Elect Sally Lieber for Supervisor to put Santa Clara County on the right track for progress.
Sally Lieber’s track record and policy positions demonstrate that she will be a progressive voice for the constituents of Santa Clara County and will govern effectively in the best interests of this diverse district.
Progressive endorsements: Lieber has the endorsement of some progressive groups, including Democratic Socialists of America and California Working Families Party. In her previous elections, she has also received endorsements from Equality California, California Teachers Association, Sierra Club, Assm. Laura Friedman, and State Sen. Josh Becker.
Electoral history: Lieber has run for office previously, and won her race to represent the California State Board of Equalization’s District 2 in 2022 with 69% of the vote. Lieber served as a Mountain View City Councilmember after winning election in 2020 with the second-highest vote total for the at-large seat. This was Lieber’s second turn on the city council, where she first served as mayor and vice mayor after winning election in 1998. She was then elected to the 22nd Assembly District seat in 2002, and won reelection in 2004 and 2006. Prior to winning her 2022 race, she had unsuccessfully run for seats in the California State Senate in 2020 and 2012.
Top issues: Sustainable county staffing, homelessness and affordable housing, childcare accessibility, environmental protection, mental health-care resources and public health, public safety, and government transparency.
Governance and community leadership experience: Lieber is a longtime public official, which she does to support advocacy, local politics, and communities. She has served as vice chair of the State Board of Equalization since she took office in January 2023. Prior to this state role, Lieber had recently taken her second turn on the Mountain View City Council, where she had previously served terms as a councilmember and as mayor. In this role, she worked on committees for finance, inclusion, transportation, and youth services. She also served three terms as the assemblymember for the 22nd district. While in the legislature, she worked on bills that increased the minimum wage, addressed sea-level rise, codified human trafficking as a felony, and created the Sexual Assault Victim’s Bill of Rights.
Other background: Lieber has lived in California for over 40 years, spending much of that time as a resident of Mountain View.
The Race
Primary election: There are five candidates running in the nonpartisan March 5 primary, including Sally Lieber, Margaret Abe-Koga, Barry Chang, Peter Fung, and Sandy Sans. The top two vote recipients will advance to the general election on November 5, unless one candidate receives more than 50% of the vote and wins outright in the primary.
Candidate fundraising and pledges: Lieber’s campaign has raised $5,000 as of December 2023, and is not funded by police, fossil fuel, corporate PAC, or real estate interests.
Opposing candidate: Margaret Abe-Koga
Opposing candidate’s fundraising and pledges: Abe-Koga’s campaign has raised $142,000 as of December 2023, and is funded by police and real estate interests.
The District
County: Santa Clara County is California’s sixth most populous county. District 5 includes Palo Alto, Mountain View, Los Altos, Los Altos Hills, Cupertino, Saratoga, Los Gatos, and unincorporated areas.
Governance structure: Santa Clara County’s Board of Supervisors oversees the needs of 1.9 million people and manages an estimated budget of $10.2 billion annually. According to the County Charter, Santa Clara County is governed by the five-member Board of Supervisors and the county executive, who acts as their agent.
The Position
Each of the 58 counties in California is governed by a five-person Board of Supervisors. A Board of Supervisors has legislative and executive power to manage county services and resources, including courts, jails, public health, and public lands. They also have quasi-judicial powers, which gives them the right to hold hearings, conduct investigations, and make decisions in a manner similar to judicial courts. Laws passed by Boards of Supervisors are generally called ordinances. Because counties include both incorporated cities, which are administered by their own city councils, and unincorporated areas, which are directly administered by the county, ordinances may or may not apply in different areas of the county. Supervisors are typically limited to 3 terms, or 12 years in office total.
Elect Sally Lieber for Supervisor to put Santa Clara County on the right track for progress.
Sally Lieber’s track record and policy positions demonstrate that she will be a progressive voice for the constituents of Santa Clara County and will govern effectively in the best interests of this diverse district.
Progressive endorsements: Lieber has the endorsement of some progressive groups, including Democratic Socialists of America and California Working Families Party. In her previous elections, she has also received endorsements from Equality California, California Teachers Association, Sierra Club, Assm. Laura Friedman, and State Sen. Josh Becker.
Electoral history: Lieber has run for office previously, and won her race to represent the California State Board of Equalization’s District 2 in 2022 with 69% of the vote. Lieber served as a Mountain View City Councilmember after winning election in 2020 with the second-highest vote total for the at-large seat. This was Lieber’s second turn on the city council, where she first served as mayor and vice mayor after winning election in 1998. She was then elected to the 22nd Assembly District seat in 2002, and won reelection in 2004 and 2006. Prior to winning her 2022 race, she had unsuccessfully run for seats in the California State Senate in 2020 and 2012.
Top issues: Sustainable county staffing, homelessness and affordable housing, childcare accessibility, environmental protection, mental health-care resources and public health, public safety, and government transparency.
Governance and community leadership experience: Lieber is a longtime public official, which she does to support advocacy, local politics, and communities. She has served as vice chair of the State Board of Equalization since she took office in January 2023. Prior to this state role, Lieber had recently taken her second turn on the Mountain View City Council, where she had previously served terms as a councilmember and as mayor. In this role, she worked on committees for finance, inclusion, transportation, and youth services. She also served three terms as the assemblymember for the 22nd district. While in the legislature, she worked on bills that increased the minimum wage, addressed sea-level rise, codified human trafficking as a felony, and created the Sexual Assault Victim’s Bill of Rights.
Other background: Lieber has lived in California for over 40 years, spending much of that time as a resident of Mountain View.
The Race
Primary election: There are five candidates running in the nonpartisan March 5 primary, including Sally Lieber, Margaret Abe-Koga, Barry Chang, Peter Fung, and Sandy Sans. The top two vote recipients will advance to the general election on November 5, unless one candidate receives more than 50% of the vote and wins outright in the primary.
Candidate fundraising and pledges: Lieber’s campaign has raised $5,000 as of December 2023, and is not funded by police, fossil fuel, corporate PAC, or real estate interests.
Opposing candidate: Margaret Abe-Koga
Opposing candidate’s fundraising and pledges: Abe-Koga’s campaign has raised $142,000 as of December 2023, and is funded by police and real estate interests.
The District
County: Santa Clara County is California’s sixth most populous county. District 5 includes Palo Alto, Mountain View, Los Altos, Los Altos Hills, Cupertino, Saratoga, Los Gatos, and unincorporated areas.
Governance structure: Santa Clara County’s Board of Supervisors oversees the needs of 1.9 million people and manages an estimated budget of $10.2 billion annually. According to the County Charter, Santa Clara County is governed by the five-member Board of Supervisors and the county executive, who acts as their agent.
The Position
Each of the 58 counties in California is governed by a five-person Board of Supervisors. A Board of Supervisors has legislative and executive power to manage county services and resources, including courts, jails, public health, and public lands. They also have quasi-judicial powers, which gives them the right to hold hearings, conduct investigations, and make decisions in a manner similar to judicial courts. Laws passed by Boards of Supervisors are generally called ordinances. Because counties include both incorporated cities, which are administered by their own city councils, and unincorporated areas, which are directly administered by the county, ordinances may or may not apply in different areas of the county. Supervisors are typically limited to 3 terms, or 12 years in office total.