Voters to decide on Nov. 5 whether to oust Alameda County District Attorney Pamela Price from office

Alameda County voters will decide in November whether to recall District Attorney Pamela Price, after the county’s supervisors opted against spending up to $20 million this summer on special election with little — if any — precedent in the county’s history.

Rather than rush the question before voters, the county’s Board of Supervisors on Tuesday opted to place the recall question on the Nov. 5 ballot alongside an expected rematch between the nation’s last two presidents as well as a wealth of state and local races.

The move falls in line with the recommendation by Alameda County Registrar of Voters Tim Dupuis, who offered a laundry list of reasons for pushing the question out six months. Chief among those was the expected price tag to hold a special election in August or September: estimates ranged from $15 million to $20 million.

That’s a particularly difficult ask, some supervisors said, given how the county faces a looming $68 million budget deficit over the next fiscal year, which begins July 1. And the county may have to funnel tens of millions of additional dollars to the Alameda Health System, which faces its own yawning deficit.

“The bottom line is the fact that I can’t, in good conscience, support a special election that’s going to cost the county nearly $20 million,” said Nate Miley, the board’s president, adding such a move “would be irresponsible on my part.”

Supervisor Elisa Márquez also said she wanted the recall question to be posed in a general election, similarly to how Price was elected in 2022, given how more voters typically cast ballots in such contests.

Yet Supervisor Keith Carson went farther, questioning the wisdom of booting a district attorney from office so soon after having been elected — particularly when that one person is just one cog in a complicated legal system with so many moving parts.

“To hold one individual completely responsible for all aspects of the system, respecting your belief or your feelings, that’s not how our system operates,” Carson said. He referenced how he first heard calls for Price’s recall barely three months after she was sworn into office, adding that “regardless as to whether I support her or not, whoever that DA is, whoever that person is who has been duly elected, I think they deserve at least a reasonable period of time in order to figure out what their job entails.”

The vote was 3-0. Supervisors David Haubert and Lena Tam were not present for the vote.

After the board’s vote, organizers of the recall effort expressed confidence that voters would boot Price from office in November. For weeks, the recall’s supporters had implored the county’s supervisors to get the question before voters as soon as possible, arguing the potential $20 million price tag paled in comparison to the impact of Price’s policies.

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