The Mercury News

Newsom sets special election for March 19 to fill retired McCarthy's congressio­nal term

- By Gillian Brassil

Gov. Gavin Newsom on Monday called for a special election to finish seven to 10 months of retired Rep. Kevin McCarthy's term.

The primary will be March 19, two weeks after the March 5 primary for the full congressio­nal term that would begin next January. If a candidate gets a majority of the votes in that special election, they win outright and will be swiftly sworn into Congress. If not, there will be a runoff with the top two vote-getters on May 21.

The winner will represent California's 20th Congressio­nal District, the state's most Republican and most oddly shaped. It runs from north of Clovis through Rosamond and reaches across Kern, Kings, Tulare and Fresno counties. Many competitor­s on the ballot for the full two-year term have decided to run in the special election too.

Assemblyma­n Vince Fong, RBakersfie­ld, is the favorite to assume his former boss's seat in both elections. Fong, who served as McCarthy' district director for nearly a decade before joining the Assembly in 2016, earned the former congressma­n's coveted endorsemen­t.

“The Central Valley needs proven, tested representa­tion in Congress that can immediatel­y get to work and deliver meaningful solutions to these issues,” Fong said Monday, with issues referring to the border, affordabil­ity and water infrastruc­ture. “In addition to the regularly scheduled primary election, I will be running in the special to provide Central Valley voters with that representa­tion as soon as possible.”

McCarthy left office Dec. 31, after being toppled as House Speaker in October.

Fong's candidacy still faces a

legal challenge, though his name is on the certified list of candidates for the Assembly and Congress fullterm that went to counties to print ballots in December. Kern County, which includes Bakersfiel­d, is expected to start printing ballots for the March 5 primary this week.

A judge ruled at the end of December that Fong, who had already qualified to run for the Assembly, could be on the ballot for both. California's secretary of state, who had previously said that Fong's dual ballot position violated state elections code, is expected to appeal the decision to prevent this from occurring in future elections. Depending on the outcome and timing of the appeal, election officials may need to reprint ballots to remove Fong from the 20th. A spokesman for the secretary of state did not say when the office intended to file the appeal.

“I would say at this point that there is no feasible way, there's no scenario in which Assemblyma­n Fong won't be on the ballot,” said Tal Eslick, a San Joaquin Valley consultant who previously worked for Republican congressme­n. “And anyone that's sort of planning on that being the case is probably not familiar with the speed or lack thereof of the California courts.”

Other Republican candidates who confirmed they are running in both the special and full-term elections are Tulare County Sheriff Mike Boudreaux and Fresno casino owner Kyle Kirkland.

Republican­s on the ballot at least for the full term are David Giglio, an “America First” business owner who is seeking to get Fong disqualifi­ed; Kelly Kulikoff, mayor of California City, and Matt Stoll, a fighter pilot turned business owner. Businessma­n Stan Ellis, who will appear on the ballot for the full term, has since encouraged voters to choose Fong.

Democrats include teacher Marisa Wood, who ran against McCarthy in 2022, and Andy Morales, a security guard. No party preference candidates are Ben Dewell, a meteorolog­ist who ran as a Democrat here in 2022, and businessma­n T.J. Esposito.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rep. Kevin McCarthy, R-Bakersfiel­d, speaks to reporters hours after he was ousted by fellow Republican­s as Speaker of the House on Oct. 3. He retired in December.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rep. Kevin McCarthy, R-Bakersfiel­d, speaks to reporters hours after he was ousted by fellow Republican­s as Speaker of the House on Oct. 3. He retired in December.

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