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Progressive Nithya Raman Achieves Narrow Victory To Keep Her LA City Council Seat

A woman with medium-tone skin wears a suit jacket. She is pictured in front of a green hedge
Councilmember Nithya Raman holds onto her seat with an outright primary win.
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Samanta Helou Hernandez
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LAist
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Latest results

Los Angeles city councilmember Nithya Raman will keep her seat, as election results show her maintaining just enough votes to avoid a runoff election.

With Raman’s vote tally now above the critical 50% threshold, her main challenger — Deputy City Attorney Ethan Weaver — called her to concede the race on Thursday.

A chart shows diverging lines in purple and red growing more apart over time. Nithya Raman now has 50.64% of the vote compared to Ethan Weaver with 38.62%
A race that appeared tight on election night now has incumbent Nithya Raman in the clear lead. The big question: Does she stay above 50% to retain the seat outright?
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Erin Hauer
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LAist
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Raman said in a statement Thursday that during the campaign she encountered many voters hopeful about the city’s future. “I really look forward to carrying that sense of optimism and insistence on a better L.A. with me over the next four years.”

A note on the results

About the vote count
  • Keep in mind that in tight races particularly, the winner may not be determined for days or weeks after Election Day. In Los Angeles County, the first batch of results released includes vote-by-mail ballots received before March 5, followed by early votes cast in-person at vote centers, then votes cast in-person on Election Day.

  • The results you see are the votes counted through March 29, when they were certified.

  • As of March 29, here's where the vote count stands:

  • Total count to date:

    • 1,641,715 (28.9% of registered voters)
  • Estimate still to be counted: 0

    • Note: In California, ballots postmarked on or before March 5 are counted toward the results as long as they arrive within seven days of the election (March 12). Results must be certified by county election officials by April 4.

    How we got here

    The race was widely seen as a key test of political progressives’ staying power in city hall.

    Raman received support from the Democratic Socialists of America, and has pushed to expand tenant rights and impose new limits on evictions. She also faced opposition from Sherman Oaks homeowners opposed to a low-income housing project Raman supports.

    Weaver told voters he would take a tougher approach to clearing homeless encampments near schools and public parks. On election night, he said early results putting him close behind Raman showed his message resonating with voters.

    “We have issues like homelessness, public safety, small businesses that are collapsing,” Weaver said. “These are voices that do not feel they have representation in city hall. And people are looking for a new approach.”

    Landlords, police and firefighters spent big to defeat Raman

    Outside spending favored Weaver, with real estate interests and police and firefighters unions spending $1.3 million to defeat Raman.

    Corporate landlord Douglas Emmett Management — currently carrying out one of the city’s largest mass evictions in the Barrington Plaza high-rise apartment complex — gave $400,000 to the independent committee opposing Raman.

    About the district

    The amount of money spent in the race marked a shift from the previous election in 2020, when Raman became the first challenger to unseat an L.A. City Council incumbent in 17 years. The district’s boundaries also changed significantly.

    When Raman originally won the seat, the district included more renter-heavy areas, such as Koreatown and fewer homeowner-dominated areas in the San Fernando Valley. After the city’s most recent redistricting process, the district’s southernmost portions were removed and more of the Valley was included.

    In a covertly recorded discussion at the L.A. County Federation of Labor headquarters in 2021, former council president Nury Martinez and current councilmember Kevin de Leon discussed diluting “her renters’ district” and putting it “in a blender” to “chop up left and right.” Ultimately, 40% of the district is new to this election.

    What's next

    Despite those changes, Raman was able to eke out a victory in the primary. She needed over 50% of voters’ support to avoid a runoff in the November general election. As of Wednesday, March 13, she had 50.64% of the vote.

    Weaver had 38.62% of the vote as of Wednesday. Former NASA engineer Lev Baronian was coming in a distant third with just over 10.74%.

    Follow the money

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    Tracking your ballot

    You can track the status of your ballot:

    If your mail-in ballot is rejected for any reason (like a missing or mismatched signature), your county registrar must contact you to give you a chance to fix it. In Los Angeles County, the registrar will send you a notification by mail and you have until March 27 to reply and "cure" your ballot.

    How we're covering this election

    • Early voters and mail-in ballots have fundamentally reshaped how votes are counted and when election results are known.

    • Our priority will be sharing outcomes and election calls only when they have been thoroughly checked and vetted. To that end, we will report when candidates concede and otherwise rely on NPR and The Associated Press for race calls. We will not report the calls or projections of other news outlets. You can find more on NPR and The AP's process for counting votes and calling races here, here and here.

    Ask us a question

    What questions do you have about the March 5 primary election?
    Whether it's about how to interpret the results or track your ballot, we're here to help you understand the 2024 primary election on March 5.

    Updated March 14, 2024 at 7:05 AM PDT
    This story was updated with the latest on how the vote has been playing out.
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