Based on our analysis, the two candidates for this position have distinct visions for the district. We recommend that you choose the candidate who best aligns to your values in this race.
Endorsements: Sheriff Alex Villanueva is endorsed by the Association for Los Angeles Deputy Sheriffs and many Republican and Democratic local leaders. The Los Angeles County Democratic Party has called for his resignation. Chief Robert Luna is endorsed by the Los Angeles Times, East Area Progressive Democrats, and San Fernando Valley Young Democrats. He is also endorsed by many local and state leaders, including Representative Alan Lowenthal, Los Angeles Supervisor Holly Mitchell, and State Senator María Elena Durazo.
Key Initiatives: Sheriff Villanueva ran a progressive race in 2018, but has since become a provocative and controversial figure in the community. During his tenure, he has evaded accountability and oversight by refusing to comply with subpoenas, failing to enforce vaccination mandates for the department, issuing veiled threats to journalists for reporting on use of force, and has not complying with the Brady List requirement that deputy misconduct be formally reported. This defiance has been coupled with general corruption, and his shift to the right has earned him airtime on Fox News. He has reinstated a deputy accused of misconduct, has failed to eradicate deputy gangs in the police force, has been antagonistic in his criticism of the L.A. County Board of Supervisors, and has openly and aggressively targeted his political enemies. In August 2022, deputy misconduct resulted in a $31 million judgement against Los Angeles County in a lawsuit related to the misuse of photos taken of the Calabasas helicopter crash that killed nine people, including Kobe Bryant.
Chief Luna maintains a straightforward agenda centered on community-based policing, relationship-building, crime prevention, and prison reform. He has affirmed his interest in leading the department back toward full coordination with the board of supervisors and the LAPD to reestablish accountability and transparency in the department. However, his time with the LAPD was not without controversy. Under his leadership, interviews after officer-involved shootings were eliminated, 61 excessive-force lawsuits were settled, laws around record retention were intentionally evaded, and he supported a specialized unit designated to target gay men for lewd conduct. He has also expressed concerning views about criminalizing homelessness while simultaneously indicating that the sheriff’s department should be directly involved in resolving the housing crisis.
Governance and Community Leadership Experience: Sheriff Villanueva has served in this seat since 2018, when he defeated incumbent Sheriff Jim McDonnell by a margin of six points. Chief Luna has not run for public office before, and was the only candidate in the primary race who was outside of the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.
Sheriff Villanueva served as a member of the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, including as a lieutenant and a sergeant, for 35 years before his election in 2018. He holds a doctor of public administration degree, and was a criminal-justice professor at Cal State University-Long Beach for several years. He is the first Spanish-speaking sheriff in the department’s history, and is the first Democrat to hold this seat in 140 years.
Chief Luna had a 36-year career with the Long Beach Police Department, in which he held positions of increasing rank until he was named chief in 2014. He credits his experience of growing up in an East Los Angeles neighborhood that was patrolled by the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department with demonstrating both the good and bad effects of policing, and inspiring his career path. He holds a master’s in public administration from Cal State University-Long Beach, has graduated from the FBI National Executive Institute and National Academy, and has completed Harvard University’s program for senior executives in state and local government.
Other background: Sheriff Alex Villanueva, a veteran and longtime law-enforcement official, grew up in Puerto Rico and has lived in Los Angeles for most of his adult life. Chief Robert Luna, a retired police chief, grew up in East Los Angeles and is a longtime resident of Long Beach.
The Race
Primary election results: The June 2022 results included incumbent Sheriff Alex Villanueva 31%, Robert Luna 26%, Eric Strong 16%, Cecil Rhambo 8%, Karla Yessenia Carranza 5%, Britta Steinbrenner 4%, Eli Vera 4%, Matt Rodriguez 4%, April Saucedo Hood 2%. Sheriff Alex Villanueva and Robert Luna will contend in a run-off in the November 8 general election.
Candidate fundraising and pledges: Sheriff Villanueva’s campaign has raised over $1.8 million.
Opposing candidate: Robert Luna
Opposing candidate’s fundraising and pledges: Luna’s campaign has raised over $260,000.
The District
County: Los Angeles is California’s most populous county, with a population of 10 million. Los Angeles County has a demographic breakdown of 48% Latino, 15% Asian, and 8% Black.
Governance Structure: Los Angeles County’s sheriff is responsible for policing cities and unincorporated areas that span approximately 4,100 square miles. The sheriff’s department manages 911 services, seven inmate facilities, and security for the Superior Court, community college system, and 216 facilities and clinics. The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department is the largest in the country, with a staff of 18,000 and an annual budget of $3.5 billion.
The Position
Each of the 58 counties in California elects a sheriff to police unincorporated areas of a county, to manage county jails, and to act as security in local government buildings. The sheriff is a constitutionally elected official. A sheriff’s role can vary from county to county, but they tend to be sworn peace officers with the power to make arrests, serve before a magistrate or a judge, serve warrants for arrest, and give tickets and citations. Sheriffs are elected to four-year terms in office.
Based on our analysis, the two candidates for this position have distinct visions for the district. We recommend that you choose the candidate who best aligns to your values in this race.
Endorsements: Sheriff Alex Villanueva is endorsed by the Association for Los Angeles Deputy Sheriffs and many Republican and Democratic local leaders. The Los Angeles County Democratic Party has called for his resignation. Chief Robert Luna is endorsed by the Los Angeles Times, East Area Progressive Democrats, and San Fernando Valley Young Democrats. He is also endorsed by many local and state leaders, including Representative Alan Lowenthal, Los Angeles Supervisor Holly Mitchell, and State Senator María Elena Durazo.
Key Initiatives: Sheriff Villanueva ran a progressive race in 2018, but has since become a provocative and controversial figure in the community. During his tenure, he has evaded accountability and oversight by refusing to comply with subpoenas, failing to enforce vaccination mandates for the department, issuing veiled threats to journalists for reporting on use of force, and has not complying with the Brady List requirement that deputy misconduct be formally reported. This defiance has been coupled with general corruption, and his shift to the right has earned him airtime on Fox News. He has reinstated a deputy accused of misconduct, has failed to eradicate deputy gangs in the police force, has been antagonistic in his criticism of the L.A. County Board of Supervisors, and has openly and aggressively targeted his political enemies. In August 2022, deputy misconduct resulted in a $31 million judgement against Los Angeles County in a lawsuit related to the misuse of photos taken of the Calabasas helicopter crash that killed nine people, including Kobe Bryant.
Chief Luna maintains a straightforward agenda centered on community-based policing, relationship-building, crime prevention, and prison reform. He has affirmed his interest in leading the department back toward full coordination with the board of supervisors and the LAPD to reestablish accountability and transparency in the department. However, his time with the LAPD was not without controversy. Under his leadership, interviews after officer-involved shootings were eliminated, 61 excessive-force lawsuits were settled, laws around record retention were intentionally evaded, and he supported a specialized unit designated to target gay men for lewd conduct. He has also expressed concerning views about criminalizing homelessness while simultaneously indicating that the sheriff’s department should be directly involved in resolving the housing crisis.
Governance and Community Leadership Experience: Sheriff Villanueva has served in this seat since 2018, when he defeated incumbent Sheriff Jim McDonnell by a margin of six points. Chief Luna has not run for public office before, and was the only candidate in the primary race who was outside of the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.
Sheriff Villanueva served as a member of the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, including as a lieutenant and a sergeant, for 35 years before his election in 2018. He holds a doctor of public administration degree, and was a criminal-justice professor at Cal State University-Long Beach for several years. He is the first Spanish-speaking sheriff in the department’s history, and is the first Democrat to hold this seat in 140 years.
Chief Luna had a 36-year career with the Long Beach Police Department, in which he held positions of increasing rank until he was named chief in 2014. He credits his experience of growing up in an East Los Angeles neighborhood that was patrolled by the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department with demonstrating both the good and bad effects of policing, and inspiring his career path. He holds a master’s in public administration from Cal State University-Long Beach, has graduated from the FBI National Executive Institute and National Academy, and has completed Harvard University’s program for senior executives in state and local government.
Other background: Sheriff Alex Villanueva, a veteran and longtime law-enforcement official, grew up in Puerto Rico and has lived in Los Angeles for most of his adult life. Chief Robert Luna, a retired police chief, grew up in East Los Angeles and is a longtime resident of Long Beach.
The Race
Primary election results: The June 2022 results included incumbent Sheriff Alex Villanueva 31%, Robert Luna 26%, Eric Strong 16%, Cecil Rhambo 8%, Karla Yessenia Carranza 5%, Britta Steinbrenner 4%, Eli Vera 4%, Matt Rodriguez 4%, April Saucedo Hood 2%. Sheriff Alex Villanueva and Robert Luna will contend in a run-off in the November 8 general election.
Candidate fundraising and pledges: Sheriff Villanueva’s campaign has raised over $1.8 million.
Opposing candidate: Robert Luna
Opposing candidate’s fundraising and pledges: Luna’s campaign has raised over $260,000.
The District
County: Los Angeles is California’s most populous county, with a population of 10 million. Los Angeles County has a demographic breakdown of 48% Latino, 15% Asian, and 8% Black.
Governance Structure: Los Angeles County’s sheriff is responsible for policing cities and unincorporated areas that span approximately 4,100 square miles. The sheriff’s department manages 911 services, seven inmate facilities, and security for the Superior Court, community college system, and 216 facilities and clinics. The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department is the largest in the country, with a staff of 18,000 and an annual budget of $3.5 billion.
The Position
Each of the 58 counties in California elects a sheriff to police unincorporated areas of a county, to manage county jails, and to act as security in local government buildings. The sheriff is a constitutionally elected official. A sheriff’s role can vary from county to county, but they tend to be sworn peace officers with the power to make arrests, serve before a magistrate or a judge, serve warrants for arrest, and give tickets and citations. Sheriffs are elected to four-year terms in office.