Mackenzie Mays covers state government and politics in the Los Angeles Times’ Sacramento bureau. Previously, she worked as an investigative reporter for Politico, the Fresno Bee and the Charleston Gazette-Mail. In 2019, she received the National Press Club Press Freedom Award for her political watchdog reporting. She is a graduate of West Virginia University and proud Appalachian.
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Maggy Krell, a former prosecutor from Sacramento, won a seat in the California Assembly by a landslide while campaigning for abortion rights in Nevada.
Lake County elections officials are tired of the rush to count ballots, defending their history of being the last in California and possibly the nation to tally votes.
It’s a huge jump toward gender equality in California’s Capitol, where only men have served as governor and women made up one-quarter of state lawmakers just eight years ago.
Voters approved a measure to reverse progressive criminal reform and were positioned to reject propositions that hike the minimum wage and end forced prison labor.
Proposition 32 proposed raising the minimum wage to $17 immediately for larger employers and to $18 starting in January 2025.
Prop. 3 removes an outdated provision of the California Constitution that defines marriage as only between a man and a woman.
Voters approve school repair measure and Proposition 36, reversing course on criminal justice reform
Here’s how California voted on statewide measures in the 2024 election, including Proposition 36 on retail theft and fentanyl.
The Berkeley poll cosponsored by The Times found Proposition 32 for a higher minimum wage could be a toss-up, while Proposition 36 to crack down on crime has overwhelming support
California Democrats are promoting Jessica Morse as they scramble to turn District 3 from red to blue in a bid for control of Congress.
A lot has changed in Berkeley since the Democratic presidential nominee was a little girl, but progressive politics remain central to the city’s DNA and growing up there.