Based on our analysis, two candidates for this position have distinct visions for the city. We recommend that you choose the candidate who best aligns to your values in this race.
Endorsements: Dr. Flo Cofer has the endorsement of many progressive groups, including California Working Families Party, Sacramento City Teachers Association, Democratic Socialists of America, Black Women Organized for Political Action, and ACCE Action. She has also received the endorsement of some local leaders, including Sacramento City Councilmember Katie Valenzuela, and Sacramento Mayor Pro Tempore Mai Vang.
Assm. Kevin McCarty has the endorsement of some progressive groups, including Planned Parenthood Advocates Mar Monte, SEIU-United Service Workers West, and Sacramento-Sierra’s Building & Construction Trades Council. He has also received the endorsement of some elected leaders, including Assm. Speaker Robert Rivas, Assm. Lori Wilson, and Assm. Speaker Emeritus Anthony Rendon.
Key initiatives: Dr. Cofer is an epidemiologist, and has spent her career working on public health and policy initiatives at California Department of Public Health, University of California San Francisco, and Public Health Advocates. She has sat on four local commissions in recent years, including serving four terms as the chair of the Measure U Community Advisory Committee. Measure U was a half-cent temporary sales tax that went into place in 2012, and was increased to one cent in 2018. The advisory committee was formed to advise the City Council on how best to use the revenue funds to benefit local residents. Experience working with the city on initiatives like these, and her understanding of the implementation of public policy, are the foundation of a campaign focused on addressing socioeconomic inequality, homelessness and the affordable housing crisis, public safety, climate action, and government accountability.
Assm. McCarty’s priorities for AD-6 this session have included 32 bills about education, homelessness and housing, and gun safety. Of these, 11 have been successfully chaptered into law, one has been vetoed, and the rest remain in committee. Assm. McCarty has authored and passed legislation designed to increase doctoral program offerings at California State University, create a pilot program for substance-use treatment for justice involved individuals, simplify the process of transferring from a community college to the University of California system, and provide academic and social support for immigrant and refugee students. He scores a Lifetime CS of 97 out of 100 on Courage Score, our annual analysis of legislators’ progressive voting records. Based on our Courage Score analysis, Assm. McCarty has supported nearly all progressive bills that made it to a vote.
Governance and community leadership experience: Dr. Cofer has not run for public office before.
Dr. Cofer was inspired to pursue a career in public health after the untimely and preventable death of her father when she was a child. She earned her PhD at the University of Michigan, and has focused her advocacy on utilizing policy data to implement meaningful public systems change. Her campaign platform seeks to apply a research lens to the challenges most impacting city residents to allow for comprehensive solutions to issues that have gone unaddressed for years.
Assm. McCarty has served in this assembly seat since 2014, when he was elected with over 58.7% of the vote. In 2022, he won his reelection against a Republican challenger by 32 points.
Prior to his election to the Assembly, Assm. McCarty was a Sacramento City Councilmember from 2004 to 2014. He was the policy director to California’s former Lieutenant Governor Cruz Bustamante and a former Budget Committee consultant. Assm. McCarty has been a longtime supporter of safe housing and protection from gun violence.
Other background: Dr. Cofer is from Pittsburgh, PA, and has lived in California for 15 years. If elected, she would be the first Black woman to lead the city of Sacramento.
Assm. McCarty is from Sacramento.
The Race
Primary election: There are six candidates running in the March 5 primary, including Assm. Kevin McCarty, Dr. Flo Cofer, Jose Antonio Avina II, Julius Engel, Steve Hansen, and Richard Pan. The top two vote recipients will advance to the general election on November 5, unless one candidate wins more than 50% of the vote and wins outright in the primary.
Candidate fundraising and pledges: Assm. Kevin McCarty’s campaign has raised $97,000 as of December 2023, and is not funded by corporate PAC, real estate, or fossil fuel interests.
Opposing candidate’s fundraising and pledges: Dr. Flo Cofer’s campaign has raised $173,000 as of December 2023, and is not funded by police, fossil fuel, real estate, or corporate PAC interests.
The District
City: Sacramento is Sacramento County’s most populous city. Sacramento’s mayor and city council oversee the needs of 525,000 people and manage an estimated operating budget of $1.5 billion annually.
District demographics: As of the 2020 Census, Sacramento had a demographic breakdown of 29% Latino, 20% Asian, and 13% Black.
Recent election results: Sacramento County, which includes Sacramento, voted for Joe Biden for president in 2020 by 25 points and for Gavin Newsom for governor in 2022 by 15 points.
The Position
Sacramento uses a Council-Manager government structure, which includes a mayor elected at large, an 8-member districted city council, and a City Manager who acts as the city’s chief executive officer. The mayor of Sacramento interprets policies, makes recommendations to the City Council, acts as a voting member of the City Council, and may appoint or remove members of boards, commissions, or advisory agencies as provided by the city’s Charter. In Sacramento, a mayor is elected to a 4-year term, with a limit of two consecutive terms.
Based on our analysis, two candidates for this position have distinct visions for the city. We recommend that you choose the candidate who best aligns to your values in this race.
Endorsements: Dr. Flo Cofer has the endorsement of many progressive groups, including California Working Families Party, Sacramento City Teachers Association, Democratic Socialists of America, Black Women Organized for Political Action, and ACCE Action. She has also received the endorsement of some local leaders, including Sacramento City Councilmember Katie Valenzuela, and Sacramento Mayor Pro Tempore Mai Vang.
Assm. Kevin McCarty has the endorsement of some progressive groups, including Planned Parenthood Advocates Mar Monte, SEIU-United Service Workers West, and Sacramento-Sierra’s Building & Construction Trades Council. He has also received the endorsement of some elected leaders, including Assm. Speaker Robert Rivas, Assm. Lori Wilson, and Assm. Speaker Emeritus Anthony Rendon.
Key initiatives: Dr. Cofer is an epidemiologist, and has spent her career working on public health and policy initiatives at California Department of Public Health, University of California San Francisco, and Public Health Advocates. She has sat on four local commissions in recent years, including serving four terms as the chair of the Measure U Community Advisory Committee. Measure U was a half-cent temporary sales tax that went into place in 2012, and was increased to one cent in 2018. The advisory committee was formed to advise the City Council on how best to use the revenue funds to benefit local residents. Experience working with the city on initiatives like these, and her understanding of the implementation of public policy, are the foundation of a campaign focused on addressing socioeconomic inequality, homelessness and the affordable housing crisis, public safety, climate action, and government accountability.
Assm. McCarty’s priorities for AD-6 this session have included 32 bills about education, homelessness and housing, and gun safety. Of these, 11 have been successfully chaptered into law, one has been vetoed, and the rest remain in committee. Assm. McCarty has authored and passed legislation designed to increase doctoral program offerings at California State University, create a pilot program for substance-use treatment for justice involved individuals, simplify the process of transferring from a community college to the University of California system, and provide academic and social support for immigrant and refugee students. He scores a Lifetime CS of 97 out of 100 on Courage Score, our annual analysis of legislators’ progressive voting records. Based on our Courage Score analysis, Assm. McCarty has supported nearly all progressive bills that made it to a vote.
Governance and community leadership experience: Dr. Cofer has not run for public office before.
Dr. Cofer was inspired to pursue a career in public health after the untimely and preventable death of her father when she was a child. She earned her PhD at the University of Michigan, and has focused her advocacy on utilizing policy data to implement meaningful public systems change. Her campaign platform seeks to apply a research lens to the challenges most impacting city residents to allow for comprehensive solutions to issues that have gone unaddressed for years.
Assm. McCarty has served in this assembly seat since 2014, when he was elected with over 58.7% of the vote. In 2022, he won his reelection against a Republican challenger by 32 points.
Prior to his election to the Assembly, Assm. McCarty was a Sacramento City Councilmember from 2004 to 2014. He was the policy director to California’s former Lieutenant Governor Cruz Bustamante and a former Budget Committee consultant. Assm. McCarty has been a longtime supporter of safe housing and protection from gun violence.
Other background: Dr. Cofer is from Pittsburgh, PA, and has lived in California for 15 years. If elected, she would be the first Black woman to lead the city of Sacramento.
Assm. McCarty is from Sacramento.
The Race
Primary election: There are six candidates running in the March 5 primary, including Assm. Kevin McCarty, Dr. Flo Cofer, Jose Antonio Avina II, Julius Engel, Steve Hansen, and Richard Pan. The top two vote recipients will advance to the general election on November 5, unless one candidate wins more than 50% of the vote and wins outright in the primary.
Candidate fundraising and pledges: Assm. Kevin McCarty’s campaign has raised $97,000 as of December 2023, and is not funded by corporate PAC, real estate, or fossil fuel interests.
Opposing candidate’s fundraising and pledges: Dr. Flo Cofer’s campaign has raised $173,000 as of December 2023, and is not funded by police, fossil fuel, real estate, or corporate PAC interests.
The District
City: Sacramento is Sacramento County’s most populous city. Sacramento’s mayor and city council oversee the needs of 525,000 people and manage an estimated operating budget of $1.5 billion annually.
District demographics: As of the 2020 Census, Sacramento had a demographic breakdown of 29% Latino, 20% Asian, and 13% Black.
Recent election results: Sacramento County, which includes Sacramento, voted for Joe Biden for president in 2020 by 25 points and for Gavin Newsom for governor in 2022 by 15 points.
The Position
Sacramento uses a Council-Manager government structure, which includes a mayor elected at large, an 8-member districted city council, and a City Manager who acts as the city’s chief executive officer. The mayor of Sacramento interprets policies, makes recommendations to the City Council, acts as a voting member of the City Council, and may appoint or remove members of boards, commissions, or advisory agencies as provided by the city’s Charter. In Sacramento, a mayor is elected to a 4-year term, with a limit of two consecutive terms.