Liccardo Raises Over $1.6 Million in Q2 Filing for CA-16

Liccardo Raises Over $1.6 Million in Q2 Filing for CA-16

Liccardo Dominating in Polling and Fundraising in Open Silicon Valley Congressional Seat

 

SAN JOSE — Today, former San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo announced he raised over $1.6 million in the second fundraising quarter of 2024. This comes on the heels of endorsements from Former Representative Jackie Speier (CA-14) and the Sierra Club. Liccardo has raised over $4.2 million total, and currently has nearly $2 million cash on hand. 

 

“Our campaign’s fundraising strength is a testament to the strong coalition Sam has built over his decades of public service,” Robin Logsdon, campaign manager for Sam Liccardo said. “People across our district understand Sam’s ability to get results and appreciate that he fights for our values. We’re humbled by this outpouring of support.”

 

Liccardo is endorsed by the Sierra Club, New Democrat Coalition, NorCal Carpenters Union, Laborers’ International Union of North America (LiUNA), Defend the Vote, California State Controller Malia Cohen, U.S. Representatives Nanette Barragan, Tony Cárdenas, Lou Correa, Robert Garcia, Linda Sanchez, Scott Peters, Brad Schneider, Josh Harder, Annie Kuster, former U.S. Representatives Jackie Speier and Gil Cisneros, San Mateo County Supervisor Ray Mueller, Former State Senator Jerry Hill, Santa Clara County Assessor Larry Stone, San Jose Mayor Matt Mahan, and more than 100 local elected officials and community leaders. In the primary election, he was endorsed by the Mercury News and the San Francisco Chronicle.  A full endorsement list can be seen here.

 

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About Sam Liccardo 

 

Sam Liccardo is running for Congress to focus Washington on the big issues like homelessness, climate change, reproductive rights, and the punishing cost of living. To a Congress that has been called the least productive in decades, Liccardo says “Let’s Get it Done!” on the problems that matter most to the Peninsula, the Coastside, and Silicon Valley.

 

As Mayor of San José, the Bay Area’s largest city, Liccardo’s innovative efforts to confront homelessness include pioneering the conversion of motels to housing in 2016, four years prior to California adopting it as a statewide model. He piloted the development of quick-build prefabricated housing communities that were constructed at a fraction of the time and cost of traditional apartments, helping thousands come off the streets. Liccardo also launched a successful program that employs unhoused residents cleaning the city in exchange for housing and pay (“San José Bridge”). Though San José long struggled with growing homelessness, it became one of the very few California cities to reduce street homelessness in Liccardo’s final year in office, 2022.

 

Under Liccardo, San José resolved chronic deficits, reduced city debt, and improved its credit rating, particularly through a 2016 ballot measure that saved taxpayers $3 billion over three decades. He took on the gun lobby and crafted a first-in-the-nation requirement for gun owners to pay annual fees to support violence-prevention programs and to purchase liability insurance. He launched San José Clean Energy for the city’s one million residents which now procures 95% of its electricity from renewable and GHG-free sources. Liccardo also led a series of successful ballot measures to preserve open space and hillsides, rebuild city streets and other infrastructure, and provide hundreds of millions in funding for housing affordable to vital workers such as teachers, nurses, firefighters, and police officers. Liccardo led efforts to expand BART and was part of the regional coalition that supported the successful efforts to electrify Caltrain.

 

Prior to his service in elected office, Liccardo prosecuted felony crimes of sexual assault and child exploitation in the Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office, and also served as a federal prosecutor in the Southern District of California. He is a graduate of Harvard Law School, Harvard’s John F. Kennedy School of Government, and Georgetown University. His published works have appeared in the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, and other national publications. He and his wife, Jessica García-Kohl, live in San José.

 

About California’s 16th Congressional District

California’s 16th is an open Congressional District that covers parts of Santa Clara and San Mateo counties, home to Silicon Valley. The district covers all or part of the cities of Menlo Park, Los Altos, Woodside, Pacifica, Half Moon Bay, Atherton, Pescadero, Portola Valley, Campbell, Los Altos Hills, Los Gatos, Monte Sereno, Mountain View, Palo Alto, San Jose, Saratoga and Stanford.

 

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