District: | 69 |
Chamber: | Assembly |
Population: | 465,317[1] |
Population Year: | 2010 |
Voting Age: | 324,581 |
Citizen Voting Age: | 172,928 |
Percent White: | 12.14 |
Percent Black: | 1.46 |
Percent Latino: | 76.14 |
Percent Asian: | 9.26 |
Percent Native American: | 0.27 |
Percent Pacific Islander: | 0.33 |
Percent Other Race: | 0.16 |
Percent Remainder Of Multiracial: | 0.24 |
Registered: | 165,843 |
Democratic: | 52.47 |
Republican: | 18.01 |
Npp: | 25.11 |
California's 69th State Assembly district is one of 80 California State Assembly districts. It is currently represented by Democrat Josh Lowenthal.
The district encompasses Signal Hill, Avalon, and parts of Carson and Long Beach. The district contains the largest population of Cambodians outside of Cambodia and one of the largest populations of Filipino people outside of the Philippines.
Orange County – 15.5%
Year | Office | Results |
---|---|---|
2021 | Recall | align="right" No 70.2 – 29.8% |
2020 | President | Biden 68.7 – 29.1% |
2018 | Governor | Newsom 69.4 – 30.6% |
Senator | Feinstein 52.9 – 47.1% | |
2016 | President | Clinton 71.9 – 22.3% |
Senator | Sanchez 62.1 – 37.9% | |
2014 | Governor | Brown 66.3 – 33.7% |
2012 | President | Obama 67.4 – 30.7% |
Senator | Feinstein 68.9 – 31.1% |
Due to redistricting, the 69th district has been moved around different parts of the state. The current iteration resulted from the 2011 redistricting by the California Citizens Redistricting Commission.
Assembly members | Party | Years served | Counties represented | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saron Nathaniel Laughlin | Republican | January 3, 1885 - January 3, 1887 | Monterey | ||
Thomas Renison | Democratic | January 3, 1887 - January 5, 1891 | |||
Claude Fontaine Lacey | Republican | January 5, 1891 - January 2, 1893 | |||
David T. Perkins | January 2, 1893 - January 7, 1895 | Ventura | |||
Peter Bennett | January 7, 1895 - January 4, 1897 | ||||
Thomas O. Toland | People | January 4, 1897 - January 2, 1899 | |||
Charles B. Greenwell | Republican | January 2, 1899 - January 1, 1901 | |||
Robert M. Clarke | January 1, 1901 - January 5, 1903 | ||||
Edgar Whittlesey Camp | January 5, 1903 - January 2, 1905 | Los Angeles | |||
Newton Warner Thompson | January 2, 1905 - January 4, 1909 | ||||
Harry Barndollar | January 4, 1909 - January 2, 1911 | ||||
William E. Hinshaw | January 2, 1911 - January 6, 1913 | ||||
Egbert J. Gates | January 6, 1913 - January 4, 1915 | ||||
Henry W. Wright | Progressive | January 4, 1915 - January 8, 1923 | Ran as Republican for his 2nd term. | ||
Republican | |||||
Charles B. Dawson | January 8, 1923 - January 5, 1925 | ||||
Jerome Valentine Scofield | January 5, 1925 - January 5, 1931 | ||||
Harry F. Sewell | January 5, 1931 - January 2, 1933 | ||||
Walter H. Sullivan | Democratic | January 2, 1933 - January 7, 1935 | |||
Amos Franklin Glover | January 7, 1935 - January 4, 1937 | ||||
Fred P. Glick | January 4, 1937 - January 2, 1939 | ||||
Ralph C. Dills | January 2, 1939 - June 1, 1949 | Resigned from office to become a Justice, Los Angeles County Municipal Court | |||
Carley V. Porter | January 8, 1951 - January 7, 1963 | ||||
William E. Dannemeyer | January 7, 1963 – January 2, 1967 | Orange | |||
Kenneth Cory | January 2, 1967 - November 30, 1974 | ||||
John Briggs | Republican | December 2, 1974 - November 30, 1976 | |||
William E. Dannemeyer | December 6, 1976 – November 30, 1978 | ||||
Ross Johnson | December 4, 1978 – November 30, 1982 | ||||
Nolan Frizzelle | December 6, 1982 - November 30, 1992 | ||||
Tom Umberg | Democratic | December 7, 1992 - November 30, 1994 | |||
Jim Morrissey | Republican | December 5, 1994 - November 30, 1998 | |||
Lou Correa | Democratic | December 7, 1998 – November 30, 2004 | |||
Tom Umberg | December 6, 2004 – November 30, 2006 | ||||
Jose Solorio | December 4, 2006 – November 30, 2012 | ||||
Tom Daly | December 3, 2012 – present | ||||
align=center | 1992 • 1994 • 1996 • 1998 • 2000 • 2002 • 2004 • 2006 • 2008 • 2010 • 2012 • 2014 • 2016 • 2018 • 2020 |