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Alyson Lewis

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Alyson Lewis
Image of Alyson Lewis
Superior Court of Sacramento County
Tenure

2013 - Present

Term ends

2027

Years in position

12

Prior offices
California State Assembly District 10

Elections and appointments
Last elected

March 3, 2020

Appointed

2012

Education

Bachelor's

Cornell University

Law

University of California, Hastings College of the Law

Alyson Lewis (formerly Alyson Huber) is a judge of the Superior Court of Sacramento County in California. She assumed office in 2013. Her current term ends on January 4, 2027.

Lewis (formerly Alyson Huber) won re-election for judge of the Superior Court of Sacramento County in California outright in the primary on March 3, 2020, after the primary and general election were canceled.

Education

Lewis received her undergraduate degree from Cornell University and her J.D. from the University of California, Hastings College of the Law.[1]

Career

Lewis is a former business lawyer. She served as a Democratic member of the California State Assembly, representing District 10, from 2008 to 2012. In October of 2012, she was hired of counsel to Greenberg Traurig LLP. She was then appointed to the superior court at the end of the year.[2][1]

Elections

2020

See also: Municipal elections in Sacramento County, California (2020)

Incumbent Alyson Lewis was the only candidate to file and won the position by default when the election was canceled.

2014

See also: California judicial elections, 2014
Lewis ran for re-election to the Sacramento County Superior Court.
As an unopposed incumbent, she was automatically re-elected without appearing on the ballot. [3] 

2012

After initially intending to move homes in order to seek re-election, Huber announced in December 2011 that she would not run for office in 2012. Huber's redrawn district gave Republicans a 20-point advantage in voter registration.[4]

2010

See also: California State Assembly elections, 2010

Huber won re-election to the 10th District seat in 2010. She had no opposition in the June 8 primary. She defeated Republican Jack Sieglock, Libertarian Janice Marlae Bonser, and Peace and Freedom Party candidate Albert R. Troyer in the November 2 general election.[5]

California State Assembly, District 10 General Election (2010)
Candidates Votes
Green check mark transparent.png Alyson Huber (D) 83,177
Jack Sieglock (R) 68,395
Janice Marlae Bonser (L) 5,286
Albert R. Troyer (Peace and Freedom) 3,368

2008

In 2008, Huber was elected to the California State Assembly District 10. Huber (D) finished with 88,242 votes and was followed by Jack Sieglock (R) with 87,768 votes and Janice M. Bonser with 13,096 votes. Huber raised $1,209,018 for her campaign fund.[6]

California State Assembly District 10
Candidates Votes
Green check mark transparent.png Alyson Huber (D) 88,242
Jack Sieglock (R) 87,768
Janice M. Bonser (L) 13,096

Campaign themes

2020

Ballotpedia survey responses

See also: Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection

Alyson Lewis did not complete Ballotpedia's 2020 Candidate Connection survey.

Campaign finance summary

Ballotpedia currently provides campaign finance data for all federal- and state-level candidates from 2020 and later. We are continuously working to expand our data to include prior elections. That information will be published here as we acquire it. If you would like to help us provide this data, please consider donating to Ballotpedia.

State legislative tenure

Committee assignments

2011-2012

In the 2011-2012 legislative session, Huber served on these committees:

2009-2010

In the 2009-2010 legislative session, Huber served on these committees:

Legislative scorecard

Capitol Weekly, California's major weekly periodical covering the state legislature, publishes an annual legislative scorecard to pin down the political or ideological leanings of every member of the legislature based on how they voted on an assortment of bills in the most recent legislative session. The 2009 scores were based on votes on 19 bills, but did not include how legislators voted on the Proposition 1A (2009). On the scorecard, "100" is a perfect liberal score and "0" is a perfect conservative score.[7][8]

On the 2009 Capitol Weekly legislative scorecard, Huber ranked as a 42.[9]

See also


External links

Footnotes

Political offices
Preceded by
-
Superior Court of Sacramento County
2013-Present
Succeeded by
-
Preceded by
-
California State Assembly District 10
2008-2012
Succeeded by
-