News

Montgomery-Steppe becomes first Black woman on county board

San Diego Councilwoman Monica Montgomery-Steppe will be District 4’s next county supervisor, opening a large lead over her Republican opponent, per Tuesday night’s preliminary results.

Driving the news: Montgomery-Steppe had 61% of the vote, good for a 17,535 vote lead over Amy Reichert, a leader of the pandemic-era group ReOpen San Diego, out of the 79,737 votes counted as of 11pm Tuesday.

What they’re saying: Montgomery-Steppe delivered a victory speech to supporters alongside California Secretary of State Shirley Weber and County Board Chair Nora Vargas.

  • “I’m going to take the day tomorrow, but other than that, it’s go time,” she told Axios.
  • She said she’s eager to continue working on law enforcement issues, and to begin working with the county’s social safety net.
  • “At the county, we get to take a more holistic view of the system,” she said.

Why it matters: District 4 has been without a representative since May 15, when former Supervisor Nathan Fletcher resigned following 𝑠e𝑥ual harassment allegations.

  • Montgomery-Steppe’s ascension would break a 2-2 partisan deadlock on the board ahead of key county decisions, such as the selection of its next chief administrative officer.
  • Her victory would be history-making, as she’s the first Black woman to win a seat on the county board. Leon Williams became the first Black person elected to the board in 1982.

By the numbers: Montgomery-Steppe’s early lead was based on votes cast by mail ahead of Election Day.

  • Vote counting will continue for days, as the Registrar approves provisional ballots and late-arriving mail votes come in. A winner won’t be certified until Dec. 7.
  • The Registrar estimates there are 30,000 uncounted ballots remaining.

What we’re watching: Montgomery-Steppe’s win creates a vacancy on the City Council to complete her term through 2026. The city could set that special election to coincide with the already-scheduled March primary.

  • Activist Shane Harris and mayoral staffer Chida Warren-Darby have already suggested on social media they could enter the race.
  • The Union-Tribune also speculated that Montgomery-Steppe’s former chief of staff Henry Foster, and nonprofit leaders Francine Maxwell and Tariq Harris could be potential candidates.

Zoom out: Voters weighed in on two other decisions in Tuesday’s special election.

  • Bart Miesfeld holds a narrow lead in the race for Chula Vista city attorney, with 39.41% of the vote over Marco Verdugo’s 38.26% and Dan Smith Diaz’s 22.32%, as of 11pm Tuesday. That race won’t be decided for days, if not weeks.
  • Voters in both the Rainbow and Fallbrook water districts overwhelmingly opted to break away from the San Diego County Water Authority, based on preliminary results. The “yes” side of both questions exceeded 94%.

Related Posts

PETER HITCHENS: Our deadbeat leaders are marching us towards chaos. Why on earth do we trust them on war in Ukraine?

Do you have confidence in our leaders on tax, health, policing, farming, immigration, sleaze, housing, education or transport? Every single one a bungle, run by deadbeats where they generally achieve the opposite of what they promise. So why trust them on war in Ukraine? Yet here we go again, down the road to chaos. The weaker we get, the louder we shout. How the rest of the world must snigger at our great power posturing in Ukraine last week. They will have laughed especially at how pathetically and quickly we aped the Americans as they went directly into war with Moscow, authorising US Service personnel to guide ATACMS weapons to targets in Russia. As soon as Washington announced this dubious plan, London did the same with our Storm Shadow rockets. These cannot be launched without the direct involvement of British military know-how and American guidance systems.

Twisted new details emerge in case of father who ‘tried to choke teen daughter to death in honor killing’

A girl almost strangled by her father in an alleged ‘honor killing’ claims he threatened to murder her several times and abused her at home. Ihsan Ali, 44, and his wife Zahraa Subhi Mohsin Ali, 40, were charged with attempted murder, attempted kidnapping, and assault after the attack on October 18. The girl, 17, who wasn’t named, ran away from home to Timberline High School in Lacey, Washington, after her parents tried to put her on a plane to Iraq.

Storm Bert’s trail of carnage: Urgent search underway for ‘dogwalker swept away by floodwater’ after killer storm leaves three people dead as weather map reveals where 16 inches of snow and -11C freeze will hit parts of Britain

Storm Bert left a trail of carnage in its wake this weekend as an urgent search for a missing dogwalker was abandoned on Saturday afternoon. It comes after a day of chaos where three motorists were killed after two fatal crashes and a car was crushed by a falling tree. Another driver escaped tragedy after a different tree crushed his vehicle, while ten people including five children were rescued from a landslide in Wales.

What America REALLY thinks of Trump’s plan to pardon January 6 protesters

New polling has suggested Americans are overwhelmingly opposed to president-elect Donald Trump’s plan to pardon January 6 defendants. During his campaign, he had pledged to ‘absolutely’ pardon those involved in the January 6 Capitol storming, frequently referring to them as ‘patriots’ and ‘hostages’. When Trump is sworn in as the 47th President of the United States, he will have the authority to wipe those cases of the 1,488 people charged in relation to Jan 6.

Bill Clinton finally breaks silence on claims he carried out shocking act of sabotage before leaving White House

Former President Bill Clinton has addressed a bizarre claim his staff deliberately tore the letter ‘W’ from White House keyboards to hinder his successor, President George W Bush – and admitted that the long-running allegation might be true. Writing in his new memoir, Citizen – My Life After The White House, Clinton, 78,  recalls how a media ‘feeding frenzy’ marred the handover to Bush in 2001 amid claims departing staff had vandalized the West Wing. At the time, it was said that filing cabinets were glued shut, obscene messages left on answering machines and pornographic pictures placed on office printers.

Outrage after Target fires woman over ‘dress code issue’

A North Dakota Target is facing backlash for firing a woman who wrote ‘Trust in Jesus’ on her name tag. Denise Kendrick, an employee of the store in Fargo, said she was fired on November 16 over a dress code issue. She put ‘Trust in Jesus’ and a drawing of a cross on her name tag for that shift, but was approached by a manager who told her she could not wear it, according to KVLY.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *