Sal DiCiccio won't run for Bill Gates' county supervisor seat. Who's already in the race?

Bill Gates won't run again for his county supervisor seat, and few Republicans are lining up to replace him in the primary.
Bill Gates won't run again for his county supervisor seat, and few Republicans are lining up to replace him in the primary.
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What promised to be a crowded GOP race to replace outgoing Maricopa County Supervisor Bill Gates now appears less so.

Longtime Phoenix City Councilman Sal DiCiccio, a provocateur on fiscal issues who didn’t shy from picking fights with city staff, has all but formally announced he’s not running.

He was presumed to be one of the front-runners, given his fundraising capacity and reputation as an unabashed partisan, for an office that could serve as a litmus test on the power of the extreme wing of the Republican Party.

DiCiccio’s pass leaves former state lawmaker Kate Brophy-McGee, a moderate, and attorney Tabatha LaVoie, who served on the Arizona-Mexico Commission under Gov. Janet Napolitano, as the two declared candidates for the seat.

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On the Democratic side, Daniel Valenzuela, a Phoenix firefighter and a former Phoenix City Council member, has filed an intent to run.

Another Republican, Beau Lane, an advertising executive who made his first foray into politics when he was recruited to run last year for secretary of state, said Wednesday he decided against entering the race.

Lane plans to endorse Brophy-McGee.

The District 3 seat is particularly intriguing given that Gates is the only incumbent to not seek reelection. The board of supervisors took a barrage of attacks over the 2020 and 2022 elections and for their defense of both the process and the results.

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Gates served as the board chairman during the 2022 midterms, when supervisors withstood angry protesters and correctly certified the results. He said in May that he was diagnosed with PTSD from election-related harassment, including threats of violence against him and his family.

Gates, like DiCiccio, served as a Phoenix city councilman before being elected to the board of supervisors.

Could DiCiccio have won in this district?

Phoenix Councilman Sal DiCiccio (left), pictured in 2019, has all but formally said he won't run for county supervisor.
Phoenix Councilman Sal DiCiccio (left), pictured in 2019, has all but formally said he won't run for county supervisor.

DiCiccio said on Wednesday that his decision pivoted on pending real-estate deals he committed to with business partners.

He remains the co-chair of the “Back the Blue Act,” a legislatively referred initiative that would levy a new $20 fine on each criminal conviction to pay an extra $250,000 to the families of first-responders killed on the job because of a criminal act.

Leading up to this week, DiCiccio’s camp had talked up his chances of winning in the north-central Valley District 3, citing internal polling of Republican and independent voters that had him besting Brophy-McGee.

That presumption would have been tested in a district that, unlike the other four supervisor districts, is evenly split among registered Republican and Democrats and where independents are the largest cohort of voters.

The GOP primary for District 3 now appears Brophy-McGee’s to lose.

Reach Abe Kwok at akwok@azcentral.com. On X, formerly Twitter: @abekwok.

This article originally appeared on Arizona Republic: Sal DiCiccio won't run for Maricopa County supervisor. So, who is?