Jeff Hewitt (politician)

American politician (born 1953) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jeff Hewitt (politician)

Jeffrey Hewitt[1] (born 1953) is an American politician who served on the Riverside County Board of Supervisors from 2019 to 2023, and as its chair from 2022 to 2023. A member of the Libertarian Party, Hewitt previously served on the Calimesa City Council and as the city's mayor.

Quick Facts Chair of the Riverside County Board of Supervisors, Vice Chair ...
Jeff Hewitt
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Hewitt in 2021
Chair of the Riverside County Board of Supervisors
In office
January 11, 2022  January 10, 2023
Vice ChairKevin Jeffries
Preceded byKaren Spiegel
Succeeded byKevin Jeffries
Vice Chair of the Riverside County Board of Supervisors
In office
January 12, 2021  January 11, 2022
ChairKaren Spiegel
Preceded byKaren Spiegel
Succeeded byKevin Jeffries
Member of the Riverside County Board of Supervisors from the 5th district
In office
January 8, 2019  January 10, 2023
Preceded byMarion Ashley
Succeeded byYxstian Gutierrez
Member of the Libertarian National Committee from the 4th region
In office
April 2, 2016  May 29, 2022
Preceded byDaniel Wiener
Succeeded byCarrie Eiler
Mayor of Calimesa
In office
December 11, 2015  December 20, 2018
Preceded byJoyce McIntire
Succeeded byBill Davis
Member of the Calimesa City Council
In office
December 7, 2010  December 20, 2018
Personal details
Born
Jeffrey Hewitt

1953 (age 7172)
Redlands, California, U.S.
Political partyLibertarian
SpouseWendy Hewitt
Children6
ResidenceCalimesa, California
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Website
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Hewitt was elected to the Calimesa city council in the 2010 election and reelected in the 2014 election before being selected by the city council to become mayor in 2015. He unsuccessfully ran for a seat in the California State Senate and California State Assembly in the 2014 and 2016 elections. Hewitt was elected to the board of supervisors despite being outspent and was labeled as the most powerful elected Libertarian in the United States by the Los Angeles Times. He ran in the 2021 California gubernatorial recall election with the support of the Libertarian Party of California.

Calimesa City Council (2010–2018)

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Hewitt as Mayor of Calimesa

Hewitt was elected to the Calimesa City Council on November 2, 2010, and sworn in on December 7.[2] He was appointed to a second four-year term by the Council in 2014.[3] The council unanimously elected Hewitt Mayor on December 11, 2015, succeeding Joyce McIntire.[4]

In 2018, Hewitt limited Calimesa's contract with the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (Cal Fire) to circumvent the state's union requirements. In its place, Calimesa established its own fire department that was free to offer 401(k) retirement plans to its employees in lieu of the pensions required by the Cal Fire union, which had accounted for a large portion of the city's budget. The change also allowed Calimesa to reduce its staffing levels on fire trucks. Hewitt argued that the staffing levels mandated by Riverside County cities with Cal Fire contracts were unnecessarily high, and claims cost cuts made possible by the switch to a city-run fire department saved Calimesa from bankruptcy.[5]

Hewitt resigned from the council on December 20, 2018, after being elected to the Riverside County Board of Supervisors in November. He was succeeded by Bill Davis.[6]

Riverside County Supervisor (2019–2023)

Summarize
Perspective
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Hewitt's official portrait, 2019

In an upset victory, Hewitt was elected to the Riverside County Board of Supervisors from District 5 in 2018 against former Republican Assemblyman Russ Bogh, despite Bogh raising twice as much money as Hewitt. Hewitt was sworn into office as a supervisor on January 8, 2019, by Libertarian National Committee Chair Nicholas Sarwark, succeeding retiring supervisor Marion Ashley.[7][8][9] In 2018, the Los Angeles Times named Hewitt as the most powerful Libertarian ever elected in the United States, though according to Reason he has since been surpassed by Wyoming State Representative Marshall Burt.[7][10][11]

Amid the California government response to the COVID-19 pandemic, Hewitt pushed Riverside County to reopen its businesses more quickly than the rest of California. In September 2020, Hewitt introduced legislation to establish restrictions specific to Riverside County, which would've been looser than those set by the state. The legislation would've allowed some indoor services that had been ordered closed to reopen with capacity limits, including restaurants, gyms, hair salons, places of worship, movie theaters, libraries, and retailers. Hewitt's proposal would have reopened the County fully by November 3, with large events being permitted starting on October 13. Due to a threat by Governor Gavin Newsom to cut state funding to counties that did not follow his guidelines for reopening, Hewitt's plan had the potential to cost Riverside County between $28 million and $656 million in state funding. Hewitt argued that the additional tax revenue gained from reopening the County would offset any loss of state funds. On September 22, the Board of Supervisors voted 3–2 to advance Hewitt's proposal, but delayed its implementation to October.[12] On October 6, the Board voted 4–1 to enact a modified version of Hewitt's plan, with Hewitt as the sole opposing vote. Hewitt says he voted against the final version because the specific deadlines in his original proposal had been removed, and language had been added directing the County to cooperate with the state on reopening guidelines.[13]

In November 2020, a female county employee filed a lawsuit against the county which accused Hewitt of sexual harassment back in May 2020.[14] Riverside County settled the lawsuit in connection with the allegation for $50,000 in April 2021.[15] Later that month, another female county employee filed suit against the county, and accused Hewitt and his chief of staff of making "disparaging and vulgar comments" back in October 2020.[16]

On January 12, 2021, Hewitt was elected by the board to serve as its vice chair for the year. He succeeded Karen Spiegel, who was elected Chair.[17][18] On January 12, 2022, Hewitt was elected by the board to serve as its chair for the year, with Kevin Jeffries elected Vice Chair.[19] In an unusual move, supervisors Chuck Washington and V. Manuel Perez, both Democrats, abstained from voting on the 2022 appointments. Such votes have been unanimous for at least the last two decades, with the positions rotated annually by district. Washington has also endorsed Hewitt's 2022 re-election challenger, Democratic mayor Yxstian Gutierrez of Moreno Valley, potentially the first such endorsement by a sitting supervisor against a colleague.[20][21] Hewitt and Gutierrez advanced from the top-two primary on June 7, 2022.[22] Hewitt lost re-election to Gutierrez in the general election.[23]

Other political activities

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Hewitt speaking on a panel at FreedomFest 2021 in Rapid City, South Dakota, during his gubernatorial campaign

Hewitt sought election to the California State Senate in 2014 and the California State Assembly in 2016.[9]

On April 2, 2016, Hewitt was elected the Region 4 representative to the Libertarian National Committee, succeeding Daniel Wiener.[24][25] He was re-elected in 2018[26] and 2020.[1] Hewitt announced his candidacy in the 2021 California gubernatorial recall election in an op-ed in the Orange County Register on May 2, 2021.[11] The 50% threshold to recall incumbent Democrat Gavin Newsom was not reached.[27] Hewitt received 0.7% of the replacement candidate vote.[28]

Electoral history

More information Candidate, Votes ...
2010 Calimesa City Council election[29]
Candidate Votes  %
Jim Hyatt 1,560 38.4
Jeff Hewitt 1,007 24.8
John Keith 882 21.7
Arthur Guerrero 614 15.1
Total votes 4,063 100%
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More information Primary election, Party ...
2014 California State Senate special election, District 23[30]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Mike Morrell 43,447 62.6
Democratic Ronald O'Donnell 10,531 15.2
Democratic Ameenah Fuller 6,705 9.7
Libertarian Jeff Hewitt 4,479 6.5
Republican Crystal Ruiz 4,187 6.0
Total votes 69,349 100%
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More information Primary election, Party ...
2016 California State Assembly election, District 42[31]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Chad Mayes (incumbent) 49,580 50.8
Democratic Greg Rodriguez 40,446 41.4
Libertarian Jeff Hewitt 7,601 7.8
Total votes 97,627 100%
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More information Primary election, Candidate ...
2018 Riverside County Board of Supervisors election, District 5[32][33]
Primary election
Candidate Votes  %
Russ Bogh 14,698 26.6
Jeff Hewitt 14,304 25.9
Jaime Hurtado 11,409 20.7
Patricia Vargas Sanchez 8,388 15.2
Altie Holcomb 6,402 11.6
Total votes 55,201 100%
General election
Jeff Hewitt 54,891 51.9
Russ Bogh 50,878 48.1
Total votes 105,769 100%
Close
More information Party, Candidate ...
2021 California gubernatorial recall election (replacement candidates)[28]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Larry Elder 3,563,867 48.4%
Democratic Kevin Paffrath 706,778 9.6%
Republican Kevin Faulconer 590,346 8.0%
Democratic Brandon M. Ross 392,029 5.3%
Republican John Cox 305,095 4.1%
Republican Kevin Kiley 255,490 3.5%
Democratic Jacqueline McGowan 214,242 2.9%
Democratic Joel Ventresca 186,345 2.5%
Democratic Daniel Watts 167,355 2.3%
Democratic Holly L. Baade 92,218 1.3%
Democratic Patrick Kilpatrick 86,617 1.2%
Democratic Armando "Mando" Perez-Serrato 85,061 1.2%
Republican Caitlyn Jenner 75,215 1.0%
Democratic John R. Drake 68,545 0.9%
Green Dan Kapelovitz 64,375 0.9%
Libertarian Jeff Hewitt 50,378 0.7%
Republican Ted Gaines 47,937 0.7%
No party preference Angelyne 35,900 0.5%
No party preference David Moore 31,224 nil
Republican Anthony Trimino 28,101 nil
Republican Doug Ose 26,204 nil
No party preference Michael Loebs 25,468 nil
Green Heather Collins 24,260 nil
No party preference Major Singh 21,394 nil
Republican David Lozano 19,945 nil
Republican Denver Stoner 19,588 nil
Republican Sam Gallucci 18,134 nil
Republican Steve Chavez Lodge 17,435 nil
Republican Jenny Rae Le Roux 16,032 nil
Republican David Alexander Bramante 11,501 nil
Republican Diego Martinez 10,860 nil
Republican Robert C. Newman II 10,602 nil
Republican Sarah Stephens 10,583 nil
No party preference Dennis Richter 10,468 nil
Republican Major Williams (write-in) 8,965 nil
No party preference Denis Lucey 8,182 nil
No party preference James G. Hanink 7,193 nil
Republican Daniel Mercuri 7,110 nil
Republican Chauncey "Slim" Killens 6,879 nil
Republican Leo S. Zacky 6,099 nil
No party preference Kevin Kaul 5,600 nil
Republican David Hillberg 4,435 nil
No party preference Adam Papagan 4,021 nil
Republican Rhonda Furin 3,964 nil
Republican Nickolas Wildstar 3,811 nil
No party preference Jeremiah "Jeremy" Marciniak 2,894 nil
Republican Joe M. Symmon 2,397 nil
No party preference Miki Habryn (write-in) 137 nil
Democratic Roxanne (write-in) 116 nil
Democratic Stacy Smith (write-in) 81 nil
No party preference Vivek B. Mohan (write-in) 68 nil
American Independent Thuy E. Hugens (write-in) 19 nil
No party preference Vince Lundgren (write-in) 5 nil
Total valid votes 7,361,568 100
Turnout 12,892,578 58.5%
Registered electors 22,057,154
Close
More information Primary election, Candidate ...
2022 Riverside County Board of Supervisors election, District 5[22][34]
Primary election
Candidate Votes  %
Yxstian Gutierrez 19,337 33.6
Jeff Hewitt 18,292 31.8
Lloyd White 15,066 26.2
Deni Antionette Mazingo 4,908 8.5
Total votes 57,603 100%
General election
Yxstian Gutierrez 47,312 54.3
Jeff Hewitt 39,887 45.7
Total votes 87,199 100%
Close

Personal life

Hewitt was born in 1953 in Redlands, California.[35] He is married to his third wife Wendy, who is the secretary of the Riverside County Libertarian Party.[7] She has served on the Calimesa City Council since 2020.[36] Hewitt has six children.[35]

References

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