How George Gascón unseated L.A. County Dist. Atty. Jackie Lacey

Challenger George Gascón has defeated two-term incumbent Jackie Lacey and will become the next Los Angeles County district attorney. The upset marks the first time a sitting D.A. has been unseated in the county in 20 years.

The hotly contested race ended Friday, when Lacey conceded after concluding that the remaining ballots offered her no path to victory. The outcome may have seemed unlikely in March, when Gascón won only 28% of the votes in the primary and Lacey nearly avoided a runoff.

But following a summer of calls for change, Gascón positioned himself as a reformer, poached endorsements, out-fundraised the incumbent and rode the wave of voters who turned out for the presidential election.

Los Angeles County district attorney election results

George Gascón
George Gascón
53.7%
1,655,481 votes
Jackie Lacey
Jackie Lacey
46.3%
1,426,459 votes

A Times analysis of the general election results shows how Gascón assembled a winning coalition. His political path to victory came from uniting the progressive opposition in the densely populated core of the county, while winning over areas where Lacey once enjoyed strong support.

While some votes remain to be counted, more than 3 million have been tallied in the 3,383 precincts across Los Angeles County. A block-by-block map of the neighborhood precincts provides the most detailed view available of the vote.

It shows that Gascón gained support all across the L.A. Basin, racking up the biggest margins in East and South Los Angeles.

Gascón: 1,920 precincts
Lacey: 1,075 precincts
Map of the L.A. county district attorney results

LOS ANGELES COUNTY

Lancaster

Lacey’s strongest support came from the suburban edges of the county in the South Bay and Antelope Valley.

Palmdale

Santa Clarita

Gascón captured most of the L.A. Basin, consolidating the opposition to Lacey seen in the primary.

Beverly Hills

Downtown

Santa Monica

Long Beach

Map of the L.A. county district attorney results

LOS ANGELES COUNTY

Lacey’s strongest support came from the suburban edges of the county in the South Bay and Antelope Valley.

Lancaster

Palmdale

Gascón captured most of the L.A. Basin, consolidating the opposition to Lacey seen in the primary.

Santa Clarita

Beverly Hills

Downtown

Santa Monica

Long Beach

Majority-Latino neighborhoods remained opposed to Lacey's reelection, with Gascón claiming most of those precincts.

While Lacey maintained her past support in white, suburban edges of the county, she lost some liberal, white-majority areas of the county such as Santa Monica and Venice.

Majority white
Gascón: 53% of votes
Lacey: 47% of votes
Map of majority-white precincts in Los Angeles

LOS ANGELES COUNTY

Lacey struggled to hold onto support in majority-white areas that backed her in the primary.

Santa Clarita

Agoura Hills

West Hollywood

Santa Monica

Rancho

Palos Verdes

Majority Latino
Gascón: 55%
Lacey: 45%
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LOS ANGELES COUNTY

Gascón racked up large margins in heavily-Latino areas near downtown and in the eastern San Fernando Valley.

Van Nuys

Eagle Rock

El Monte

Huntington Park

Inglewood

Norwalk

Perhaps the biggest upset came from areas where Black people make up the largest share of the population. Lacey, the first Black woman elected as county district attorney, is a Los Angeles native who attended high school in Baldwin Hills, an area considered to be a vital part of Black Los Angeles.

In a drastic shift from the primary, Gascón won the vast majority of plurality-Black precincts.

Plurality-Black neighborhoods
General election:
Gascón: 58%
Lacey: 42%
March primary:
Gascón & Rossi: 49%
Lacey: 51%
Maps comparing the plurality-black precincts won by Gascon in the primary vs. the general election.

Downtown

Downtown

10

10

Baldwin hills

5

South Los

Angeles

5

South Los

Angeles

Inglewood

Inglewood

105

105

405

405

110

110

Compton

Compton

Lacey narrowly won 51% of the vote in these neighborhoods in the primary

Maps comparing the plurality-black precincts won by Gascon in the primary vs. the general election.

Downtown

Baldwin hills

South Los

Angeles

Inglewood

Compton

Downtown

South Los

Angeles

Inglewood

Compton

Lacey narrowly won 51% of the vote in these neighborhoods in the primary

Gascón raised nearly twice as much money as Lacey, thanks to massive contributions from wealthy individuals, though most lived far outside the county.

Here in Los Angeles, wealthier precincts still gave many of their votes to Lacey. Gascón performed strongly in lower-income areas, where primary voters were more likely to have voted for him or Rachel Rossi, the other challenger in the March race.

Majority of households earn more than $100,000
Gascón: 50%
Lacey: 50%
Map of majority 100K households in Los Angeles County

LOS ANGELES COUNTY

Saugus

Some wealthy neighborhoods on the west side of L.A. abandoned Lacey after the primary.

Calabasas

Bel-Air

Hermosa

Beach

Lakewood

Majority of households earn less than $60,000
Gascón: 57%
Lacey: 43%
Map of majority-under 60K precincts in Los Angeles County

LOS ANGELES COUNTY

Van Nuys

Hollywood

Huntington

Park

Norwalk

Long Beach

See which of the two candidates your neighborhood supported by searching our interactive map.

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