Javier Lopez
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Javier Lopez (Republican Party) is running for election to the U.S. House to represent California's 13th Congressional District. He declared candidacy for the 2026 election.[source]
Lopez completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2025. Click here to read the survey answers.
Biography
Javier Lopez was born in Los Angeles, California. He earned a high school diploma from Ceres High School. His career experience includes working in the fire suppression industry.[1]
Elections
2026
See also: California's 13th Congressional District election, 2026
Note: At this time, Ballotpedia is combining all declared candidates for this election into one list under a general election heading. As primary election dates are published, this information will be updated to separate general election candidates from primary candidates as appropriate.
General election
The general election will occur on November 3, 2026.
Withdrawn or disqualified candidates
Endorsements
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2026
Video for Ballotpedia
Video submitted to Ballotpedia Released April 5, 2025
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Ballotpedia survey responses
See also: Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection
Javier Lopez completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2025. The survey questions appear in bold and are followed by Lopez's responses. Candidates are asked three required questions for this survey, but they may answer additional optional questions as well.
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Javier has called Ceres home since the age of five. Before public service, he spent 20 years in the fire-suppression industry as a programmer, technician, building a work ethic, technical skills, and a commitment to fire life safety. That experience helped him lead a historic move to join MST Fire Consolidated, expanding resources and strengthening fire protection for Ceres residents. In 2020, Coach and business owner Javier Lopez made history by defeating a 3 term City Council opponent to become Mayor of Ceres on a “back to basics” platform focused on responsible spending and public safety. Under his leadership, the city increased pay for staff, including firefighters and police officers, repaired roads, and attracted new businesses and housing. He was re-elected in 2024 as he ran against two opponents. .Beyond City Hall, Javier is committed to mentoring youth. He began coaching freshman football at Central Valley High School, coaching staff lead the team to an undefeated season, and has since moved up to coach JV. Through coaching, he teaches discipline, hard work, leadership, and respect, shaping the next generation of leaders. He also helped create the Cross-Town Showdown Parade before the Friday Night Lights game between Central Valley High School and Ceres High School. Beyond City Hall,
- Public Safety
I believe public safety is key to keep our citizens safe. By supporting funding and resources for both large and small city's.
- Water for Farms & Communities
In the Central Valley, water is instrumental for our farmers and citizens, I’m committed to more storage, fair water allocations, and smart infrastructure so our farmers can keep producing and our families can count on clean, reliable water.
- Border Security & Immigration Reform
I support strong, secure borders and fully enforcing immigration laws to reduce crime and stop gangs, drug smuggling, and sex trafficking. At the same time, we need a common-sense approach to immigration that respects law and order while supporting our economy, especially in agriculture. That includes expanding the H-2A visa program and creating a legal pathway to citizenship for the hard-working laborers who come here to help feed America. Border security and legal immigration reform must go hand in hand for our safety, our workforce, and our future.
As a member of Congress, I would focus on practical solutions for public safety, water, and immigration that work for the Central Valley. I’ll fight for federal funding so local police, fire, and first responders can hire, retain, and equip personnel to confront gangs, drugs, fentanyl, and human trafficking. I’ll support more water storage, recharge and surface water, while protecting water rights so farms stay productive and families have affordable, clean water. I’ll back strong border enforcement while fixing H-2A and creating a work-based, legal path for long-time farmworkers who follow the law and help feed America.
The most important characteristics for an elected official are integrity, accountability, and a real commitment to serving people, not a political career. Integrity means keeping your word, being honest about tough issues, and making decisions based on what’s best for the community, not what’s easiest or most popular in the moment. An elected official should also be willing to put in the work. As mayor, I’ve been hands-on: tackling public safety, supporting our police and fire, investing in code enforcement to clean up our neighborhoods, and pushing for projects like the surface water treatment plant, new housing, and better roads. That comes from a mindset of problem-solving, not making excuses.
The core responsibility of someone elected to this office is to be a strong, honest voice for the people they represent. That starts with listening. A Congressman should spend as much time in the district as in Washington talking with farmers, small business owners, working families, seniors, and young people so every vote is grounded in real local needs, not party talking points.
Another key responsibility is making and shaping laws that actually improve people’s lives. For our Central Valley, that means fighting for water storage and fair allocations, protecting agriculture and food security, supporting public safety, securing the border while fixing our broken immigration system, and helping make life more affordable for working families.
This office is also responsible for oversight and accountability. A Congressman must hold federal agencies accountable, fight waste and abuse, and make sure taxpayer dollars are spent wisely and fairly especially when it comes to water, infrastructure, and public safety funding in rural regions like ours.
Finally, there is a responsibility to deliver and to report back. That means bringing home federal resources for roads, water projects, public safety, veterans, and economic development and then clearly explaining to the community what was done, how money was used, and how decisions were made. In short, represent, listen, legislate, provide oversight, and deliver real results for the district. Yes, I believe it’s especially important at this level of government for representatives to have previous experience in government or public service. When you’re dealing with federal policy, budgets, and regulations that affect millions of people, knowing how government actually works – not just how it sounds in a speech – makes a big difference. My time as Mayor of Ceres, chair of StanCOG, and vice chair of the SRWA has taught me how to navigate complicated issues like water projects, public safety, transportation funding, and interagency partnerships, and how to move things from ideas to real results on the ground. That kind of experience means I understand how laws and regulations hit local communities, small businesses, and families in the real world, not just on paper. At the same time, I don’t believe in “career politicians” who sit in office forever and lose touch. The best representatives, in my view, are people who combine government experience with real-life experience as workers, business owners, parents, and community members, and who remember they’re there to serve, not to hold onto a title.
Over the next decade, I believe our greatest challenges as a nation will be maintaining economic stability, supporting families and public safety through smart policy, and keeping America strong and stable on the world stage. At home, families are being squeezed by the cost of housing, food, energy, and healthcare. If we don’t get serious about controlling inflation, reducing unnecessary regulations that drive up costs, protecting American agriculture, and creating good-paying jobs, the middle class will continue to struggle and more people will feel like the American Dream is slipping away.
I support term limits for Congress. A Member of Congress serves a two-year term in the House of Representatives, and right now there are no formal term limits. I believe that makes it even more important to remember that this seat belongs to the people. No one should turn this office into a lifetime career while families back home deal with the same problems decade after decade.
Yes, I believe compromise is necessary for policymaking, especially in a diverse country like ours. For me, compromise doesn’t mean abandoning my values or principle. it means sitting down at the table, listening, and finding common ground so we can actually solve problems. As Mayor, I’ve had to work with people who don’t always agree with me, Democrats, Republicans, independents, local agencies, and different levels of government, to get things done on water, public safety, roads, and homelessness. Projects like the surface water treatment plant, regional fire service, and major transportation investments only happened because people were willing to meet in the middle and focus on results. I’d take the same approach: stand firm on core beliefs like public safety, economic stability, and support for families, but be willing to negotiate on the details so we can pass laws that move the country forward. Gridlock and grandstanding don’t help families in the Central Valley practical, principled compromise does.
Congressman Tom McClintock
Congressman Doug Lamalfa
Hughson Mayor George Carr
Patterson Mayor Michael Clauzel
Waterford Mayor Charlie Goeken
Newman Mayor Casey Graham
Ceres Councilman Daniel Martinez
Patterson Councilman Carlos Roque
Turlock Councilwoman Erika Phillips
Fmr. CA Secretary of State Bill Jones
Fmr. Waterford Mayor Jose Aldaco
The Central Valley Leadership Round Table
Associated Builders and Contractors, Northern California
Norcal Water Jobs Liberty PAC The accomplishment I’m most proud of is being elected Mayor of Ceres and helping lead our city into a real turnaround, one you can actually see and feel in the community. When I took office, Ceres was struggling with aging infrastructure, limited economic activity, and a sense that we were being left behind. I ran as a local kid who grew up here, coached here, and worked here, and I made a commitment to roll up my sleeves and fight for our town.
Since then, we’ve brought in new economic development that’s creating jobs and growing our tax base, which helps us fix roads and invest back into the community. We’ve focused on family-friendly events and new traditions, parades, night markets, community celebrations—that give people pride in calling Ceres home. I’m especially proud of supporting and expanding our Hometown Hero and veterans banner programs, honoring the men and women who have served our country and making their sacrifice visible on our streets.
At the same time, we made large, serious investments in public safety, both police and fire, because without safe neighborhoods, nothing else works. From backing regional fire partnerships to supporting law enforcement and code enforcement to clean up our streets and tackle homelessness, we’ve put public safety at the center of our progress.
Becoming mayor wasn’t just about winning an election; it was about helping turn Ceres into a safer, stronger city with more opportunity, more community, and more respect for the people who built it. That’s the work I’m proud to stand on. Note: Ballotpedia reserves the right to edit Candidate Connection survey responses. Any edits made by Ballotpedia will be clearly marked with [brackets] for the public. If the candidate disagrees with an edit, he or she may request the full removal of the survey response from Ballotpedia.org. Ballotpedia does not edit or correct typographical errors unless the candidate's campaign requests it.
Campaign finance summary
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See also
External links
- ↑ Information submitted to Ballotpedia through the Candidate Connection survey on November 9, 2025
Senators
Representatives
Democratic Party (45)
Republican Party (9)