• Santa Monica voters back Hochman and harsher criminal penalties while o

    From P. Coonan@21:1/5 to All on Sat Nov 9 00:00:13 2024
    XPost: alt.crime, alt.los-angeles, talk.politics.guns
    XPost: sac.politics, talk.politics.misc

    While Santa Monica voters backed a slate of progressive, liberal
    candidates for City Council this week, voters took a slightly more
    conservative turn in some regional and state races.

    The Unity Slate of Dan Hall, Ellis Raskin, Barry Snell and Natalya
    Zernitskaya remained on the top spots Thursday for City Council. While it
    is still mathematically possible for current Mayor Phil Brock to pick up
    enough votes to retain his seat, it is highly unlikely he would do so.

    Brock has been stuck in fifth place since Election Day. He needs to gain
    about 1,000 votes to climb into fourth and as of Thursday, the County had
    about 3,500 outstanding ballots to count from Santa Monica voters. While
    it is possible for more outstanding ballots to arrive through next week (ballots postmarked by Election Day will be counted), Brock has to outpace
    his rivals by a 2-1 margin to pull ahead and it is highly unlikely that
    such a high concentration of voters for any one candidate would be
    clustered in those final ballots.

    While Brock�s slatemates Oscar de la Torre, Vivian Roknian seem close in
    voter percentage (reporting 10.7% and 10.15% respectively vs. the 12.54%
    needed to claim a council seat), they are even further behind Brock in the actual vote count and each needs more than 2,000 votes.

    At the county level, Santa Monicans were on par with the region in backing
    the more conservative Nathan Hochman over incumbent District Attorney
    George Gason. About 54% of Santa Monica voters backed Hochman in his
    effort to unseat the more liberal Gascon. Locals were also on par with the state in opposing the expansion of rent control as 54% of local voters
    voted �no� on Prop 33. It was a similar outcome for supporting harsher
    criminal penalties via Prop 36 with 54% of locals voting in favor.

    Voters overwhelming supported repealing the state ban on same-sex marriage
    and backed new funding for schools by a 2-1 margin. Locals supported
    efforts to lower voting thresholds to approve new bonds for housing and supported a ban on forced labor for prisoners by similar margins (although
    both of those appear headed for defeat at the state level). Santa Monicans bucked the state trend and supported raising the minimum wage.

    Locals backed Democrat Adam Schiff over his Republican rival Steve Garvey almost 4-1.

    Countywide, the total election results count is now 2,696,482, which is
    47% of registered voters. According to the Registrar of Voters, a large
    number of Vote by Mail ballots were returned on Election Day and their
    office continues to prioritize the timely processing of these ballots to establish a clear number of outstanding ballots in this election.

    The preliminary estimate of outstanding ballots to be processed is
    1,116,100 countywide.

    Final vote results will be reported in the Official Election Canvas, a 30-
    day period in which the registrar processes and verifies all outstanding ballots to ensure that every eligible ballot cast by Election Day is
    counted.

    https://smdp.com/2024/11/08/santa-monica-voters-back-hochman-and-harsher- criminal-penalties-while-opposing-rent-control-expansion/

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