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Montgomery Steppe wins special election for San Diego District 4 seat

Monica Montgomery Steppe will become San Diego County's first Black female supervisor when she is sworn in by early next month to represent District 4.

SAN DIEGO — Monica Montgomery Steppe, a San Diego City Councilwoman since 2018, handily defeated private investigator Amy Reichert in Tuesday's special election. Montgomery Steppe led Reichert, 61%-39%, 48,636-31,101, according to results released by the San Diego County Registrar of Voters vote count on November 8.

See live San Diego County Registrar of Voters election results for all Nov 7 races 

"We took a grassroots movement to yet another hall of power," Montgomery Steppe said in a statement. "We brought a model of governance that puts the people first."

Reichert's campaign said she will release a full statement about the race on Wednesday morning.

The special election was prompted by the May 15 resignation of Nathan Fletcher amid allegations of sexual harassment and assault, which he has denied.

The supervisors voted in May to have an election, rather than appoint a successor to serve out the term, which ends in January 2027. Montgomery Steppe and Reichert finished 1-2 in the Aug. 15 primary.

Montgomery Steppe, a Democrat seeking the nonpartisan office, said her priorities as a supervisor would be tackling homelessness, including more resources for shelters and affordable housing, and expanding substance abuse treatment; and "holistic and humane public safety" by reducing jail deaths, giving first responders and neighborhoods what they need to prevent crime, and effective gun safety policies.

Montgomery Steppe also advocates "investing in people," with increased access to health care, education and youth counseling; job creation, more parks, and infrastructure to improve air quality and reduce crime; and supporting reproductive rights and privacy.

Reichert, a Republican, became prominent in 2020 after co-founding the nonprofit Re-Open San Diego, which opposed county mandates, including certain closures, in connection with the COVID-19 pandemic. She lost to Fletcher last year in his bid for a second term.

District 4 includes La Mesa and Lemon Grove, the San Diego neighborhoods of Azalea Park, Bankers Hill, Bay Ho, City Heights, Clairemont Mesa, Encanto, Grantville, Hillcrest, Linda Vista, Mission Hills, Normal Heights, Rolando, Skyline, University Heights and Valencia Park and the Casa de Oro-Mount Helix, Dehesa, Rancho San Diego and Spring Valley unincorporated communities.

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