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Steve Bennett (California politician)

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American politician

Steve Bennett
Member of theCalifornia State Assembly
Assumed office
December 7, 2020
Preceded byMonique Limón
Constituency37th district (2020–2022)
38th district (2022–present)
Member of theVentura County Board of Supervisors from the 1st district
In office
January 2001 – December 7, 2020
Preceded bySusan Lacey
Succeeded byMatt LaVere
Member of theVentura City Council
In office
1993–1997
Personal details
Born (1950-12-31)December 31, 1950 (age 74)
Political partyDemocratic
SpouseLeslie Ogden
Children4
EducationBrown University
Butler University (MA)
Signature

Stephen Bennett (born December 31, 1950) is an American activist, educator, and politician serving as a member of theCalifornia State Assembly from the38th district as a member of theDemocratic Party. Prior to his tenure in the state legislature, he was active in local politics inVentura, California, andVentura County, California, with him serving on the city council and board of supervisors.[1][2]

Bennett was born inIndiana, and educated atBrown University andButler University. He worked as an educator atCalabasas High School andNordhoff High School before moving to Ventura. He became active in local politics in Ventura by working with the Voters for Alternate Sites and serving as a leader of the Alliance for Ventura's Future.

He was elected to the Ventura city council in 1993, after an unsuccessful write-in candidacy in 1991, and served until 1997. Following his tenure in the city council he served on the county board of supervisors. During his tenure on the board of supervisors he served as chair and he ran a campaign for a seat in theUnited States House of Representatives, but withdrew. Bennett was elected to the state house in the2020 election.[3]

Early life and education

[edit]

Steve Bennett was born inIndianapolis,Indiana, on December 31, 1950. He graduated fromBrown University with anhonours degree in economics in 1972, and graduated fromButler University with amaster's degree in education in 1976. He worked as a high school teacher who taught economics and American history for twenty years atCalabasas High School andNordhoff High School. He married Leslie Ogden, with whom he had four children, and moved toVentura, California.[4][5][6][7] Bennett later led the counseling department and worked as assistant principal at Nordhoff High School after leaving the city council.[8][9] He admiresHarry S. Truman andWilliam Jennings Bryan as his political heroes.[10]

Career

[edit]

Activism

[edit]

In the 1990s Bennett served as the spokesman for the Voters for Alternate Sites organization which opposed the construction of a new campus by theCalifornia State University near theRobert Taylor Ranch. He also worked as one of the leaders of the Alliance for Ventura's Future which aided in the election of three candidates to the Ventura city council.[11] He later served as president of the Alliance for Ventura's Future.[12]

Ventura City Council

[edit]

Bennett ran for one of three seats on the Ventura city council as a write-in candidate in 1991, and placed fifth out of eighteen candidates.[5][13][14][15] During the campaign he had been endorsed byPatagonia, Inc. and the VenturaSierra Club.[16][17] Bennett won election to the Ventura city council after placing second in the 1993 election and during the campaign he spent $21,487.[5][18][19] He served on the city council until 1997, when he announced that he would not seek reelection due to a campaign promise to only serve one term.[4][20]

Bennett nominated Gary Tuttle, a member of the city council, to serve as mayor in 1995, and initially supported him, but after Jack Tingstrom won the position of mayor by a vote of five to two a second vote was requested by Bennett and Tuttle so that they could unanimously support Tingstrom.[21] During the1996 presidential election Bennett seconded a motion to allow Republican vice-presidential candidateJack Kemp to use Ventura's city hall for a rally in the name of "bipartisanship".[22]

Ventura County Board of Supervisors

[edit]

Susan Lacey, a member of theVentura CountyBoard of Supervisors, retired from her position.[5] Bennett announced that he would seek election to the seat on April 7, 1999.[23] Bennett won the initial election against Jim Monahan and Rosa Lee Measures and then defeated Monahan in the runoff election.[24][25] He announced on June 9, 2003, that he would seek reelection and won reelection in the 2004 election against Jeffrey Ketelsen.[26][27] He won reelection without opposition in 2008.[28] Bennett defeated Bob Roper, Christy Weir, and Neal Andrews in the initial election in 2012, and defeated Roper in the runoff election.[29][30] He defeated Dave Grau in the 2016 election.[31] Bennett was unable to seek reelection as supervisor for a sixth term due to term limits that were implemented in 2008. Matt LaVere, the mayor of Ventura, was elected to succeed Bennett.[5]

During his tenure he served as chair of the Ventura County Board of Supervisors multiple times and Kelly Long succeeded him as chair after his last term as chair.[32][33]

Bennett announced on November 16, 2011, that he would seek election to theUnited States House of Representatives fromCalifornia's 26th congressional district, but he announced at theCalifornia Democratic Party's state convention that he was withdrawing from the election.[34][35][36]Julia Brownley won the seat in the2012 election.[37]

California State Assembly

[edit]

Bennett ran for a seat in theCalifornia State Assembly from theCalifornia's 37th State Assembly district. He placed second in the primary behindRepublican Charles W. Cole and ahead of Democratic candidates Cathy Murillo, Jonathan Abboud, Jason Dominguez, Elsa Granados, and Stephen Blum. He defeated Cole in thegeneral election.[38][39]

During Bennett's tenure in the state house he served on the Budget, Education, Elections, Privacy and Consumer Protection, Rules, and Water, Parks, and Wildlife committees.[40]

Bennett is a member of theCalifornia Legislative Progressive Caucus.[41]

Political positions

[edit]

In 1994, the Ventura city council voted, with Bennett voting in favor, in favor of a resolution opposingProposition 187, which would not allow illegal immigrants to have access to healthcare or education.[42] In 1995, the city council voted four to three, with Bennett voting in favor, in favor of having the Ventura city attorney file a brief in support of the city council ofSanta Barbara, California's appeal of a federal court ruling. The ruling declared that an eight-foot bubble ordinance outside family planning clinics was unconstitutional.[43] In 1997, the city council voted three to three, with Bennett voting against, on legislation that would have implemented term limits on people serving on Ventura's fourteen boards, commissions, and committees.[44]

Campaign finance

[edit]

Bennett, who had refused to accept donations above $100 during his city council campaign, proposed legislation to limit campaign contributions to $100, but the city council voted four to two against it.[45] He requested that the campaign contribution limit be placed onto the ballot as a proposition by the city council and the placement was approved by a vote of five to two. TheLeague of Women Voters,Common Cause, Sierra Club, and Voters Coalition of Ventura aided Bennett in the writing of the proposition. The proposition limited campaign donations to $100, but allowed it to be $200 if the candidate agreed to limit their spending to $20,000.[46] Bennett's Measure H was passed by voters in the election.[47][48]

The city council voted five to two, with Bennett against, in favor of repealing legislation that prevented organized groups from donating money to candidates.[49] Bennett announced on August 25, 1997, that he would push for a ballot initiative to the 1998 ballot to prohibit organized groups from donating to candidates.[50] However, he later stated that a proposition was unnecessary after the city council voted to require PACs to report all contributions above $25.[51]

During his campaign for a seat on the board of supervisors in the 2000 election he limited individual campaign donations to his campaign to $500.[52]

Ventura County had legislation passed in 1991, which limited campaign contributions to $750 during primaries and $250 during general elections and was changed following the passage of a state law in 1996, but when the state law was found unconstitutional the county's law was invalidated too. Bennett proposed legislation while serving on the board of supervisors to create an eleven-member ethics panel, with all members of the board of supervisors, the district attorney, sheriff, assessor, auditor-controller, treasurer-tax collector, and county clerk-recorder serving on the panel, to enforce the legislation. Individual donors would be limited to donating $500 per candidate and campaign spending would be limited to $75,000.[53][54]

In 2003, he and Supervisor Kathy Long proposed legislation that would limit campaign spending for supervisors to $150,000 and limit spending for countywide officials to $500,000. Their legislation also limited donations to $600 who accepted campaign spending limits while the limit would be $300 for those who did not.[55] The legislation was approved by the board of supervisors by a vote of four to one.[56]

Economics

[edit]

Bennett stated that "no way would I support cutting the police budget" during discussion on the city budget and he stated that he was comfortable cutting $100,000 from other areas of the budget.[57] In 2001, Bennett gave support to and voted for increasing the minimum wage to $8 per hour with medical benefits or $10 per hour without medical benefits.[58][59] Bennett called for the board of supervisors to pass a resolution in support of prohibiting new federal leasing for offshore oil and gas drilling.[60]

In 2024, Bennett authored legislation to prohibit thecommercial farming of octopuses in California, citing ethical concerns around octopussentience andintelligence,animal welfare, and the environment. The legislation was signed by GovernorGavin Newsom in September 2024, making California the second state to prohibit octopus farming afterWashingtonenacted a ban earlier that year.[61][62]

Electoral history

[edit]

Ventura City Council

[edit]
1991 Ventura, California city council election[15]
PartyCandidateVotes%
NonpartisanGreg Carson11,01921.24%
NonpartisanJack Tingstrom8,34516.09%
NonpartisanTom Buford8,07015.56%
NonpartisanDon Villeneuve6,19311.94%
NonpartisanSteve Bennett (write-in)5,31510.25%
NonpartisanJamie Steward-Bentley2,6175.04%
NonpartisanS. R. Wyatt1,9863.83%
NonpartisanDonald R. Boyd1,2882.48%
NonpartisanBob Van Der Valk1,2072.33%
NonpartisanAndrew M. Hicks1,1472.21%
NonpartisanKeith Burns1,0181.96%
NonpartisanMarcum Patrick8251.59%
NonpartisanKenneth Vernie Jordan6251.20%
NonpartisanJohn T. Sudak5651.09%
NonpartisanCarroll Dean Williams5571.07%
NonpartisanAlan Berk4490.87%
NonpartisanLouis J. Cunningham3680.71%
NonpartisanBrian Lee Rencher2820.54%
Total votes51,876100.00%
1993 Ventura, California city council election[18]
PartyCandidateVotes%
NonpartisanRose L. Measures14,35915.86%
NonpartisanSteve Bennett12,22013.50%
NonpartisanJames L. Monahan10,37011.45%
NonpartisanGary Robert Tuttle9,84210.87%
NonpartisanClark Owens7,5558.34%
NonpartisanKenneth Michael Schmitz7,3458.11%
NonpartisanNancy Cloutier7,2408.00%
NonpartisanTodd J. Collart6,4087.08%
NonpartisanVirginia K. Weber5,4936.07%
NonpartisanDick Massa4,1574.59%
NonpartisanCharles E. Kistner Jr.2,2902.53%
NonpartisanCarroll Dean Williams1,6601.83%
NonpartisanNeil Demeres-Grey1,0261.13%
NonpartisanBrian Lee Rencher5100.56%
Write-in650.07%
Total votes90,540100.00%

Ventura County Board of Supervisors

[edit]
2000 Ventura County, California Board of Supervisors 1st district election[24]
PartyCandidateVotes%
NonpartisanSteve Bennett17,58044.19%
NonpartisanJim Monahan12,55531.56%
NonpartisanRosa Lee Measures9,47923.83%
Write-in1650.41%
Total votes39,779100.00%
2000 Ventura County, California Board of Supervisors 1st district election runoff[25]
PartyCandidateVotes%
NonpartisanSteve Bennett36,11562.62%
NonpartisanJim Monahan21,32336.97%
Write-in2340.41%
Total votes57,672100.00%
2004 Ventura County, California Board of Supervisors 1st district election[27]
PartyCandidateVotes%
NonpartisanSteve Bennett (incumbent)25,62175.95%
NonpartisanJeffrey Ketelsen7,70622.84%
Write-in4051.20%
Total votes33,732100.00%
2008 Ventura County, California Board of Supervisors 1st district election[28]
PartyCandidateVotes%
NonpartisanSteve Bennett (incumbent)20,59396.91%
Write-in6573.09%
Total votes21,250100.00%
2012 Ventura County, California Board of Supervisors 1st district election[29]
PartyCandidateVotes%
NonpartisanSteve Bennett (incumbent)13,00044.25%
NonpartisanBob Roper8,17727.83%
NonpartisanChristy Weir4,47215.22%
NonpartisanNeal Andrews3,72812.69%
Total votes29,377100.00%
2012 Ventura County, California Board of Supervisors 1st district election runoff[30]
PartyCandidateVotes%
NonpartisanSteve Bennett (incumbent)33,55967.22%
NonpartisanBob Roper29,75632.78%
Total votes63,315100.00%
2016 Ventura County, California Board of Supervisors 1st district election[31]
PartyCandidateVotes%
NonpartisanSteve Bennett (incumbent)26,63358.87%
NonpartisanDave Grau18,60441.13%
Total votes45,237100.00%

California State Assembly

[edit]
2020 California State Assembly 37th district election[38][39]
Primary election
PartyCandidateVotes%
RepublicanCharles W. Cole41,94527.54%
DemocraticSteve Bennett37,51624.63%
DemocraticCathy Murillo29,49819.37%
DemocraticJonathan Abboud12,0397.91%
DemocraticJason Dominguez11,1777.34%
DemocraticElsa Granados10,8407.12%
DemocraticStephen Blum9,2786.09%
Total votes152,293100.00%
General election
DemocraticSteve Bennett166,01567.57%
RepublicanCharles W. Cole79,66132.43%
Total votes245,676100.00%
Democratichold
2022 California State Assembly 38th district election[63][64]
Primary election
PartyCandidateVotes%
DemocraticSteve Bennett (incumbent)54,69059.74%
RepublicanCole Brucato33,35236.43%
No party preferenceDaniel Wilson3,5063.83%
Total votes91,548100.00%
General election
DemocraticSteve Bennett (incumbent)79,70961.20%
RepublicanCole Brucato50,54438.80%
Total votes130,253100.00%
Democratichold
2024 California State Assembly 38th district election[65][66]
Primary election
PartyCandidateVotes%
DemocraticSteve Bennett (incumbent)51,65761.58%
RepublicanDeborah Baber32,23338.42%
Total votes83,890100.00%
General election
DemocraticSteve Bennett (incumbent)117,38763.37%
RepublicanDeborah Baber67,84536.63%
Total votes185,232100.00%
Democratichold

References

[edit]
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  66. ^"November 5, 2024, General Election - State Assemblymember"(PDF).California Secretary of State. RetrievedApril 17, 2025.

External links

[edit]
2025–26 Session
Speaker
Robert A. Rivas
Speakerpro tempore
Josh Lowenthal
Majority Leader
Cecilia Aguiar-Curry (D)
Minority Leader
Heath Flora (R)
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  75. Carl DeMaio (R)
  76. Darshana Patel (D)
  77. Tasha Boerner (D)
  78. Chris Ward (D)
  79. LaShae Sharp-Collins (D)
  80. David Alvarez (D)
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