he was president of the Los Angeles County Federation of Labor before being elected Democratic Party chair in 2019. His reputation as a skilled strategist and even-keeled leader in the labor movement helped him dominate the 2019 race as the party looked to correct course after an internal sexual misconduct scandal.

Hicks’ campaign messaging centers on safeguardi­ng jobs, creating affordable housing options and expanding access to healthcare in a region with few medical clinics. He has also emphasized environmen­tal preservati­on, an issue that resonates in a region home to towering redwoods and vast state and national park land.

“I’m running because I’ve got a long track record of delivering real results for real people,” Hicks said.

His opponents describe him in a different light.

Skeptics accuse Hicks of carpetbagg­ing his way from L.A. to Humboldt County with ambitions to run for office and have blasted his long list of donations from Southern California and Sacramento as evidence that he lacks connection­s to the people he wants to represent.

He has also faced criticism for maintainin­g his influentia­l position as party chair while campaignin­g for Assembly. Hicks said he has suspended his pay and benefits during the race and pledged to step down as party chair if elected.

Hicks said he and his wife bought their home in Arcata in Humboldt County in 2021 after falling in love with the North Coast while he was running for party chair. His campaign, he said, is “funded by individual­s and workers and the unions that represent them” — a coalition for which no Democrat should be criticized, many backing his candidacy say.

Hicks faces a strong opponent in Kelley, 41, a former mayor of Healdsburg, whose endorsemen­ts include local government officials and statewide groups dedicated to electing women to office and expanding access to safe abortion services.

A political action committee supporting Kelley — largely funded by her sister, who poured in at least $200,000 — has sponsored ads accusing Hicks of covering up sexual harassment in the Democratic Party, an allegation he and his proponents deny. His campaign sent local TV stations ceaseand-desist letters warning them against continuing to run ads that Hicks maintains are “patently false.”

Hicks has also clapped back with criticism of Kelley’s investment­s in the oil industry and questioned her connection­s to a local developer who donated $50,000 to the PAC.

“It’s unfortunat­e when some candidates and their supporters conclude that they can no longer talk about their own record or run on their own record and decide to lie about mine,” Hicks said.

Kelley said she doesn’t communicat­e with the PAC or with her sister about its strategy, and agrees that the negative campaignin­g is unhelpful.

She said her father died last year and left her a trust that held investment­s “in a number of industries,” and she plans to divest from those involving oil and gas.

She has called the attacks “completely baseless” and a distractio­n from real issues facing district voters, such as the need for paid family leave, ensuring access to reproducti­ve healthcare, improving housing affordabil­ity and reducing homelessne­ss.

“I’m really focused on just talking about my record of delivering. Because it’s a very strong record of delivering for this community, on homelessne­ss, on wildfire prevention, on housing, healthcare access,” she said.

Rogers, 36, who has also mounted a fierce campaign, has called for his opponents to end the “mudslingin­g,” even as he has expressed many of the same concerns about Hicks’ fundraisin­g strategies.

Raised in Sonoma County, Rogers worked for a decade as an aide to congressio­nal and state legislator­s in the district before joining local politics. He contends that he is the most qualified to represent the district after steering it through emergency after emergency — including the COVID-19 pandemic, a drought, flooding and wildfires — during his time on the Santa Rosa City Council, which has included a stint as mayor.

Rogers is endorsed by Senate President Pro Tem Mike McGuire (D-Healdsburg), for whom he worked as a legislativ­e staffer, and a long list of city and county officials, a local firefighte­rs group and environmen­tal organizati­ons. He said he is focused on mitigating climate change, protecting healthcare facilities from closing and addressing a critical narrowing of access to homeowners insurance in Northern California.

“I have that experience. Not just understand­ing the perspectiv­e but how to translate needs in the district into legislativ­e action,” Rogers said.

Yurok Tribe Vice Chair Frankie Myers, 43, is also running as a Democrat, hoping to become the second Native American elected to the California statehouse. Myers has received support from tribal communitie­s throughout the state.

He has tried, with limited success, to break through the bickering with his message about elevating tribal issues and the importance of environmen­tal stewardshi­p and universal healthcare.

“I’m learning it is a privilege running for state Legislatur­e. It has a lot of barriers for low-income people, people from historical­ly disadvanta­ged communitie­s,” he said. “We’ve only had one single elected Native American in the state Legislatur­e in the history of this state. And now having campaigned, there’s some realizatio­ns I’m coming to about why that is.”

A fifth Democrat, Mendocino County Supervisor Ted Williams, hasn’t raised money and is using his campaign to encourage candidates to focus on rural issues. A sixth Democrat, Cynthia Click, has withdrawn from the race, though her name will appear on the ballot.

Michael Greer, the sole Republican running for the seat, has focused his campaign on bread-and-butter issues familiar to California families, including public safety, homelessne­ss and spiraling housing costs, along with region-specific concerns similar to those raised by the other candidates.

“As one vote, as one Republican, can I change the votes on all these things?” Greer said of his potential effect in the Democratic-led Assembly. “No. But I can be loud enough to make sure that the rural areas are heard.”

 ?? Josh Edelson For The Times ?? RUSTY HICKS, chair of the state Democratic Party, has been accused of carpetbagg­ing. He faces opposition from Ariel Kelley and Chris Rogers, among others.
Josh Edelson For The Times RUSTY HICKS, chair of the state Democratic Party, has been accused of carpetbagg­ing. He faces opposition from Ariel Kelley and Chris Rogers, among others.

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