Scroll Top

EXPENDITURE CEILING LIFTED IN CD 9 PRIMARY ELECTION RACE

For Immediate Release: April 20, 2022
Contact: Nancy Jackson (213) 978-1960

The expenditure ceiling has been lifted in the June 7 primary election race for City Council District (CD) 9, as a result of $124,406 in independent spending to support candidate Curren Price.

Two committees reported the spending: $99,625 was reported by Essential Workers in Support of Price, Cedillo, Good, McOsker and Yaroslavsky for City Council 2022, Sponsored by the Los Angeles Federation of Labor AFL-CIO; and $24,781 was reported by Working Families Committee for Soto, Price, and Good for Council and Kevin De Leon for Mayor and Opposing O’Farrell for Council 2022, sponsored by UNITE HERE Local 11.

Candidates who participate in the City’s matching funds program must limit their campaign spending in both the primary and general elections. For the upcoming primary election, the expenditure ceiling for participating City Council candidates is $571,000.

The expenditure ceiling is lifted and no longer applies in a particular City Council race when either of the following occurs: a candidate not participating in the matching funds program spends more than the expenditure ceiling or independent spending to support or oppose a single candidate totals more than a certain dollar threshold. For the 2022 elections, the independent spending threshold is $92,000 for City Council races.

Independent spending occurs when a person incurs costs for one or more political communications that supports or opposes a candidate or ballot measure and the communications are not coordinated with or authorized by a candidate. At this point in the election, a person must report independent spending and provide copies of communications to the Ethics Commission within 24 hours of making or incurring the costs.

Additional information about candidates, independent spending, and political communications in the 2022 primary elections is available on the Election Totals page. Campaign activity and political communications may also be searched on the Public Data Portal and the Campaign Committees Table.

To download PDF, click here.

The Ethics Commission was created by Los Angeles voters in 1990 to impartially administer and enforce the City’s governmental ethics, campaign financing, and lobbying laws.

Share this page:

Ethics Commission