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California playoff live update scores, roundup: Nov. 28-29, 2025

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California playoff live update scores, roundup: Nov. 28-29, 2025


Throughout the Golden State, previews turned to scores, highlights, notes of section finals everywhere from games Nov. 28-29.

Make sure to to go to all your local newspaper/online sites for more details. (We’ll link to as many as possible here).

Final: McClymonds 34, Oakland Tech 0

Berell Staples threw three touchdown passes, two to Prince Staten (24 and 55 yards), and Dominic Davis (70 yards) and Keian Davis-Jiminez (1 yard) added rushing touchdowns as McClymonds won its 16th straight Silver Bowl. Washington commit Rahsjon Duncan added a 10-yard receiving TD and a 70-yarder setting up another score.

Final: Balboa 54, Washington 42 GAME STORY

High school football California

Mekai Smith off to the races for one of his six touchdowns, leading Balboa to a 54-42 San Francisco Section championship win over Washington at legendary Kezar Stadium on Thanksgiving / Photo by Ernie Abrea

Final: De La Salle 24, Pittsburg 17

De La Salle-Concord was sternly tested but captured its 33rd consecutive section title, beating Pittsburg at Diablo Valley College on Friday. The Spartans got touchdown runs of 26 yards from Brady Smith, 50 from Jaden Jefferson and 57 yards by quarterback Brayden Knight. They then relied on a bend-but-don’t-break defense to knock off a Pittsburg squad that held advantages in total yards (396-338), first downs (24-10) and plays (76-39). Pittsburg (10-2) converted just two of seven tries in the red zone, missing two short field goals and getting TDs from Kenneth Ward (16-yard pass from JaVale Jones) and Siotame Finau (3-yard run). While De La Salle (12-0) will almost certainly be chosen as the Northern California representative in the CIF Open Division Bowl Game scheduled for Dec. 13, Pittsburg drops down to the Division I finals to face Cardinal Newman-Santa Rosa, a 52-17 winner over Acalanes-Lafayette. 

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Final: Pittsburg 42, Cardinal Newman 17

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No. 3 Cardinal Newman (11-1) vs. No. 2 Pittsburg (10-2) at Diablo Valley College, 7 p.m. Friday, — The first meeting between these longtime powers and both teams coming in with loads of confidence. Newman, without starting QB JT Retamoza (collarbone injury), rushed for 463 yards in a 52-17 win over previously unbeaten Acalanes-Lafayette. Pittsburg largely outplayed De La Salle-Concord in a 24-17 Open Division title defeat, dropping the Pirates to Division I. The Pirates, led by sophomore QB Javale Jones (31 of 45, 304 yards), goes after its fifth straight D1 crown and eighth overall. Newman has won 13.  

Final: Monte Vista 24, Clayton Valley Charter 10

Preview
No. 2 Monte Vista-Danville (7-5) vs. No. 4 Clayton Valley Charter-Concord (7-5) at Dublin High School, 7 p.m. Friday — Monte Vista, under first-year coach Joe Wingert, have caught fire at the right time but will have to slow Fresno State-bound RB Jhadis Luckey, who has carried the ball 289 yards for 2,173 yards and 28 touchdowns, all section highs. CVC owns a 5-1 series lead since 2015, including a wild 39-35 barnburner the last time they faced in 2023. Monte Vista has won seven NCS titles, Clayton Valley four. 

Final: El Cerrito 32, Ukiah 21

Preview
No. 3 El Cerrito (10-2) vs. No. 5 Ukiah (8-4) at American Canyon HS, 7 p.m. Friday — El Cerrito has won nine straight including last week’s 26-9 semifinal win at Rancho Cotate-Rohnert Park. Ukiah, coached by former Newman head coach Paul Cronin, is led by senior QB Beau David (2,654 passing yards, 22 TDs) who last week threw a game-winning two-point conversion off the referee’s chest into the arms of Dareon Dorsey in a wild 21-20 win over Vintage-Napa. EC has four shutouts and allowed 96 points. Ukiah is after its second NCS title and first since 1999, while El Cerrito is after its fourth.

Preview
No. 3 Miramonte-Orinda (7-5) vs. No. 1 Hayward (9-3) at Moreau Catholic-Hayward HS, 7 p.m. Saturday — Miramonte looks to win its 10th NCS title and Hayward just its second and first since Jack Del Rio led the Farmers in 1979. Hayward relies on speedy RB Maurice Hall (1,096 yards rushing, 17 TDs in 11 games). Miramonte has 17 interceptions, five each by David Roman and Henry Hunt. 

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No. 2 Ferndale (12-0) vs. No. 1 St. Vincent de Paul-Petaluma (11-1) at Rancho Cotate, 7 p.m. Saturday — After its 15th NCS title, Ferndale has outscored opponents 736-39, relying heavily on the rush, especially QB Tanner Pidgeon and RB Prescott Langer who have combined for 57 touchdowns. Pigeon is also a ballhawk on defense with seven of his team’s 24 interceptions. St. Vincent, winner of two straight state titles, is an entirely different beast with fourth-year QB Gabe Casanovas (nearly 10,000 total career yards, 130 touchdowns) and third-year starting RB Mason Caturegli (4,307 total yards, 60 TDs). Ferndale won the only meeting between the teams since 2004, a 53-14 NCS title win in 2012. St. Vincent is after its 11th NCS title and fourth in five years.

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Preview
No. 4 Fortuna (8-4) vs. No. 3 Bishop O’Dowd-Oakland (8-4) at Moreau Catholic, 2 p.m. Saturday — O’Dowd has won five previous titles and Fortuna four. Both last won crowns in 2018. The teams have never met. Lamar Ellis leads O’Dowd with 1,080 yards rushing and 17 touchdowns in seven games. 

Final: Middletown 37, Piedmont 23

Preview
No. 2 Piedmont (8-4) vs. Middletown (10-2) at Justin-Siena HS, 7 p.m. Friday —  Since a 63-7 loss to Hayward, Piedmont has won six straight behind a balanced offensive attack that averages 170 yards through the air behind sophomore QB Jimmy Lagios and 157 on the ground behind Xavier Henderson (18 TDs, nine games). Piedmont is after its second NCS title and first since 1976. Middletown has won four crowns, the last in 2018. 

Final: Serra 28, Los Gatos 21

Preview
No. 3 Los Gatos (9-3) vs. No. 2 Serra (7-5) at San Jose City College, 7 p.m. Friday — Serra lost its first CCS title game under Patrick Walsh — after eight titles — in a 33-13 setback to Riordan in the Open Division. The Padres go for their 10th overall  hoping for big games from freshman QB William Orr, leading rusher Iziah Singletown and receiver Charlie Walsh. Los Gatos, led by 17 rushing TDs from Grayson Doslak and 24 scoring passes by Callum Schweitzer, has won a CCS record 16 titles, two under current coach Mark Krail who led the Wildcats to win over Serra the last two meetings, 14-7 last season and 28-0 in 2014. 

Preview
No. 2 Sacred Heart Cathedral (6-6) vs. No. 1 St. Ignatius (6-6) at SJCC, 1 p.m. Saturday — For the second time in the 130-year history of this rivalry the teams will meet for a section crown, the last time in 2011 at (currently named) Oracle Park St. Ignatius prevailed 21-14 before 12,000 fans. Though both teams aren’t thrilled with traveling 50 miles south, “we could meet in a parking lot, it doesn’t matter,” said SHC senior QB Michael Sargent. Especially the Irish, who were beaten 23-14 three weeks ago at Kezar Stadium to help decide the Bruce-Mahoney trophy. Both teams are playing their best football of the season, St. Ignatius, under first-year head coach JaJuan Lawson, is after its fifth title and second straight (last year it won the Open title). SHC seeks a third crown. 

Preview
No. 8 San Mateo (9-3) vs. No. 3 Menlo-Atherton (6-6) at MacDonald-San Jose HS, 7 p.m. Saturday — The upstart Bearscats, led by nearly 1,500 rushing yards and 18 touchdowns by Lukas Fitzgerald, are after their fourth CCS title but first since 2003. Menlo-Atherton, which started the season 0-4, seeks its fifth crown. M-A beat San Mateo 42-28 on Sept. 26. 

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Preview
No. 3 Lincoln-San Jose (9-3) vs. Branham-San Jose (7-5) at SJCC, 7 p.m. Saturday — Both teams are after a first CCS title. This is Lincoln’s first title game. 

Preview
No. 2 Sobrato-Morgan Hill (8-4) vs. Piedmont Hills-San Jose (9-3) at MacDonald HS, 1 p.m. Saturday — Sobrato makes its first CCS championship, while Piedmont Hills is after its second crown and first since 2010.  

Final: No. 1 Folsom 21, No. 2 Oak Ridge 14

No. 4 St. Mary’s (10-2) vs. No. 2 Granite Bay (9-3) 7:30 p.m. Saturday

Final: No. 1 Woodcreek 58, No. 2 Oakdale 52

No. 4 East Union (9-3) vs. No. 2 Roseville (10-2), 4 p.m. Saturday

Final: No. 3 Sutter 42, No. 1 Casa Roble 27

No. 1 Sonora (12-0) vs. No. 3 Ripon Christian (10-2), 12:30 p.m. Saturday

Final: No. 1 Calaveras 27, No. 7 Linden 12

No. 1 Mira Loma (11-0) vs. No. 2 Foresthill (10-1), 9 a.m. Saturday

No. 1 Central East 70, No. 2 Clovis 35

No. 1 Bakersfield Christian 38, No. 3 Liberty 16

No. 4 Arroyo Grande 23, No. 2 Bakersfield 20

No. 5 Kennedy 49, No. 6 Independence 13

No. 2 Immanuel 48, No. 1 Templeton 7

No. 4 Bishop Union 59, No. 2 Woodlake 21

No. 1 Minarets 21, No. 2 Orosi 14

No. 4 Foothill (7-5) vs. No. 3 Chico (10-2)

No. 1 Gridley (12-0) vs. No. 3 Orland (10-2)

No. 1 Winters 32, No. 2 Hamilton 29

No. 1 Redding Christian 26, No. 2 Maxwell 0

Final: Santa Margarita 42, Corona Centennial 7

Los Alamitos (11-2) at San Clemente (9-4)

Final: Oxnard Pacifica 20, Palos Verdes 10

La Habra (10-3) at San Jacinto (10-3)

Rio Hondo Prep (13-0) at Redondo Union (9-4)

Ventura (11-2) at St. Pius X-St. Matthias Academy (7-6)

Barstow 10, Apple Valley 7

Beckman 30, Brea Olinda 24 (OT)

Ramona (11-2) at Cerritos Valley Christian (10-3)

Tahquitz (10-3) at Hillcrest (8-5)

Baldwin Park (8-5) at Valley View (8-5)

Grace 48, Santa Paula 16

Woodbridge 24, Montebello 23

South El Monte 14, Pioneer 6

Crenshaw (10-1) vs. Carson (8-3), 6 p.m.

Marquez (11-2) vs. South Gate (10-3), 2 p.m.

San Fernando 21, Cleveland 14

Santee 35, Hawkins 6

Final: Cathedral Catholic 20, Carlsbad 16

No. 1 Lincoln (10-2) vs. No. 2 Granite Hills (9-3)

No. 1 Santa Fe Christian 44, No. 2 Steele Canyon 41

No. 1 Central (10-2) vs. No. 6 Central (6-7)

No. 5 Eastlake (7-6) vs. No. 3 Valley Center (6-6)

No. 2 Morse 45, No. 9 Hoover 30

No. 1 Marantha Christian 24, No. 2 Palo Verde Valley 12



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Tori Spelling speaks out after California car crash with seven children

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Tori Spelling speaks out after California car crash with seven children


Tori Spelling is feeling “grateful” after the “Beverly Hills, 90210” star and four of her children were involved in a serious car crash in California earlier this month.

“We are so grateful and so lucky, because it could have been so much worse,” Spelling said in a Tuesday Instagram video, adding that the last few days have been “overwhelming.”

The Riverside County Sheriff’s Office previously told NBC News the April 2 crash occurred after another driver allegedly ran a red light while speeding and hit Spelling’s car.

Spelling, 52, and seven children — four of her own and three of their friends — were taken to the hospital after the April 2 accident in Temecula, California. The sheriff’s officer said at the time that all occupants were evaluated at the scene, and no arrests were made. The cause of the collision, however, remains under investigation.

In the self-style video, Spelling detailed the incident from her point of view, saying that the driver who hit her car was “going crazy, crazy fast.”

“I’m just really grateful that in a split second, guardian angels were definitely with us that day, because in a split second, I looked to my right and I saw he was coming full on, full impact into the side of our car,” she said.

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To avoid impacting the children as much as possible, Spelling said she had to turn hard left as fast as she could, causing them to spin out. TMZ, which first reported the incident, said Spelling and the children were treated for cuts, bruises, contusions, concussions, and other injuries.

“I just want to thank all of the first responders on the scene and to Inland Valley ER that took such great care of all of the kids and myself,” Spelling added in the video.

Video obtained by TMZ appeared to show Spelling speaking animatedly with first responders. Photos published by TMZ appeared to show Spelling’s car to be significantly less damaged than the other vehicle involved.

“I’m grateful to everyone who has reached out and repeatedly checked on us and offered to do whatever we needed to get us through this, and all the blessings everyone has sent,” Spelling added in the video.

Spelling shares five children with her ex-husband, Dean McDermott. It is unclear which of her four children was in the car involved in the crash.

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California Assembly Health Committee passes ‘Next of Kin Notification’ bill

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California Assembly Health Committee passes ‘Next of Kin Notification’ bill


A bill sparked by a KCRA 3 investigation cleared its first hurdle in the California Legislature on Tuesday.Assembly Bill 2598 was introduced in response to KCRA’s “Dignity Delayed.” The investigation revealed a backlog of human remains after patient deaths at Dignity Health hospitals. The hospitals are accused of failing to notify families and county officials for months or even years after the deaths and, instead, leaving bodies to decompose in cold storage at an off-site morgue without a death certificate.In court records, Dignity Health said the COVID-19 pandemic and staffing issues caused delays, although they dispute that they did not initially try to contact next of kin.That is a dispute that is now being argued in civil court following lawsuits filed by families who say they were left in the dark about the deaths of their loved ones.In the meantime, AB 2598 aims to make it clear that notification of next of kin is required and that not doing so could have consequences.“This is necessary to fill a gap that we currently have in our law,” said the bill’s author, Assemblymember Maggy Krell, D-Sacramento.The bill states that the California Department of Health could dole out penalties of $200 a day for each day that a hospital fails to make a reasonable attempt to notify family. Fines would max out at $50,000. The California Hospital Association is proposing some amendments and clarifications to the bill, but there is currently no registered opposition to it.The Assembly Health Committee voted to pass the bill, and it is scheduled to be heard before the Assembly Judiciary Committee next.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel

A bill sparked by a KCRA 3 investigation cleared its first hurdle in the California Legislature on Tuesday.

Assembly Bill 2598 was introduced in response to KCRA’s “Dignity Delayed.” The investigation revealed a backlog of human remains after patient deaths at Dignity Health hospitals. The hospitals are accused of failing to notify families and county officials for months or even years after the deaths and, instead, leaving bodies to decompose in cold storage at an off-site morgue without a death certificate.

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In court records, Dignity Health said the COVID-19 pandemic and staffing issues caused delays, although they dispute that they did not initially try to contact next of kin.

That is a dispute that is now being argued in civil court following lawsuits filed by families who say they were left in the dark about the deaths of their loved ones.

In the meantime, AB 2598 aims to make it clear that notification of next of kin is required and that not doing so could have consequences.

“This is necessary to fill a gap that we currently have in our law,” said the bill’s author, Assemblymember Maggy Krell, D-Sacramento.

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The bill states that the California Department of Health could dole out penalties of $200 a day for each day that a hospital fails to make a reasonable attempt to notify family. Fines would max out at $50,000.

The California Hospital Association is proposing some amendments and clarifications to the bill, but there is currently no registered opposition to it.

The Assembly Health Committee voted to pass the bill, and it is scheduled to be heard before the Assembly Judiciary Committee next.

See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel

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Trump Won This Latino California District; Now Independents Will Decide Who Holds It

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Trump Won This Latino California District; Now Independents Will Decide Who Holds It


Assembly District 36 covers some of California’s most remote and geographically extraordinary terrain, stretching across all of Imperial County and a large portion of Riverside County, with a small slice of San Bernardino County. The district includes the cities of Indio, Coachella, Blythe, and Needles in Riverside County; portions of the City of Hemet; and the Imperial Valley cities of Calexico, Brawley, El Centro, Imperial, Calipatria, Holtville, and Westmorland.

Few districts can claim three borders. AD36 runs along the Mexico border to the south, the Arizona border to the east, and touches Nevada to the northeast. 

Near Blythe, the ancient Blythe Intaglios, enormous figures etched into the desert floor by Indigenous peoples, are the best known of hundreds of geoglyphs found across the American West. 

The district encompasses tribal lands belonging to the Quechan Tribe near Winterhaven, the Chemehuevi near Needles, and the Twenty-Nine Palms Band of Mission Indians.

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El Centro, one of the few American cities located below sea level, is recognized as the birthplace and early home of the iconic singer, actress, and “Goddess of Pop,” Cher. In a twist that only California rock and roll could produce, the Sonny Bono Salton Sea National Wildlife Refuge sits entirely within AD36.

It’s also the home of the Empire Polo Club, host of the famous Coachella festival.

This year, the festival’s being held April 10-12 & 17-19, 2026, and will feature Sabrina Carpenter and Justin Bieber

At last year’s festival, US Senator Bernie Sanders and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez wrapped up their Fighting Oligarchy Tour on April 16, after a five-day, seven-stop sweep through the West that drew nearly 150,000 people—capping it off with an unexpected appearance at the Coachella music festival.

Sanders and AOC Wrap ‘Fighting Oligarchy’ Tour and Bernie Takes the Mic at Coachella

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US Senator Bernie Sanders and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez wrapped up their Fighting Oligarchy Tour on April 16, after a five-day, seven-stop sweep through the West that drew nearly 150,000 people—capping it off with an unexpected appearance by Sanders at the Coachella music festival.

The climate in AD36 is definitely not for the faint of heart. Temperatures routinely exceed 110 degrees in summer, yet the district’s mild winters are exactly what make the Imperial Valley one of the most productive winter vegetable growing regions in the United States. 

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When the rest of the country is eating lettuce, broccoli, and carrots in January, there is a good chance it came from AD36. 

The farming operations here hold some of the most senior water rights in the United States, and because the district encompasses both the Colorado River basin communities of Blythe and Needles and the intensively irrigated Imperial Valley, the representative for AD36 is a key player in Western water politics, in constant negotiation with the federal government and neighboring states. 

The 2024 Imperial County Agricultural Crop and Livestock Report confirms cattle as a top commodity in the district, with a gross value of $546 million.

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The Salton Sea, California’s largest lake by surface area, lies entirely within AD36 and sits atop one of the world’s largest known lithium deposits, found in geothermal brine beneath the valley floor. There has been an enormous push to turn the Imperial Valley into a global hub for electric-vehicle battery production, making this region one of the most closely watched economic stories in California.

The district was drawn to protect the political voice of its majority-Latino population under Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, and its communities share deep concerns about water, the border, and the region’s economic future.

Demographics, Housing, and Cost of Living

According to the 2023 American Community Survey, Assembly District 36 has a total population of 486,764. 

The district is 69.7% Latino, making it one of the most heavily Latino districts in California. White residents comprise 20.4%, Black residents 3.5%, and Asian residents 3%. 

The citizen voting age population stands at 61.3%, with 26.8% of residents foreign-born and 13.3% classified as non-citizens.

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Economic conditions in the district reflect significant hardship. The median household income is $66,802, with a mean household income of $88,932 and a per capita income of $28,343. 

Approximately 14.9% of residents live below the poverty line, 7.8% lack health insurance, and 20.9% of households receive food assistance. Educational attainment is relatively low, with 17.7% of residents holding a bachelor’s degree and 5.8% a graduate degree.

Housing is predominantly owner-occupied at 66.4%, with 33.6% of homes renter-occupied. The median home value is $347,100, and the median monthly rent is $1,168. 

The district’s 19,652 civilian veterans represent 5.5% of the population, a significant share that reflects both the region’s proximity to military installations and its strong tradition of military service.

23%of Voters Do Not Belong to A Major Party

As of December 30, 2025, Assembly District 36 had 258,071 registered voters. Democrats hold 40.9% of registrations, Republicans 29.1%, and No Party Preference voters 22.9%, with American Independent comprising roughly 4%. Democrats maintain a registration advantage of approximately 11.8 points, but that figure understates how dramatically the partisan landscape has shifted.

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The Democratic advantage peaked at 17.3 points in 2022 and has contracted sharply since, falling to 13.6 points by the 2024 general election and further to 11.8 points by the close of 2025. Republican registration has climbed from 26.9% in 2022 to 29.1% today, while the Democratic share has slipped from 44.2% to 40.9% over the same period.

The growth of No Party Preference voters is significant. NPP registrations have nearly doubled in raw numbers since 2008, rising from roughly 22,000 to nearly 59,000, and their share of the electorate has grown from 15.2% to 22.9%. Nearly one in four voters in AD36 now belongs to no party. In a district where the Democratic registration advantage has been shrinking and top-of-ticket results have already flipped Republican, independent voters are not a secondary factor at all in this race.

They are central to the outcome.

More Choice for San Diego

The district’s partisan profile also varies considerably by county. Riverside County accounts for 62.4% of registered voters and leans Democratic by just 8.1 points. Imperial County, representing 36.4% of the electorate, carries a wider 19.1-point Democratic advantage. The small San Bernardino County portion, just 1.2% of registrations, actually leans Republican.

Trump and Harris Were Neck and Neck in 2024

The rightward movement in AD36 has been among the most pronounced of any majority-Latino district in California. 

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Donald Trump carried the district by 1.3% in 2024, winning 49.5% to Kamala Harris’s 48.2%, a striking outcome in a district where Democrats still held a registration advantage exceeding 13 points.

In the 2024 U.S. Senate race, Republican Steve Garvey edged Democrat Adam Schiff by 1.9%, 51% to 49%. 

Republican Jeff Gonzalez defeated Democrat Joey Acuña by 3.6%.

The 2026 Race for Assembly

Gonzalez enters the 2026 cycle as the incumbent in a district his party captured just two years ago. Three Democrats have qualified to challenge him in the top-two primary.

Oscar Ortiz, an Indio City Councilmember who challenged Representative Raul Ruiz from the left in the 2024 congressional primary and finished fourth with 10% of the vote, came closest to winning the Democratic Party’s formal backing. He received 60% at the party’s pre-endorsement conference, falling short of the required threshold, and then 45% at the primary endorsement vote, also short of the mark. The California Democratic Party ultimately issued no endorsement in the race.

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Tomas Oliva, a former El Centro City Councilmember who placed sixth in the 2024 Assembly primary and serves as a senior field representative for Representative Ruiz, and Ida Obeso-Martinez, an Imperial City Councilmember and cardiovascular nurse practitioner, have also filed.

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Gonzalez closed 2025 with a commanding financial advantage, having raised $751,378 for the cycle and reporting $402,837 on hand. Among the Democrats, Ortiz led in total fundraising at $147,874 raised with $61,017 on hand, followed by Oliva at $89,587 raised and $63,569 on hand, and Obeso-Martinez at $73,059 raised and $24,659 on hand.

More About The Candidates

Jeff Gonzalez (Republican, Incumbent)

Jeff Gonzalez, born August 5, 1974, is a Marine veteran, former pastor, small business owner, and self-described first-generation American who became the first Republican to win this district in years when he prevailed in 2024. 

Born in New Jersey and raised in Southern California, he enlisted in the Marines at 19 and served in counterintelligence and as an operations manager during deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan, earning the rank of chief warrant officer. He holds a bachelor’s degree in domestic security management from National University and a master’s in theology from Gateway University.

His path to elected office ran through a decade in ministry. Starting in 2007 as a volunteer campus coordinator at Saddleback Church, he moved to Southwest Church in Indian Wells six years later as outreach pastor and public relations director, then returned to Saddleback, serving congregations in San Diego and later Indian Wells. Along the way, he chaired the Marine Corps Counterintelligence Association and served on the board of Habitat for Humanity. He now owns a Spherion Staffing and Recruiting franchise.

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Gonzalez first sought the Assembly in 2018, running against Democrat Eduardo Garcia in what was then the 56th district. He advanced out of the primary but lost the general election by a wide margin in a difficult year for Republicans statewide. When Garcia retired in 2024, Gonzalez ran again and won in a race that reflected the district’s dramatic rightward shift.

In the Assembly, he serves on the Aging and Long-Term Care, Agriculture, Arts and Entertainment, Higher Education, and Military and Veterans Affairs Committees, and is vice chair of the Water, Parks, and Wildlife Committee.

His early legislative priorities reflect the economic realities of this sprawling rural district. A bill to suspend the state’s 61-cent-per-gallon gas tax for one year drew on imagery he has used on the campaign trail, contrasting gas prices in Needles with those just across the Arizona border. “In rural and desert communities, a car is not a luxury. It’s a lifeline,” he said. “This is about affordability, this is about fairness, and this is about putting people before politics.” 

He recently authored the Rural Farmworker Women’s Health Act, which would require the state health department to partner with local nonprofits to distribute free menstrual products to women in remote agricultural regions. “More than 100,000 women work in California agriculture,” he said. “Many are in rural areas with no easy access to stores or health services. They should not have to go through a full workday without basic hygiene products.”

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CA bill aims to provide ‘dignity’ and free menstrual hygiene products to female farmworkers

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A new state bill looks to fill a crucial healthcare need for female farmworkers in rural agricultural areas across California.

He also authored a bill to expedite environmental review for the Coachella Valley Rail project, a proposed $1.5 billion passenger line between the valley and Los Angeles, potentially cutting its planning timeline by roughly two years if the measure passes. 

“AB 1855 removes unnecessary roadblocks to expanding passenger rail on an already existing rail line, especially in communities that depend on driving,” Gonzalez said. The bill attracted bipartisan support, with Democratic Assemblymember Corey Jackson and Republican Assemblymember Greg Wallis among the co-authors.

On public safety, Gonzalez has been outspoken about the lasting harm of violent crime, at times speaking from personal experience. Joining Republican colleagues at a March 2026 press conference urging the parole board to deny release to a convicted child molester, he said, “This issue is not abstract for me. I understand firsthand the lifelong impact the abuse leaves behind. It doesn’t end when the crime ends. It follows you.” When opponents argued that the rising cost of housing aging inmates should factor into the decision, he dismissed the framing: “I don’t give a damn about the rising costs. I give a damn about these victims.”

In February 2025, Gonzalez joined the newly formed California Hispanic Legislative Caucus, which Republican lawmakers created after the Democratic Latino Legislative Caucus declined to admit them over policy differences on immigration.

 “Californians want their legislators exchanging ideas across the aisle,” Gonzalez wrote at the time. “No more partisan exclusion!” 

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His platform also calls for eliminating taxes on groceries, passing what he describes as a major middle-class tax cut, hiring more teachers, and strengthening school safety.

He resides in Indio with his wife, Christine, and their four children.

Oscar Ortiz (Democrat)

Oscar Ortiz, born January 20, 1990, is an Indio City Councilmember, former mayor, and deputy director of Friends of the Desert Mountains, a nonprofit devoted to land conservation and environmental education in the region. Born in Mexicali and raised in Indio after his family immigrated when he was 3, he became a U.S. citizen at 17. He graduated at the top of his class from Indio High School and went on to earn a chemistry degree from Stanford University in 2012, where his coursework included research on bioterrorism defense. He subsequently built a career in the pharmaceutical industry before moving into environmental nonprofit work.

More Choice for San Diego

First elected to the Indio City Council in 2018 at 28, Ortiz became the youngest person ever to hold that office, unseating an incumbent in the process. His tenure included serving as mayor in 2023 and steering the city through the COVID-19 pandemic and the damage caused by Tropical Storm Hilary, while advancing affordable housing, bilingual community outreach, and support for small businesses. He was appointed to a second council term in 2022 without opposition and currently chairs the Coachella Valley Association of Governments Energy and Sustainability Commission. In the 2024 congressional primary, he challenged Representative Raul Ruiz from the left, finishing fourth with 10% of the vote.

“I’m running for State Assembly to raise the concerns of workers in our state,” he said when announcing his candidacy. “Our families are struggling to keep up with the rising costs of rent and the ever-increasing costs of health care and insurance rates.” He has also called for new approaches to persistent regional challenges. “We need representatives who are willing to bring bold, innovative solutions to solve the increasingly complex challenges facing our region,” he said.

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His platform centers on housing affordability, expanded healthcare access in a district with too few specialists and mental health providers, and building regional economic strength through clean energy and union labor. He has also emphasized the contributions of domestic and care workers. 

Upon receiving the endorsement of United Domestic Workers of America, he said:

“Home and child care workers are the backbone of our communities. They show up every single day to care for our children, our seniors, and our neighbors with disabilities, often without the recognition or compensation they deserve. As your Assemblymember, I will fight to ensure these essential workers have the wages, benefits, and respect they have earned.”

His endorsers include the California Federation of Labor Unions, the Inland Empire Labor Council, United Domestic Workers of America, the California Teachers Association, the California Federation of Teachers, SEIU California, the California Legislative Progressive Caucus, IBEW locals 440 and 569, Painters and Allied Trades District Council 36, and California Environmental Voters.

Ortiz is the leading Democratic fundraiser in the field, having raised $147,874 with $61,017 on hand at year-end 2025. He resides in Indio.

Tomas Oliva (Democrat)

Tomas Oliva, born September 11, 1984, is a former El Centro City Councilmember, adjunct professor at Imperial Valley College, and senior field representative for Representative Raul Ruiz. 

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His family moved to El Centro when he was young to be near relatives in Mexicali, after his father became too ill to work. His mother transitioned from homemaker to breadwinner, earning a graduate degree and spending more than two decades as an elementary school educator in the Imperial Valley. 

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Growing up on food stamps and public assistance, Oliva has drawn directly on that experience in his campaign. 

“I’m not another out-of-touch politician,” he has said. “I’m a kid from El Centro who grew up on food stamps and government assistance. I know firsthand policy is personal.”

Oliva earned a bachelor’s degree in political science from UC San Diego and a master’s in public administration from San Diego State University

His public service career began as a Polanco Fellow placed in the California Attorney General’s Office and the State Assembly. He subsequently managed Assemblymember Manuel Perez’s 2008 campaign, worked for the Superior Court of California in Imperial County, and served as a regional affairs officer for the Southern California Association of Governments from 2011 to 2015. He has since worked as a field representative in the offices of Representatives Juan Vargas and Raul Ruiz, taught adjunct courses at Imperial Valley College since 2016, including classes for incarcerated students at Centinela State Prison and Calipatria State Prison, and serves as a board trustee at El Centro Regional Medical Center. He chaired the Imperial County Democratic Central Committee in 2021.

Oliva served on the El Centro City Council from 2018 through March 2025, including a term as mayor. He considers his most consequential act in office to be overseeing the merger of the El Centro Regional Medical Center into the Imperial Valley Healthcare District, preserving hospital services for tens of thousands of residents. 

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His resignation in March 2025 came after he concluded that other council members were taking steps that jeopardized that merger’s future. 

“My resignation is the loudest alarm I could ring to make residents aware of the concerning direction this new council is taking, particularly when it comes to the future of our healthcare system,” he said. His departure also came ahead of a likely censure vote. 

Oliva placed sixth in the 2024 AD36 primary with 7.5% of the vote.

His priorities include protecting rural hospitals through better Medi-Cal reimbursement rates and expanded physician residency programs, sustaining the Salton Sea mitigation plan, creating an equitable economic framework for the Lithium Valley that channels revenues back to affected communities, and building out transit infrastructure connecting the Coachella Valley and Imperial Valley. 

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Oliva opposes data centers.

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“As an Assemblymember I will call for a statewide moratorium of data center developments across the state…The safety of our people and our neighbors cannot be an afterthought this is unacceptable.”

He has also pushed back against what he considers distorted narratives about border communities and President Trump’s effort to end automatic birthright citizenship. “Our hospitals are not being inundated by Mexican nationals,” he said in May 2025. “If you’re pregnant, you’re probably not going to get a visa. It’s a false narrative.”

Oliva had raised $89,587 with $63,569 cash on hand as of December 31, 2025. He resides in El Centro.

Ida Obeso-Martinez (Democrat)

Ida Obeso-Martinez, born May 6, 1979, is an Imperial City Councilmember, former Mayor Pro-Tem, and cardiovascular nurse practitioner at Imperial Cardiac Center.

A lifelong resident of Imperial County, she completed her nursing education at Imperial Valley College, the University of Phoenix, and ultimately the University of Arizona, where she earned a doctorate in nursing practice.

She spent more than two decades in emergency and intensive care nursing in Imperial Valley hospitals before specializing in cardiovascular care, has contributed to peer-reviewed medical journals, and sees more than 35 patients on a typical day, the majority of whom rely on Medicaid.

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Elected to the Imperial City Council in 2022, she has also served as Mayor Pro-Tem and mayor. In September 2024, she was chosen as board director and division representative for the League of California Cities, Imperial County Division. 

Her council record reflects a consistent focus on public health and community quality of life. In December 2023, she helped shepherd a smoke-free ordinance through the council that bans tobacco use at city-owned outdoor venues, including parks, playgrounds, and public events. 

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In February 2026, she announced $1.5 million in federal funding for a new regional park, secured with the assistance of Representative Ruiz and Senator Schiff. “Their dedication to improving quality of life for our residents will leave a lasting legacy,” she said. 

She has also led the city’s legal battle against Imperial County’s approval of a data center without environmental review under CEQA, arguing that residents deserve full transparency and enforceable protections. “The City of Imperial remains committed to the pursuit of a concise and public process,” she said. “Residents of this region deserve nothing less.”

In March 2025, Representative Ruiz brought Obeso-Martinez to Washington, D.C. as his guest for President Trump’s Joint Address to Congress, where she advocated against Medicaid cuts.

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“As a lifelong advocate for expanding health care access in the Imperial Valley, I am here to stand against Medicaid cuts that would limit the care our health facilities can provide to patients,” she said.

Her endorsements include Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas, Representative Ruiz, and Assemblymember Sharon Quirk-Silva. Obeso-Martinez had $73,059 raised and $24,659 on hand at year-end 2025 and resides in Imperial with her husband, Omar.

Independent Voters and an Unsettled Primary

No Party Preference registrations in AD36 have grown from 15.2% of the electorate in 2008 to 22.9% today, a gain of more than 36,000 voters in raw numbers. These 59,000 unaffiliated voters will play a pivotal role in shaping the outcome of both the June primary and the November general election.

In 2024, NPP voters in the district were part of a broader rightward wave that carried President Trump to a narrow victory here and helped Gonzalez flip the seat from blue to red. The question hanging over 2026 is whether that alignment will hold. Trump’s immigration enforcement policies have had direct and visible consequences in a district that runs along the United States-Mexico border, where many residents have family ties on both sides and where immigrant labor is the backbone of the agricultural economy. Whether the independent voters who supported Gonzalez in 2024 were casting a vote for him specifically, for Trump’s agenda broadly, or simply against the status quo is a question that 2026 may answer.

For Gonzalez, who has tried to cultivate a bipartisan identity and distanced himself from purely partisan messaging, the challenge will be holding NPP voters who may be uneasy with the administration’s direction. For the three Democrats in the field, the opportunity lies in making the case that those same voters have reason to reconsider. With no party endorsement unifying the Democratic side and a crowded primary ballot, how NPP voters distribute their support across the field will be among the defining questions of the race.

About the 2026 California Top Two Primary

The last day to register to vote for the June 2, 2026, Primary Election is May 18, 2026. All active registered voters will receive a vote-by-mail ballot. Ballots will begin mailing on May 4, and drop-off locations will open on May 5. Early in-person voting begins May 23 in Voter’s Choice Act counties. Vote-by-mail ballots must be postmarked by Election Day and received by June 9.

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This article draws on publicly available information from the California Secretary of State, the California Target Book, California FPPC campaign finance filings, the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey, Ballotpedia, the Imperial Valley Press, The Desert Sun, CalMatters, and other local and regional reporting.



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