Lori Saldaña Explained

Lori Saldaña
Office:Speaker pro tempore of the California State Assembly
Term Start:December 1, 2008
Term End:March 18, 2010
Predecessor:Sally Lieber
Successor:Fiona Ma
State Assembly1:California
District1:76th
Term Start1:December 6, 2004
Term End1:November 30, 2010
Predecessor1:Christine Kehoe
Successor1:Toni Atkins
Birth Date:7 November 1958
Birth Place:San Diego, California, U.S.
Nationality:American
Party:Democratic (before 2014, 2017–present)
Otherparty:Independent (2014–2016)
Residence:San Diego, California
Alma Mater:San Diego State University

Lori R. Saldaña (born November 7, 1958) is an American politician who served as Speaker pro tempore of the California State Assembly from 2008 to 2010. A member of the Democratic Party, she served in the California State Assembly from 2004 to 2010, representing the 76th Assembly district.

After leaving the Assembly, Saldaña has run unsuccessfully for a number of other elected offices, including California's 52nd congressional district, Mayor of San Diego, San Diego County Board of Supervisors, and member of the San Diego City Council from District 2.

Early life, education, and academic career

Lori Saldaña was born in 1958 in San Diego, the third of four daughters born to Virginia and Frank Saldaña. Frank Saldaña served in the Marine Corps and was a reporter for the San Diego Evening Tribune. Saldaña grew up in the Clairemont area of San Diego. After graduation from Madison High School, she attended San Diego State University (SDSU), earning both a Bachelor of Arts degree and a master's degree in Education.

Saldaña started her post-graduate life as a coach at San Diego City College, Clairemont High School, and Madison High School. Later, she worked as a professor and administrator in the San Diego Community College District, where she taught Business Information Technology and managed Department of Labor grants used to provide technical skills and training to the student base. She has also taught at her alma mater, San Diego State University.

She is the author of Lori Saldaña's Backpacking Primer (1995).[1]

California Assembly

Elections

In 2004, incumbent State Assemblywoman Christine Kehoe of California's 76th State Assembly district decided to retire in order to run for a seat in the California Senate. Saldaña ran for the open seat and won the Democratic primary with a plurality of 41% of the vote.[2] In the general election, she defeated Republican Tricia Hunter, a former Assemblywoman, 54%-41%.[3] In 2006, she won re-election to a second term with 64% of the vote.[4] In 2008, she won re-election to a third term with 64% of the vote.[5] She left the Assembly due to term limits in 2010.

Tenure

In 2007 Saldaña was named Legislator of the Year by Californians Against Waste for her legislation regarding E-waste.

In the 2009 session of the state legislature, Saldana introduced three bills that would restrict California's ballot initiative process:

Due to California's term limits, Saldaña's assembly career ended on August 31, 2010 in an acrimonious late-night session as she pushed legislation banning the open carry of firearms known as AB 1934.[7] Saldaña presented her bill to the Assembly with 70 minutes remaining in the 2010 regular session, and would not suspend debate when it became clear that its opponents would not let it come to an early vote.[8] Saldaña later clashed with fellow Democrats over their refusal to employ parliamentary procedure tactics to end debate so her measure could be heard.[9]

Committee assignments

She was appointed Assistant Majority Whip and served on the Appropriations, Natural Resources, Veteran's Affairs, and Water, Parks and Wildlife committees.

2012 congressional election

See main article: 2012 United States House of Representatives elections in California.

Originally, she was planning on running for a seat in the California Senate, but instead decided to run in the newly redrawn California's 52nd congressional district. She came in third place in the open primary and did not advance to the general election, which was ultimately won by Scott Peters.

2016 San Diego mayoral election

See main article: 2016 San Diego mayoral election.

In January 2016, she announced her candidacy for the mayor of San Diego against incumbent mayor Kevin Faulconer in his bid for re-election.[10] [11] For this election, she ran with a party affiliation of "no preference," though the office of mayor is officially nonpartisan. She lost in the primary to Faulconer, coming in second.

2018 San Diego County board of supervisors election

In 2018, Saldaña ran for a seat on the officially nonpartisan San Diego County Board of Supervisors. She campaigned as a Democrat, having changed her party affiliation back after the mayoral election.[12] She came in third place in the open primary and did not advance to the general election, which was ultimately won by Nathan Fletcher.[13]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Saldaña, Lori. Lori Saldaña's Backpacking Primer: Tips, Tricks, Techniques, and Step-by-step Help on Outfitting and Organizing a Successful Backpacking Trip. 1995. Mountain N' Air Books. 978-1-879415-13-3. en.
  2. Web site: Our Campaigns - CA State Assembly 76- D Primary Race - Mar 02, 2004.
  3. Web site: Our Campaigns - CA State Assembly 76 Race - Nov 02, 2004.
  4. Web site: Our Campaigns - CA State Assembly 76 Race - Nov 07, 2006.
  5. Web site: Our Campaigns - CA State Assembly 76 Race - Nov 04, 2008.
  6. Web site: California Catholic Daily, "Death by a thousand cuts", June 16, 2009 . January 14, 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110921092516/http://calcatholic.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?id=a2b5cf44-96ba-42f1-aa21-2e731d1e138b . September 21, 2011 . dead . mdy-all .
  7. http://www.leginfo.ca.gov/pub/09-10/bill/asm/ab_1901-1950/ab_1934_bill_20100831_status.html AB 1934
  8. News: Assembly session end in acrimony; gun bill dies. Jim Sanders. The Sacramento Bee. 2010-09-01. 2010-09-01. https://web.archive.org/web/20100905012424/http://www.sacbee.com/2010/09/01/2998092/assembly-session-ends-in-acrimony.html. 2010-09-05. dead.
  9. News: 'Open Carry' ban falls short in a surprise. Michael Gardner. San Diego Union Tribune. 2010-09-01. 2010-09-01.
  10. News: Saldana challenging Faulconer for re-election. Garrick. David. January 25, 2016. The San Diego Union Tribune. 3 February 2016.
  11. http://www.lori4mayor.com Mayoral election campaign website
  12. News: Stewart. Joshua. Saldaña enters race for county supervisor. February 11, 2018. sandiegouniontribune.com. September 16, 2017.
  13. News: McDonald . Jeff . Smith . Joshua Emerson . Dumanis, Fletcher advance to runoff in 4th District supervisor's race; in 5th District, Desmond is clear leader but can't avoid runoff . August 13, 2019 . San Diego Union-Tribune . June 6, 2018.