The resignation of former Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) set in motion a chain of events that resulted in Rep. Vince Fong (R-Calif.) winning two races.
Rep. Vince Fong (R-Calif.) was on the ballot in two races—one each for the state Assembly and the House of Representatives—and he is leading both contests by wide margins in preliminary results.
After redistricting in 2022, the district now represents parts of Fresno, Kern, Kings, and Tulare counties.
He can resign that position once his congressional win is certified, and Gov. Gavin Newsom will then be required to call a special election next year to fill the vacant seat.
The path to appearing twice on the ballot began when Fong filed paperwork in November 2023 to run for reelection for his assembly position.
Less than two weeks later, McCarthy announced he would not seek re-election, and Fong subsequently filed documents to run for the 20th congressional district seat.
Before he was elected to the Assembly, Fong served as district director for McCarthy and later received his former boss’s endorsement to replace him in the House of Representatives.
Fong won a special election in the March primary to serve out the rest of McCarthy’s term.
Shirley Weber, California’s secretary of state, cited the code when she informed Fong in December 2023 of her decision to not accept his nomination for Congress.
A week later, Fong sued in superior court, seeking to force Weber to include his name on the ballot.
Weber appealed the decision, but the state’s Third Appellate Court upheld the superior court’s ruling on April 9.
Weber reacted to the court’s ruling by calling for more legislative action.
She pinpointed the comments made by justices and suggested the decision could impact the state.
“Both the Court of Appeals and trial court recognize this ruling leaves the door open to chaos, gamesmanship and voter disenfranchisement, and disadvantages other candidates,” Weber stated. “My office sought to avoid such problems through this litigation.”
Signed into law by Newsom in September, the legislation declares that preventing candidates from running for multiple offices in one election “serves important governmental interests, including regulating the number of candidates who appear on the ballot, limiting gamesmanship, avoiding voter confusion, preventing unnecessary special elections, and facilitating the operation of the state’s prohibition on holding incompatible offices.”
AB 1784 codifies laws that no person can run for more than one office at a time, creates a process for candidates to remove their nominations if desired, and requires officials to reject nominations if individuals file for more than one office.
With ballot counting still underway, the secretary of state has until Dec. 13 to certify the election results. More details about the timing of a special election are expected in the weeks after tallies are official.
Fong’s campaign did not respond to requests for comment by The Epoch Times before publication.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
Running For Office? Conservative Campaign Consulting – Election Day Strategies!