Courage California endorses Lola Smallwood-Cuevas for state Senate to put SD-28 on the right track for progress.
Lola Smallwood-Cuevas’s track record of community organizing and policy advocacy demonstrate that she will be a progressive voice for the constituents of SD-28 and will govern effectively in the best interest of this diverse district.
Progressive endorsements: Smallwood-Cuevas has the endorsement of many progressive groups, including UNITE HERE Local 11, Heart of LA, SEIU California, and California Working Families Party. She has also received the endorsement of many local elected officials, including Supervisor Holly Mitchell, Assemblymember Laura Friedman, Assemblymember Isaac Bryan, and State Senator Sydney Kamlager.
Electoral history: Smallwood-Cuevas has not run for public office before, but was appointed to the Los Angeles County Workforce Development Board in 2021 and was elected by her fellow commissioners to serve as secretary/treasurer.
Top issues: Workforce development and organized labor, homelessness, affordable housing, universal health care, criminal-justice reform, clean energy, and environmental protections.
Priority bills: Smallwood-Cuevas sees workers’ rights as the clear intersection of racial equity, economic insecurity, health-care access, education, and the housing crisis. It’s through this lens of worker dignity and protection that she would approach social-equity legislation in the state Senate. She has proposed a public employment benefit for those returning from incarceration, a two-year jobs bill to create quality employment opportunities during the COVID-19 recovery, a reinstatement of pandemic sick leave and hero pay, and increased funding for affordable housing initiatives. In supporting workers’ rights, Smallwood-Cuevas hopes her approach would dismantle wealth inequality and create improved health, education, and economic outcomes across generations. She has frequently collaborated with local organizations and lawmakers, including labor unions, Working Families Partnership, and Community Coalition, and would bring this coalition approach to her work in the state Senate.
Governance and community leadership experience: Smallwood-Cuevas is a longtime supporter of the development of organized labor and currently serves as project director at the UCLA Labor Center. She directs projects for the Center for the Advancement of Racial Equity Work and focuses on furthering policies that benefit working families. She has received national recognition for this work from Labor Secretary Tom Perez and former President Barack Obama. She currently serves as treasurer of the LA County Workforce Development Board, and has also served as a researcher and political organizer with SEIU Local 1877, plus co-founded the LA Black Worker Center to increase employment equity.
Other background: Lola Smallwood-Cuevas has lived in the district for twenty years. She was raised by a single mother in a working family, and spent her early career in journalism before transitioning to research and community organizing in the labor sector.
The Race
Primary election results: The June 2022 results included Lola Smallwood Cuevas (D), 45%; Cheryl Turner (D), 30%; Joe Lisuzzo (R), 15%; Kamilah Victoria Moore (D), 7%; and Jamaal Gulledge (D), 4%. Lola Smallwood-Cuevas and Cheryl Turner will compete in a run-off in the November 8 general election.
Candidate fundraising and pledges: Smallwood-Cuevas’s campaign has raised $512,000 and is not funded by corporate PAC or fossil fuel donors. She has received donations from the California Apartment Association PAC and L.A. County Probation Officers Union AFSME Local 685 PAC.
Opposing candidate: Democrat Cheryl Turner
Opposing candidate’s fundraising and pledges: Turner’s campaign has raised $64,000 and is funded by real estate donors. Additionally, she has made several significant donations to her own campaign fund.
The District
Counties in district: California’s 28th Senate District includes parts of Los Angeles County.
Voter registration: 65% Democrat, 8% Republican, and 21% No Party Preference. Prior to redistricting, Republicans typically held this seat. Since the 2021 redistricting process, SD-28 is 2% less Democratic than it was during the 2020 general election cycle.
District demographics: 33% Latino, 9% Asian, and 29% Black
Recent election results: SD-28 voted for Joe Biden for president in 2020 by 71 points and Gavin Newsom for governor in 2018 by 72 points.
The Position
State senators represent and advocate for the needs of their district constituents at the California State Capitol. They are responsible for creating, debating, and voting on legislation that addresses issues within their district.
The California State Senate has 40 districts. Each represents a population of about 930,000 Californians. Representatives are elected to the Senate for a four-year term. Every two years, half of the Senate's 40 seats are subject to election. Members elected before 2012 are restricted to two four-year terms (eight years) in the Senate. Those elected in or after 2012 are allowed to serve 12 years total across both the state Senate or Assembly. This term, Democrats currently hold a two-thirds supermajority of 31 seats in the California State Senate, while Republicans hold 9 seats.
Courage California endorses Lola Smallwood-Cuevas for state Senate to put SD-28 on the right track for progress.
Lola Smallwood-Cuevas’s track record of community organizing and policy advocacy demonstrate that she will be a progressive voice for the constituents of SD-28 and will govern effectively in the best interest of this diverse district.
Progressive endorsements: Smallwood-Cuevas has the endorsement of many progressive groups, including UNITE HERE Local 11, Heart of LA, SEIU California, and California Working Families Party. She has also received the endorsement of many local elected officials, including Supervisor Holly Mitchell, Assemblymember Laura Friedman, Assemblymember Isaac Bryan, and State Senator Sydney Kamlager.
Electoral history: Smallwood-Cuevas has not run for public office before, but was appointed to the Los Angeles County Workforce Development Board in 2021 and was elected by her fellow commissioners to serve as secretary/treasurer.
Top issues: Workforce development and organized labor, homelessness, affordable housing, universal health care, criminal-justice reform, clean energy, and environmental protections.
Priority bills: Smallwood-Cuevas sees workers’ rights as the clear intersection of racial equity, economic insecurity, health-care access, education, and the housing crisis. It’s through this lens of worker dignity and protection that she would approach social-equity legislation in the state Senate. She has proposed a public employment benefit for those returning from incarceration, a two-year jobs bill to create quality employment opportunities during the COVID-19 recovery, a reinstatement of pandemic sick leave and hero pay, and increased funding for affordable housing initiatives. In supporting workers’ rights, Smallwood-Cuevas hopes her approach would dismantle wealth inequality and create improved health, education, and economic outcomes across generations. She has frequently collaborated with local organizations and lawmakers, including labor unions, Working Families Partnership, and Community Coalition, and would bring this coalition approach to her work in the state Senate.
Governance and community leadership experience: Smallwood-Cuevas is a longtime supporter of the development of organized labor and currently serves as project director at the UCLA Labor Center. She directs projects for the Center for the Advancement of Racial Equity Work and focuses on furthering policies that benefit working families. She has received national recognition for this work from Labor Secretary Tom Perez and former President Barack Obama. She currently serves as treasurer of the LA County Workforce Development Board, and has also served as a researcher and political organizer with SEIU Local 1877, plus co-founded the LA Black Worker Center to increase employment equity.
Other background: Lola Smallwood-Cuevas has lived in the district for twenty years. She was raised by a single mother in a working family, and spent her early career in journalism before transitioning to research and community organizing in the labor sector.
The Race
Primary election results: The June 2022 results included Lola Smallwood Cuevas (D), 45%; Cheryl Turner (D), 30%; Joe Lisuzzo (R), 15%; Kamilah Victoria Moore (D), 7%; and Jamaal Gulledge (D), 4%. Lola Smallwood-Cuevas and Cheryl Turner will compete in a run-off in the November 8 general election.
Candidate fundraising and pledges: Smallwood-Cuevas’s campaign has raised $512,000 and is not funded by corporate PAC or fossil fuel donors. She has received donations from the California Apartment Association PAC and L.A. County Probation Officers Union AFSME Local 685 PAC.
Opposing candidate: Democrat Cheryl Turner
Opposing candidate’s fundraising and pledges: Turner’s campaign has raised $64,000 and is funded by real estate donors. Additionally, she has made several significant donations to her own campaign fund.
The District
Counties in district: California’s 28th Senate District includes parts of Los Angeles County.
Voter registration: 65% Democrat, 8% Republican, and 21% No Party Preference. Prior to redistricting, Republicans typically held this seat. Since the 2021 redistricting process, SD-28 is 2% less Democratic than it was during the 2020 general election cycle.
District demographics: 33% Latino, 9% Asian, and 29% Black
Recent election results: SD-28 voted for Joe Biden for president in 2020 by 71 points and Gavin Newsom for governor in 2018 by 72 points.
The Position
State senators represent and advocate for the needs of their district constituents at the California State Capitol. They are responsible for creating, debating, and voting on legislation that addresses issues within their district.
The California State Senate has 40 districts. Each represents a population of about 930,000 Californians. Representatives are elected to the Senate for a four-year term. Every two years, half of the Senate's 40 seats are subject to election. Members elected before 2012 are restricted to two four-year terms (eight years) in the Senate. Those elected in or after 2012 are allowed to serve 12 years total across both the state Senate or Assembly. This term, Democrats currently hold a two-thirds supermajority of 31 seats in the California State Senate, while Republicans hold 9 seats.