Beverly Hills Incumbents Fight For Their Spot Against Fiery Newcomers

News

Beverly Hills CA

06 June, 2022

12:12 PM

Description

BEVERLY HILLS, CA — Tuesday is the last day for Beverly Hills residents to cast their votes in a number of county, state and national races. Locally, Beverly Hills voters will elect three new City Councilmembers, a City Treasurer and vote on a local term limit measure. Residents can vote in person at Beverly Hills City Hall, 455 N Rexford Dr., from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Monday and from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Tuesday. Find out where else to vote in the city here. Want to vote from home? Voters can fill out their ballots at home and mail in their decisions by Tuesday, leave them at one of the city's drop off locations or drop them off at one of the in-person voting sites. Beverly Hills residents will pick between 11 candidates for three open seats on the Beverly Hills City Council. Learn more about the 11 candidates here. The three seats will be decided on Tuesday, and candidates will not move forward to the Nov. 8 general election. The race between three incumbents and eight newcomers has been hot and has focused on key issues like public safety and policing, development and education. Visit the city's website to watch three candidate forums in full. Visit this link to watch a candidate forum hosted by Beverly Hills students. Beverly Hills voters will decide between three candidates for City Treasurer: Gabrielle Pantera-Rowe, Howard Fisher and Jake Manaster. Check out these candidates' statements and information on the city's website. A measure to establish a three-term limit on city councilmembers and city treasurers hangs in the balance Tuesday. The measure would bar Mayor Lili Bosse and Councilmembers John Mirisch and Julian Gold from running for re-election given they have all served three terms already, but the measure would not affect Mirisch's potential re-election on Tuesday. Beverly Hills voters weighed in on a number of Los Angeles County positions, including Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors and Los Angeles County Sheriff. Statewide, California voters will cast their initial votes for California governor. The Los Angeles County Sheriff and the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors, District 3, races will directly affect the city of Beverly Hills. The massive 3rd District, currently represented by Sheila Kuehl, covers much of the San Fernando Valley and communities from Malibu to Hollywood. For a complete guide to statewide races, see the CalMatters California Election 2022 Voter Guide.

By:  view source

Discussion

By posting you agree to the Terms and Privacy Policy.

/
Search this area