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Politics

Fletcher, Desmond Set To Gain Seats On San Diego County Board Of Supervisors

District 4 Democratic candidate Nathan Fletcher gives a speech, Nov. 6, 2018
Spark Photography
District 4 Democratic candidate Nathan Fletcher gives a speech, Nov. 6, 2018

County Board of Supervisors District 4

Bonnie Dumanis: 33.86%

Nathan Fletcher: 66.14%

100% precincts reporting

UPDATED: 11:33 a.m., Nov. 12, 2018

View All Election Results

County Board of Supervisors District 5

Jim Desmond: 57.78%

Michelle Gomez: 42.22%

100% precincts reporting

UPDATED: 11:33 a.m., Nov. 12, 2018

View All Election Results

UPDATE: 4:40 p.m., Nov. 7, 2018

With all precincts reporting, Democrat Nathan Fletcher and Republican Jim Desmond take the two open seats on the County Board of Supervisors.

UPDATE: 7 a.m., Nov. 6, 2018

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The technically nonpartisan San Diego County Board of Supervisors will likely have a Democratic member for just the second time in three decades.

District 4 Democratic candidate Nathan Fletcher jumped to a commanding lead over Republican Bonnie Dumanis, with 67 percent of precincts reporting.

Democrat and legislative analyst Michelle Gomez was not faring as well in District 5, where San Marcos Mayor Jim Desmond had collected about 60 percent of the vote.

The two open seats on the board are the result of termed-out supervisors Ron Roberts and Bill Horn. Roberts and Horn are the first supervisors to be termed out of office as a result of San Diego County's Measure B, which was passed in 2010. The measure established a limit of two four-year terms for supervisors, with the five supervisors at that time being grandfathered in. District 1 Supervisor Greg Cox and District 2 Supervisor Dianne Jacob will be termed out in 2020.

Fletcher, then a Republican, served in the Assembly from 2008 to 2012, choosing to run for San Diego mayor in 2012 in lieu of running for re-election. After changing his party affiliation to Independent, Fletcher finished third in the 2012 mayoral primary to Carl DeMaio and eventual election winner Bob Filner. Fletcher finished with 24.1 percent of the vote.

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Dumanis was San Diego's district attorney from 2003 to 2017, becoming the first openly gay prosecutor in the country and the first woman to serve as DA in the county's history. She also ran for mayor in 2012, finishing fourth behind Fletcher with 13.3 percent of the vote. Dumanis would go on to endorse DeMaio in the general election.

Desmond fell roughly five points short of 50 percent during the primary election, which would have given him the win outright. Instead, he faced Gomez, who netted 22.9 percent during the primary.

County Board of Supervisors District 5 candidate Jim Desmond gives a speech at The US Grant Hotel in San Diego, Nov. 6, 2018.
Spark Photography
County Board of Supervisors District 5 candidate Jim Desmond gives a speech at The US Grant Hotel in San Diego, Nov. 6, 2018.

Desmond has served as San Marcos mayor for 12 years. Prior to taking mayoral office in 2006, Desmond was a San Marcos City Councilman. He is endorsed by the San Diego County Republican Party and serves on the boards of directors for the San Diego Association of Governments, San Diego International Airport, San Diego County Economic Development Corporation and San Diego and Imperial County Boy Scouts of America.

Gomez sits on the San Diego County Commission on the Status of Women and Girls and the Oceanside Housing Commission, in addition to her work as a legislative analyst. She has received endorsements from the San Diego County Democratic Party and the San Diego and Imperial Counties Labor Council.

Corrected: December 11, 2024 at 2:30 AM PST
Editor's note: This story was changed to correctly state the length of a supervisor's term.
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