Politics & Government
Irvine Mayor Leads Former Rep. In 3rd District Supervisor Race
The votes are still being counted in the race for the third district Supervisor seat, left vacant by Todd Spitzer's new role as OCDA.

ORANGE COUNTY, CA — After a day of voting, Irvine Mayor Don Wagner is leading over former Rep. Loretta Sanchez by 2,980-votes in the race to fill the Third District seat on the Orange County Board of Supervisors. An estimated 9,233 ballots remain to be counted in the special election.
Wagner led the field of seven candidates with 25,017 votes, 41.6 percent with all 229 precincts counted, according to figures from the Orange County Registrar of Votes. Sanchez was second with 22,037, 36.6 percent.
See the most recent vote counts here.
Find out what's happening in Mission Viejofor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Former Anaheim City Councilwoman Kris Murray was third with 4,496 votes, 7.5 percent, followed by retiree and Vietnam veteran Larry Bales, who was fourth with 3,590 votes, 6 percent. Former Villa Park City Councilwoman Deborah Pauly was the only other candidate with at least 5 percent of the vote, receiving 3,309 votes, 5.5 percent.
Tuesday's special election was necessitated by Todd Spitzer's election as district attorney.
Find out what's happening in Mission Viejofor free with the latest updates from Patch.
The district includes Anaheim Hills, most of Irvine, Orange, Tustin, Villa Park, Yorba Linda and a portion of Mission Viejo, as well as unincorporated areas such as the canyons in the Cleveland National Forest.
The post is nonpartisan, but behind the scenes, Orange County Democrats persuaded several other potential candidates to back off in favor of Sanchez, the only Democrat on the ballot, City News Service has said.
The Orange County Republican Party endorsed Wagner.
Because it is a special election, a majority is not needed to be elected.
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.