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2024 Irvine elections

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Municipal elections in Irvine, California
This article is about elections in the city of Irvine. For elections in Orange County, see2024 Orange County, California elections.

2024 Irvine elections

← 2022November 5, 20242025 (Special) →

5 out of 7 seats on theCity Council
4 seats needed for a majority
 Majority partyMinority party
 
PartyDemocraticRepublican
Seats before41
Seats won32
Seats after42
Seat changeSteadyIncrease 1

Party Gains:
     Republican gain
     Democratic held[a]     Republican held     No election/Vacant/Member at-Large[b]
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Elections by year

The2024 Irvine elections were held on March 5, 2024, and November 5, 2024. In the March primary, voters approvedMeasure D, expanding the Irvine City Council from five to seven members and transitioning the city from at-large to by-district elections.

Measure D took effect in time for the November general election, creating four new council districts — three of which would elect representatives to four-year terms, and one short-term seat (District 1) to be contested again in 2026. Themayoralty was also on the ballot.

Municipal elections in California are officially nonpartisan; candidates' party affiliations do not appear on the ballot, but every major candidate was registered with or endorsed by a major political party.[1]

Mayor

[edit]
Main article:Mayoral elections in Irvine, California § 2024

The 2024 mayoral election was held on November 5, 2024 and coincided with elections for city council.[2] Incumbent mayorFarrah Khan, who was first sworn into office in 2020, could not seek re-election due toterm limits.[3] Councilmember Larry Agran defeated fellow councilmember Tammy Kim and was sworn in as Mayor on December 10, 2024

Results

[edit]
2024 Irvine mayoral election
CandidateVotes%
Larry Agran42,65238.76
Tammy Kim37,92434.46
Ron Scolesdang12,89111.71
Liqing Lee Sun6,0015.45
Felipe Delgado5,3254.84
Akshat Bhatia2,7612.51
Wing Chow2,4962.27
Total votes110,050100.0


City council

[edit]

District 1

[edit]
2024 Irvine City Council District 1 election (short term)

← —November 5, 20242026 →
Turnout75.4%[4]
 
CandidateMelinda LiuJohn ParkMichelle Johnson
Popular vote5,8965,7873,274
Percentage32.3%31.7%17.9%

 
CandidateJackie KanJeff Kitchen
Popular vote2,2431,050
Percentage12.3%5.8%

Precinct results
Liu:     30–40%     40–50%
Park:     30–40%
     No votes

City Councilmember before election

none (district created)

City Councilmember

Melinda Liu

District 1 covers north Irvine, includingOrchard Hills, West Irvine, Northpark, Stonegate, and parts ofNorthwood. It was designated as a short-term seat, to be contested again in 2026.[5]

The race was competitive, with five candidates — three of whom held or had held city commission seats. Key issues included traffic congestion on Jeffrey Road, preservation of open space in Orchard Hills, and fire risk management.

Candidates

[edit]
  • Melinda Liu (Democrat), City of Irvine commissioner and Attorney.[6]
  • John Park (Republican), business owner, Irvine Transportation Commissioner, andperennial candidate.[7][8]
  • Michelle Johnson (Republican), Irvine Planning Commissioner and business owner.[9]
  • Jackie Kan (Democrat), small business owner.
  • Jeff Kitchen(Democrat), Systems engineer.

Results

[edit]
2024 Irvine City Council District 1 election (Short Term)[4]
CandidateVotes%
Melinda Liu5,89632.3
John Park5,78731.7
Michelle Johnson3,27417.9
Jackie Kan2,24312.3
Jeff Kitchen1,0505.8
Total votes18,250100
Invalid or blank votes2,89013.7

District 2

[edit]
2024 Irvine City Council District 2 election

← —November 5, 20242028 →
Turnout75.9%[4]
 
CandidateWilliam GoJeff StarkeGang Chen
Popular vote5,3524,4413,624
Percentage30.9%25.7%20.9%

 
CandidateParrisa Yazdani
Popular vote3,199
Percentage18.5%

Precinct results
Go:     20–30%     30–40%
Starke:     20–30%
Yazdani:     30–40%
     No votes

City Councilmember before election

none (district created)

City Councilmember

William Go

District 2 covers portions of central and southeastern Irvine, includingGreat Park, parts of Cypress Village, Woodbury and areas adjacent to theIrvine Spectrum.

During the campaign,Irvine Watchdog reported that Yazdani had filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy in April 2024, resulting in the discharge of approximately $900,000 in state and federal tax debt, as well as related fines.[10] Subsequent reporting by theOrange Juice Blog detailed an ongoing civil lawsuit in which a creditor alleged that Yazdani had misrepresented her ownership role in a business when obtaining loans, and sought to have the debt declared non-dischargeable due to fraud and misappropriation claims. Yazdani filed a response in court denying all allegations.[11] The reports drew media and community attention in the weeks leading up to the election.

Candidates

[edit]
  • William Go (Democrat), Irvine commissioner and businessowner.[12]
  • Jeff Starke (Democrat), City of Irvine finance commissioner.[13]
  • Gang Chen (Republican), architect, author and businessman.
  • Parrisa Yazdani (Independent), City of Irvine commissioner, businesswoman.
  • Mohamed Kothermydeen (Independent), IT service manager.

Withdrawn

[edit]

Results

[edit]
2024 Irvine City Council District 2 election[4]
CandidateVotes%
William Go5,35230.9
Jeff Starke4,44125.7
Gang Chen3,62420.9
Parrisa Yazdani3,19918.5
Mohamed Kothermydeen6894.0
Total votes17,305100
Invalid or blank votes3,04715.0

District 3

[edit]
2024 Irvine City Council District 3 election

← —November 5, 20242028 →
Turnout77.7%[4]
 
CandidateJames MaiTom ChomynJing Sun
Popular vote8,9685,8455,569
Percentage44.0%28.7%27.3%

Precinct results
Mai:     30–40%     40–50%     50–60%
Chomyn:     30–40%
     No votes

City Councilmember before election

none (district created)

City Councilmember

James Mai

District 3 is located in central and north-central Irvine, including neighborhoods such as Walnut Village and portions of El Camino Real.

Candidates

[edit]
  • James Mai (Republican), Irvine commissioner and businessman.[16]
  • Tom Chomyn (Democrat), Community Services Commissioner.[17]
  • Jing Sun (Democrat), Irvine commissioner.[18]

Results

[edit]
2024 Irvine City Council District 3 election[4]
CandidateVotes%
James Mai8,96844.0
Tom Chomyn5,84528.7
Jing Sun5,56927.3
Total votes20,382100
Invalid or blank votes3,64715.2

District 4

[edit]
2024 Irvine City Council District 4 election

← 2020November 5, 20242028 →
Turnout79.2%[4]
 
CandidateMike CarrollAyn Craciun
Popular vote10,2557,446
Percentage57.93%42.1%

Precinct results
Carroll:     50–60%     60–70%     80–90%
Craciun:     50–60%
     No votes

City Councilmember before election

Mike Carroll (at-large)

City Councilmember

Mike Carroll

District 4 encompasses southwestern Irvine, includingQuail Hill,Turtle Rock, portions ofUniversity Park,Irvine Spectrum and areas borderingLaguna Canyon. Incumbent Mike Carroll, previously elected at-large in 2020, sought and won re-election to the district seat.

The contest was one of the most closely watched in the city, with Carroll facing sustainability commissioner Ayn Craciun. The campaign drew renewed scrutiny amid questions about Carroll’s use of his official city portrait on campaign materials,raising concerns about blurring the boundary between public duty and campaign activity.[19]

This was not Carroll’s first such controversy. In late 2020, he came under fire for using approximately $70,000 from his staff budget on city mailers that critics argued served to promote his political profile rather than purely inform constituents. Following the backlash, the City Council in January 2021 approved new budget policies—by a 4–1 vote—that shifted oversight responsibilities to the city manager, aiming to increase transparency and accountability for council members' spending.[20]


Candidates

[edit]
  • Mike Carroll (Republican), incumbent Irvine City Councilmember (at-large).[21]
  • Ayn Craciun (Democrat), nonprofit director and Chair of the Irvine Sustainability Commission.[22]

Results

[edit]
2024 Irvine City Council District 4 election[4]
CandidateVotes%
Mike Carroll10,25557.9
Ayn Craciun7,44642.1
Total votes17,701100
Invalid or blank votes3,05014.7

Ballot measures

[edit]

Measure D

[edit]
Measure D

March 5, 2024
Amendment to Expand City Council and Establish City Council Districts
Results
Choice
Votes%
Yes30,79059.80%
No20,69640.20%
Valid votes51,48693.68%
Invalid or blank votes3,4756.32%
Total votes54,961100.00%
Registered voters/turnout153,04435.9%

Yes

  50–60%
  60–70%
  70–80%
  80–90%
  >90%

No

  50–60%
  60–70%

Sources:[23]

Measure D was a charter amendment placed before Irvine voters in the March 5, 2024 primary election. It proposed expanding the Irvine City Council from five to seven members, including the mayor and six councilmembers, and changing the electoral system so that the six councilmembers would be elected by individual districts rather than at large. The measure passed with approximately 59.8 percent of the vote.

The measure stipulates that if a councilmember elected at large—but residing in District 5 or District 6—vacates their seat, the position must be filled through a by‑district special municipal election (rather than appointment). Following the election of Councilmember Larry Agran to mayor a special election was held onApril 15, 2025, to fill the remainder of his term for District 5.

School Boards

[edit]

The city of Irvine is served by several school districts, including theIrvine Unified School District,Tustin Unified School District,Santa Ana Unified School District, and theSouth Orange County Community College District. School board elections held in Irvine are listed below.

Irvine Unified School District

[edit]

Area 1

[edit]

The general election for IUSD Area 1 was cancelled, with incumbent Lauren Brooks securing a four year term.

Area 3

[edit]

The general election for IUSD Area 3 was cancelled, with incumbent Cyril Yu securing a four year term.

Area 5

[edit]

The general election for IUSD Area 5 was cancelled, with Connie Stone securing a four year term after incumbent Paul Bakota opted to not run for re-election

Tustin Unified School District

[edit]

Area 2

[edit]
2024 Tustin Unified School District Area 2 election

← 2020November 5, 20242028 →
Turnout82.2%[4]
 
CandidateKathy CopelandBill Pevehouse
Popular vote7,7536,599
Percentage54.02%45.98%

Precinct results
Copeland:     50–60%
Pevehouse:     50–60%
     No votes

Trustee before election

James Laird

Trustee

Kathy Copeland

Incumbent James Laird opted to not run for re-election. District 2 covers portions of Northpark andOrchard Hills in Irvine. Kathy Copeland was elected over Bill Pevehouse

2024 Tustin Unified School District Trustee Area 2 election[4]
CandidateVotes%
Kathy Copeland7,75354.0
Bill Pevehouse6,59946.0
Total votes14,352100
Invalid or blank votes2,29013.8

South Orange County Community College District

[edit]

Area 1

[edit]
2024 South Orange County Community College District Area 1 election
← 2020November 5, 20242028 →
Turnout80.2%[4]
 
CandidateCarolyn InmonKatherine DaigleMarlene Bronson
Popular vote31,5009,1155,446
Percentage68.4%19.8%11.8%

Precinct results
Inmon:     50–60%     60–70%     70–80%     80–90%
     No votes

Trustee before election

Caroyln Inmon

Elected Trustee

Carolyn Inmon

Incumbent Carolyn Inmon was re-elected to a four year term ending in 2028. Area 1 covers much of south west Irvine, includingUCI,Woodbridge andUniversity Park. Inmon defeated Marlene Bronson and perennial candidate Katherine Daigle.

2024 South Orange County Community College District Trustee Area 1 election[4]
CandidateVotes%
Carolyn Inmon31,50068.4
Katherine Daigle9,11519.8
Marlene Bronson5,44611.8
Total votes45,061100
Invalid or blank votes13,88023.2

Area 3

[edit]
2024 South Orange County Community College District Area 3 election
← 2020November 5, 20242028 →
Turnout82.8%[4]
 
CandidateLisa BartlettRocky Cifone
Popular vote37,35434,501
Percentage52.0%48.0%

Precinct results
Bartlett:     50–60%     60–70%     70–80%
Cifone:     50–60%     60–70%
     No votes

Trustee before election

Barbara Jay

Elected Trustee

Lisa Bartlet

Incumbent Barbara Jay opted to not run for re-election. Area 3 covers one neighborhood within Turtle Ridge in Irvine.Lisa Bartlett defeated Rocky Cifone to serve a full term of four years on the South Orange County Community College District.

2024 South Orange County Community College District Trustee Area 3 election[4]
CandidateVotes%
Lisa Bartlett37,35452.0
Rocky Cifone34,50148.0
Total votes71,855100
Invalid or blank votes15,86618.1

Area 6

[edit]
2024 South Orange County Community College District Area 6 election
← 2022November 5, 20242028 →
Turnout78.3%[4]
 
CandidateRyan DackMichael Franklin
Popular vote31,12520,318
Percentage59.7%40.3%

Precinct results
Dack     50–60%     60–70%     70–80%
Franklin:     60–70%
     No votes

Trustee before election

Ryan Dack

Elected Trustee

Ryan Dack

Incumbent Ryan Dack was re-elected to a full four year term ending in 2028. Area 6 covers the Irvine Spectrum neighborhoods, Great Park neighborhoods, Woodbury, Oak Creek, and portions of Northwood. Dack defeated Michael Franklin.

2024 South Orange County Community College District Trustee Area 6 election[4]
CandidateVotes%
Ryan Dack30,12559.7
Michael Franklin20,31840.3
Total votes50,443100
Invalid or blank votes16,93325.1

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^While all districts were newly created under Measure D, the number of Democratic held seats did not change from 2022 to 2024, and are reflected here as being "held".
  2. ^Under Measure D, District 5 and 6 were to remain vacant while council members who reside in those areas still serve their council term at-large.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Did Your Candidate Vote?".Irvine Watchdog. August 24, 2024.
  2. ^Petersen, Carl."General Municipal Election - November 5, 2024".City of Irvine. RetrievedSeptember 28, 2023.
  3. ^"Vice Mayor Tammy Kim Announces Candidacy For Irvine Mayor".OC Independent. February 4, 2023. RetrievedSeptember 28, 2023.
  4. ^abcdefghijklmnop"OC ROV 2024 General Election Statement of Votes"(PDF). Orange County Registrar of Voters. RetrievedAugust 10, 2025.
  5. ^"Five candidates vie for new Irvine District 1 seat on City Council".Orange County Register. October 22, 2024.
  6. ^"Melinda Liu, Irvine City Council District 1 candidate, 2024 election questionnaire".
  7. ^"John Park, Irvine City Council District 1 candidate, 2024 election questionnaire".
  8. ^"John Park".Ballotpedia. Ballotpedia. RetrievedAugust 10, 2025.
  9. ^"Michelle Johnson, Irvine City Council District 1 candidate, 2024 election questionnaire".
  10. ^"Irvine City Council Candidate Owed $900,000 in Taxes, Received Forgiveness Through Bankruptcy".Irvine Watchdog. July 28, 2024.
  11. ^"Alex Mohajer Drops Irvine Council Run to Fight Trump in Arizona — and More".Orange Juice Blog. July 29, 2024.
  12. ^"William Go, Irvine City Council District 2 candidate, 2024 election questionnaire".
  13. ^"Jeff Starke, Irvine City Council District 2 candidate, 2024 election questionnaire".
  14. ^"Alex Mohajer Drops Irvine Council Run to Fight Trump in Arizona — and More".Orange Juice Blog. July 29, 2024.
  15. ^"Alex Mohajer suspends Irvine City Council Campaign to Promote Harris Presidential Campaign".The Liberal OC. August 1, 2024.
  16. ^"James Mai, Irvine City Council District 3 candidate, 2024 election questionnaire".
  17. ^"Tom Chomyn, Irvine City Council District 3 candidate, 2024 election questionnaire".
  18. ^"Jing Sun, Irvine City Council District 3 candidate, 2024 election questionnaire".
  19. ^"Opinion: Councilmember Mike Carroll Once Again Faces Questions Over Use of City Resources in Campaign Materials".Irvine Watchdog. October 31, 2024.
  20. ^"Irvine City Council Changes Budget Policies Following Mailer Spending Controversy".Voice of OC. January 27, 2021.
  21. ^"Mike Carroll, Irvine City Council District 4 candidate, 2024 election questionnaire".
  22. ^"Ayn Craciun, Irvine City Council District 4 candidate, 2024 election questionnaire".
  23. ^Orange County Registrar of Voters. “Statement of Vote — March 5, 2024 (Presidential Primary Election).” PDF. OC Vote.https://ocvote.org/fileadmin/live/PRI2024/sov.pdf (accessed August 11, 2025).
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