Elect Anna Slotky Reitano for LA Superior Court judge to put Los Angeles County on the right track for progress.
Anna Slotky Reitano’s policy positions demonstrate that she will use her judicial prudence effectively in the best interest of this diverse district.
Progressive endorsements: Reitano has the endorsement of some progressive groups, including Sunrise Movement Los Angeles, Progressive Asian Network for Action, California Working Families Party, San Gabriel Valley Progressives, and Stonewall Democratic Club. She has also received the endorsement of state and local leaders, including LA City Councilmembers Eunisses Hernandez and Mike Bonin, Assemblymember Isaac Bryan, and Assemblymember Laura Friedman.
Electoral history: Reitano has not run for public office before.
Top issues: According to campaign materials, Reitano is running for election to bring balance, transparency, and a respect for the evolving ideals of the law to the bench.
Governance and community leadership experience: Reitano is a public defender, which she does to bring representation to low-income and vulnerable community members. She has worked jury trials for the public defender’s office, spent three years representing children in the juvenile-justice system, and serves as the treasurer of the Public Defender’s Association. Reitano clerked with the district attorney’s office, interned with the Screen Actors Guild, and spent her first years after law school working for a private firm that supported LA County Sheriff’s Deputies in civil matters. She is a longtime supporter of legal approaches that center rehabilitation and diversion, particularly for individuals experiencing mental-health crises. Reitano has campaigned alongside three other female candidates—two public defenders and a plaintiff attorney—running for Los Angeles Superior Judicial seats, with the hope of bringing transformational representation to four of the judiciary's nine seats.
Other background: Reitano, a deputy public defender, is a longtime California resident. She is the descendent of Holocaust survivors, and worked as an actor before pursuing her law degree.
The Race
Primary election results: The June 2022 results included Abby Baron, 30%; Anna Slotky Reitano, 28%; Sharon Ransom, 22%; Troy Slaten, 10%; and Mark Rosenfeld, 9%. Anna Slotky Reitano and Abby Baron will compete in a run-off in the November 8 general election.
Candidate fundraising information is not publicly available for this race.
The District
County: The Superior Court of Los Angeles County operates as the trial court for criminal, civil, and other cases filed in Los Angeles County.
The Position
Judges of the California Superior Courts are elected in nonpartisan, county-wide elections to six-year terms. Once voted in, a judge can run for retention at the expiration of their term. A retention election is a process by which voters decide whether an incumbent judge should remain for another term. If the judge, when not facing an opponent, does not obtain a certain percentage of voters (often 50%), they are removed from the position. Many judges join the court through a gubernatorial appointment. If a judge is appointed, they compete in the next general election following the appointment.
California has 58 trial, or superior courts, one in each county. In the more than 450 courthouses of the superior courts, a judge and sometimes a jury hears witness testimony and other evidence. These courts hear civil, criminal, family, probate, and juvenile cases. The judge decides cases through the application of relevant law to the relevant facts.
Elect Anna Slotky Reitano for LA Superior Court judge to put Los Angeles County on the right track for progress.
Anna Slotky Reitano’s policy positions demonstrate that she will use her judicial prudence effectively in the best interest of this diverse district.
Progressive endorsements: Reitano has the endorsement of some progressive groups, including Sunrise Movement Los Angeles, Progressive Asian Network for Action, California Working Families Party, San Gabriel Valley Progressives, and Stonewall Democratic Club. She has also received the endorsement of state and local leaders, including LA City Councilmembers Eunisses Hernandez and Mike Bonin, Assemblymember Isaac Bryan, and Assemblymember Laura Friedman.
Electoral history: Reitano has not run for public office before.
Top issues: According to campaign materials, Reitano is running for election to bring balance, transparency, and a respect for the evolving ideals of the law to the bench.
Governance and community leadership experience: Reitano is a public defender, which she does to bring representation to low-income and vulnerable community members. She has worked jury trials for the public defender’s office, spent three years representing children in the juvenile-justice system, and serves as the treasurer of the Public Defender’s Association. Reitano clerked with the district attorney’s office, interned with the Screen Actors Guild, and spent her first years after law school working for a private firm that supported LA County Sheriff’s Deputies in civil matters. She is a longtime supporter of legal approaches that center rehabilitation and diversion, particularly for individuals experiencing mental-health crises. Reitano has campaigned alongside three other female candidates—two public defenders and a plaintiff attorney—running for Los Angeles Superior Judicial seats, with the hope of bringing transformational representation to four of the judiciary's nine seats.
Other background: Reitano, a deputy public defender, is a longtime California resident. She is the descendent of Holocaust survivors, and worked as an actor before pursuing her law degree.
The Race
Primary election results: The June 2022 results included Abby Baron, 30%; Anna Slotky Reitano, 28%; Sharon Ransom, 22%; Troy Slaten, 10%; and Mark Rosenfeld, 9%. Anna Slotky Reitano and Abby Baron will compete in a run-off in the November 8 general election.
Candidate fundraising information is not publicly available for this race.
The District
County: The Superior Court of Los Angeles County operates as the trial court for criminal, civil, and other cases filed in Los Angeles County.
The Position
Judges of the California Superior Courts are elected in nonpartisan, county-wide elections to six-year terms. Once voted in, a judge can run for retention at the expiration of their term. A retention election is a process by which voters decide whether an incumbent judge should remain for another term. If the judge, when not facing an opponent, does not obtain a certain percentage of voters (often 50%), they are removed from the position. Many judges join the court through a gubernatorial appointment. If a judge is appointed, they compete in the next general election following the appointment.
California has 58 trial, or superior courts, one in each county. In the more than 450 courthouses of the superior courts, a judge and sometimes a jury hears witness testimony and other evidence. These courts hear civil, criminal, family, probate, and juvenile cases. The judge decides cases through the application of relevant law to the relevant facts.