Bryan Caforio

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Bryan Caforio
Image of Bryan Caforio
Elections and appointments
Last election

June 5, 2018

Education

Bachelor's

University of California, Los Angeles

Law

Yale Law School

Personal
Profession
Attorney
Contact

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Bryan Caforio (Democratic Party) ran for election to the U.S. House to represent California's 25th Congressional District. He lost in the primary on June 5, 2018.

Caforio was a 2016 Democratic candidate who sought election to the U.S. House to represent the 25th Congressional District of California.[1]

Biography

Caforio's professional experience includes working as an attorney for a U.S. federal judge on the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals and practicing law in Southern California. He earned his J.D. from Yale Law School and graduated from the University of California Los Angeles.[2]

Elections

2018

See also: California's 25th Congressional District election, 2018

General election

General election for U.S. House California District 25

Katie Hill defeated incumbent Stephen Knight in the general election for U.S. House California District 25 on November 6, 2018.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Katie Hill
Katie Hill (D)
 
54.4
 
133,209
Image of Stephen Knight
Stephen Knight (R)
 
45.6
 
111,813

Total votes: 245,022
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Nonpartisan primary election

Nonpartisan primary for U.S. House California District 25

Incumbent Stephen Knight and Katie Hill defeated Bryan Caforio, Jess Phoenix, and Mary Pallant in the primary for U.S. House California District 25 on June 5, 2018.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Stephen Knight
Stephen Knight (R)
 
51.8
 
61,411
Image of Katie Hill
Katie Hill (D)
 
20.7
 
24,507
Image of Bryan Caforio
Bryan Caforio (D)
 
18.4
 
21,821
Image of Jess Phoenix
Jess Phoenix (D)
 
6.4
 
7,549
Silhouette Placeholder Image.png
Mary Pallant (D)
 
2.7
 
3,157

Total votes: 118,445
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey.

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Withdrawn or disqualified candidates

Campaign finance

Endorsements

Ballotpedia tracks endorsements by organizations and elected officials. To notify us of other endorsements, please email us.

Primary election endorsements
Endorsement Democratic Party Caforio[3] Democratic Party Hill[4] Republican Party Knight Democratic Party Phoenix[5]
Federal officials
Jerry McNerney, U.S. representative
Nanette Barragan, U.S. representative
Judy Chu, U.S. representative
Lois Frankel, U.S. representative
Jimmy Gomez, U.S. representative
Jackie Speier, U.S. representative
Lois Capps, former U.S. representative
State figures
Sharon Davis, former California first lady
Gavin Newsom, lieutenant governor of California
Ben Allen, California state senator
Henry Stern, California state senator
Dante Acosta, California state assemblyman
Laura Friedman, California state assemblywoman
Jacqui Irwin, California state assemblywoman
Tom Lackey, California state assemblyman
Fran Pavley, former California state senator
Local figures
Sheila Kuehl, Los Angeles County supervisor
Don Knabe, former Los Angeles County supervisor
Susan Rose, former Santa Barbara County supervisor
Peter Foy, Ventura County supervisor
Kathy Long, former Ventura County supervisor
Cameron Smyth, mayor of Santa Clarita
Bob Huber, mayor of Simi Valley
Mike Judge, Simi Valley mayor pro tem
Mike Bonin, Los Angeles city councilman
Paul Koretz, Los Angeles city councilman
Joy Picus, former Los Angeles city councilwoman
Dee Dee Cavanaugh, Simi Valley city councilwoman
Keith Mashburn, Simi Valley city councilman
Cheryl Heitmann, Ventura city councilwoman
Lindsey Horvath, West Hollywood city councilwoman
Wendy Greuel, former Los Angeles city controller
Rick Tuttle, former Los Angeles city controller
Juan Carillo, Palmdale city councilman
Michael Dutton, Antelope Valley Union High School District board member
Jannie Dutton, Keppel Union School District board president
Manuel Magana, Keppel Union School District board member
Christy Smith, Newhall School District board president[6][7]
Joyce Ricks, Palmdale School District president
Ralph Velador, Palmdale School District board member
Christopher Trunkey, Saugus Union School District president
Gonzalo Freixes, former Newhall School District president
Robert "Bo" Bynum, former Palmdale School District board member
Arleigh Kidd, former Simi Valley Unified School District president
Kathy MacLaren, Palmdale Water Board director
Gloria Dizmang, former Palmdale Water Board director
Organizations
Our Revolution, Santa Clarita
Greater and Grander
Americans for Democratic Action of Southern California
Free Thought Equality
Gaaays in Spaaace
Blue Grizzlies
Party of Reason and Progress
Blue Wave Crowdsource
Amalgamated Transit Union Local 1277
American Nurses Association
American Postal Workers Union
Blue America
Communications Workers of America, Southern California Council
Democracy for America
EMILY's List
Equality California
The Feminist Majority
Heart of L.A. Democratic Club
International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers Local 416 and Local 433
International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 40
International Union of Operating Engineers Local 12
International Union of Painters and Allied Trades District Council 36
Justice Democrats
L.A. County Young Democrats
Laborers' International Union of North America Local 300
NARAL
National Association of Letter Carriers Local 2200, Local 4430, and Local 2902
National Nurses United
North Valley Democratic Club
Progressive Democrats of the Santa Monica Mountains
Santa Clarita Valley Young Democrats
Sheet Metal, Air, Rail and Transportation Workers Local Union 105
Southwest Regional Council of Carpenters
Southeast Antelope Valley Initiative
Southern California District Council of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union
Stonewall Democratic Club
The Suburban Women's Action Network
Teamsters Joint Council 42
United Aerospace Workers Local 887
United Association of Plumbers, Pipefitters and Welders Local 761
United Steelworkers Los Angeles and Orange County Legislative Education Committee
Utility Workers Union of America
Victory Fund
The Women's Political Committee


2016

See also: California's 25th Congressional District election, 2016

California's 25th Congressional District was a battleground district in 2016. Incumbent Stephen Knight (R) won re-election to his second term in 2016. He defeated Bryan Caforio (D) in the general election on November 8, 2016. Knight and Caforio defeated Jeffrey Moffatt (R) and Lou Vince (D) in the top-two primary on June 7, 2016.[8][9][10][11][12][13]

U.S. House, California District 25 General Election, 2016
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Republican Green check mark transparent.pngStephen Knight Incumbent 53.1% 138,755
     Democratic Bryan Caforio 46.9% 122,406
Total Votes 261,161
Source: California Secretary of State


U.S. House, California District 25 Primary, 2016
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Republican Green check mark transparent.pngStephen Knight Incumbent 48.3% 63,769
     Democratic Green check mark transparent.pngBryan Caforio 29.1% 38,382
     Democratic Lou Vince 15.4% 20,327
     Republican Jeffrey Moffatt 7.3% 9,620
Total Votes 132,098
Source: California Secretary of State

Caforio was added to the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee's Emerging Races program on April 8, 2016. Emerging Races is the second tier of the Red to Blue program. According to the DCCC, it includes the districts "where campaigns are on track and working hard to put seats in play."[14][15]

Campaign themes

2018

The section below was taken from Caforio's 2018 campaign website.

Holding President Trump Accountable

We need a Congress that will stand up to President Trump instead of rubber stamping his dangerous agenda. Now more than ever, Congress must use its power to create jobs, help middle-class Americans get ahead and make the wealthiest pay their fair share, protect our healthcare, safeguard environmental protections, defend against discrimination, and ensure our freedom.

We must make our voices heard in Washington, and that starts with you. As your representative, I want to hear your concerns at in-person town halls, in letters and phone calls, on social media, and at the grocery store, and once in office, I pledge to be open and accessible to all of my constituents.

Medicare for All

Healthcare is a right, not a privilege.

We need Medicare for All because every American must have access to the high quality and affordable healthcare they deserve. Trump and his cronies in Congress are trying to take healthcare away from millions of Americans and tens of thousands of our neighbors in the 25th District. As if that isn’t bad enough, they want to eliminate protections for pre-existing conditions and increase costs for people over 50-years-old.

Too many families are only one bad accident or one medical emergency away from bankruptcy. Medicare for All will save families thousands of dollars per year by eliminating healthcare deductibles and out-of-pocket costs. By expanding Medicare, we’re also keeping the program solvent and, in turn, keeping our sacred promise to seniors. Allowing Medicare to negotiate prescription drug prices will bring costs down and stop letting insurance companies put their profits ahead of our health. I will fight back against any attempt to decrease coverage or increase premiums, and I’ll never vote to give a trillion-dollar tax break to billionaires and bankers at the expense of the most vulnerable people in our community.

Supporting Women and Families

When women thrive, America succeeds.

We can’t move forward as a country unless women are given an equal opportunity to succeed, which is why I support pro-woman, pro-family policies. I will stand up and defend women’s health and reproductive rights against misguided and misleading attacks; I will fight to end wage discrimination and make sure that women receive equal pay for equal work; and I will push for and support paid family leave and affordable healthcare policies. I proudly stand with Planned Parenthood and will fight to protect its funding so women have access to critical health services like cancer screenings and birth control. Women must be able to make their own healthcare decisions without interference from their employers.

Defending Medicare and Social Security

Our seniors worked hard their entire lives to earn Social Security and Medicare – we can’t break our promise to them now.

Keep our promises to seniors. After a lifetime of hard work, every senior deserves a secure and healthy retirement. Yet every year the career politicians in Washington try to dismantle Medicare and Social Security, attempting to balance the budget on the backs of our seniors. I will fight any attempt to privatize Social Security or turn Medicare into a voucher system.

Instead of finding ways to benefit the billionaires and bankers on Wall Street, we must take steps now to strengthen and secure Social Security for this and future generations. In Congress, I will fight to:

Scrap the Cap: by requiring millionaires and billionaires to pay the same percent of their incomes towards Social Security as middle-class families, we can guarantee that Social Security remains fully funded for decades to come.

Increase Benefits: by using the CPI-E (Consumer Price Index-Elderly), instead of the CPI-W (Consumer Price Index — Urban Wage and Clerical), to calculate COLA (Cost of Living Adjustments), we will more accurately account for our seniors’ regular expenses and allow them to live more securely on their own.

Building an Economy That Works for the Middle Class

It’s time to build an economy that works for everyone, not just the wealthy few.

Reduce the tax burden on the middle class and ensure the wealthiest pay their fair share. While middle-class Americans are working hard to provide for their families, millionaires and billionaires are benefitting from tax breaks and loopholes. We need to fix this system that unfairly prioritizes wealthy special interests at the expense of the middle class.

Increase the nation’s minimum wage. No one who works full time should live in poverty. California is leading the way by raising the minimum wage, but Congress continues to ignore the issue, widening our nation’s income gap and making it harder for families to get ahead.

Stop giving handouts and tax breaks to big banks and corporations. Instead of giving handouts to big banks and tax breaks to corporations that ship jobs overseas, we need to focus on projects that grow our economy and create jobs right here in the 25th District. The Antelope Valley is a leader in aerospace, and when we support the aerospace industry, we’re able to create well-paying jobs while investing in our national security. Building a water recycling facility here in the District would provide much needed water security should California experience another devastating drought. We also need to invest in our roads, bridges, and renewable energy sources to stay ahead and create the jobs of the future.

End wage discrimination. Everyone deserves equal pay for equal work regardless of race or gender. It’s time to end wage discrimination so that every American worker earns what he or she deserves.

Give our kids the education they deserve. As the son of two public school teachers and the product of California public schools, I know the opportunity a strong school system can provide. Unfortunately, our public schools are under attack from President Trump, Betsy DeVos, and Trump’s out of touch allies in Congress. College graduates are saddled with debt they can’t refinance because Congress won’t act. We must make our public schools a priority by investing in STEAM education, offering advanced vocational training, and reforming our student loan system to make college affordable for everyone. A greater emphasis on apprenticeship and internship programs will ensure that our students are well prepared for the high-tech aerospace jobs that we can support right here in the 25th District.

Supporting Small Businesses

Small businesses make up more than 99% of all employer firms, and yet far too many Washington politicians spend their time looking out for only the biggest and wealthiest corporations.

Many small businesses and entrepreneurs struggle to access the capital necessary to start and expand their businesses. Inadequate access to capital holds these companies back and harms our economy. We should ease access to capital in a variety of ways, including:

– Expanding the availability of Small Business Administration (SBA) loans.
– Encouraging crowdfunding for small businesses to provide access to equity capital.
– Supporting credit unions and community banks.
– Incentivize providing loans under $50,000.

LGBTQ Rights

While we had a historic victory at the Supreme Court guaranteeing marriage equality, the LGBTQ community now faces increased attacks from extremists in Congress and the Trump Administration. I am steadfast in my support for total equality, and will be a fierce advocate for LGBTQ rights in the face of these attacks both at home and abroad. Our elected officials have a responsibility to ensure that there is no place for discrimination based on sexual orientation in our society or government, and I will co-sponsor the Equality Act as soon as I’m sworn into office.

Preserving Our Environment

We need to combat climate change and protect the environment for our families and children.

Whether you live in Simi Valley or Lancaster, Santa Clarita or Palmdale, Littlerock or Porter Ranch, we all call the 25th District home. We need a representative who accepts and trusts science, understands that climate change is a paramount threat to national security, and will stand up to dirty energy companies in order to keep our roads clear from increased trucking traffic congestion, our air breathable, our water drinkable, and our communities safe.

The devastating Aliso Canyon Gas Leak showed us what happens when our representatives are beholden to dirty energy companies. I have pledged not to take any contributions from oil and gas companies in this campaign, and am committed to investing in clean energy as we move to 100% renewable energy. Right here in the 25th District, Lancaster is on track to be a net-zero city by 2020 and serves as an example of what we can achieve when we commit to a sustainable future.

We must not let Trump and his anti-environment Administration negotiate away our community’s health or sell our beautiful protected spaces to the highest bidder. I believe in protecting our national monuments, keeping the Arctic free from drilling, and passing legislation to ensure this or future Administrations can’t open the Cemex mine.

With the Porter Ranch Gas Leak, the contamination at Santa Susana, the Chiquita Canyon dump expansion, Whittaker Bermite, Cemex, and so much more, we need a representative who will stand with our community and work to address both local and national environmental issues so that our families have the peace of mind to know the air they breathe and the water they drink is safe.

Animal Welfare

We must treasure the unique relationship between people and animals. Our actions, more often than not, affect animals just as much as they affect people, and I’ll keep that in mind when considering legislation. While not everyone can commit to a vegan diet, we can commit to ensuring that animals raised for food are treated humanely. We need to protect wild animals from cruelty, unnecessary killing, and extinction, keep natural environments habitable for animals, and ensure that every pet has a home free from abuse or neglect. Earlier this year police rescued 7,000 roosters from an illegal cockfighting ring–the largest in U.S. history–right here in Val Verde. I will work with our law enforcement agencies to crack down on such reprehensible conduct, and fight to put in place strong protections to end these abuses once and for all.

Fixing Our Immigration System and Securing Our Border

It’s time to pass immigration reform that keeps families together, secures our border, and strengthens our economy.

We must pass commonsense, comprehensive reform. In 2013, the U.S. Senate passed a bipartisan comprehensive immigration reform bill supported by a broad group of immigration, business, labor, and faith organizations. I support the principles of that bipartisan bill, which secured our borders and provided a pathway to citizenship for those who pay their taxes, learn English, and have no criminal background. Passing commonsense, comprehensive legislation would boost our economy and reduce our deficit by upwards of $900 billion over the coming years.

I will fight any attempt to roll back President Obama’s actions on immigration, which protected young people who were brought to this country as children, as well as their parents, from the constant fear of deportation. We must support hard-working students who were brought here as infants and toddlers and have contributed to American society, which is why I also strongly support the California DREAM Act, designed to increase access to college for undocumented immigrants who graduated from high school in the United States.

National Security and Terrorism

The U.S. military is the best fighting force the world has ever seen, and I’m committed to keeping it that way. While President Trump continues to destroy relationships with our closest allies, weaken our military readiness, and hinder our diplomatic efforts within the State Department, it’s more important than ever that Congress provides checks and balances to keep our nation safe. We must build an international coalition to defeat ISIS and stop the global spread of terrorism, prioritize diplomatic solutions, and implement tough and smart national security policies that will protect Americans at home and abroad.

Honor our Veterans

As a nation, we have no greater duty than to fully provide for the men and women who have served and sacrificed for this country when they return from service.

For more than 70 years, the G.I. Bill has been available to help returning veterans achieve easier access to educational opportunities. Since its inception in 2008, the Post-9/11 G.I. BIll has provided educational benefits to more than 1.5 million brave men and women who sacrificed for our country. Unfortunately, extremists in Congress attacked the Post-9/11 G.I. Bill by voting to cut the benefits it provides our veterans. That is unacceptable. We need to make it easier, not harder, for veterans to access educational benefits, which is why I pledge to defend the Post-9/11 G.I. Bill and will work to ensure that sufficient funds remain available to provide educational benefits for soldiers into the future.

We have a responsibility to ensure that veterans returning from combat zones have immediate access to the physical, mental, and emotional care they need. I’ve heard far too many stories from veterans in our community about waiting seven, eight, or nine months for an appointment. We should take steps toward building a world class VA facility in the Antelope Valley, and in the meantime, we must provide veterans with increased shuttle service to Westwood/Sepulveda to ensure they receive the care they need. I also support legislation providing a single point of contact for each veteran to help navigate through the VA system.

Our servicemen and women have tremendous skills, and we must provide any assistance necessary to help transfer those skills into a successful career when they return home. I will support bills that aim to accelerate vital skills training for U.S. veterans in manufacturing careers. I also fully support the Veterans Retraining Assistance Program (VRAP), which trains unemployed veterans for careers in high-demand occupations, and will work to expand the benefits available so that the program applies to more veterans.

Gun Violence Prevention

I’m sick and tired of waking up to read about the next mass shooting to tear another community apart, and I’m disgusted at our elected officials who keep failing to take concrete actions to start saving lives. I’ll stand up to the corporate gun lobby, and I’ll work to implement policies to keep our community safe. I support immediately reauthorizing the CDC to restart conducting research to determine the most effective ways to protect us from the ongoing gun violence epidemic. In the meantime, there are commonsense solutions we should and must enact without any further delay. First, I support expanding background checks and closing loopholes. There is no reason a potential suspected terrorist, stalker, domestic abuser, or person with mental health illness should have access to firearms. I support uniform nationwide waiting periods, which at the very least will save 1,000 lives each year by reducing the number of suicides. Finally, weapons of war have no place in our communities, and I support banning assault weapons, bump stocks, and silencers. Let’s work together to start saving lives today.

Campaign Finance Reform

Unless we dramatically reform our political system, insurance companies will continue to control our health care, oil companies will continue to dictate how we respond to climate change, and corporations will continue to get massive tax breaks for shipping jobs overseas. The disastrous Citizens United Supreme Court decision gives special interests even more influence over our democracy, our economy, and our lawmakers. We now have a corrupt campaign finance system with no accountability. Overturning that awful decision and implementing real campaign finance reform with teeth is one of my top priorities. I strongly support a constitutional amendment to overturn Citizens United, and I will fight for publicly financed elections, eliminating money from politics, and complete transparency for all political contributions.[16]

2016

Obama endorsement
Obama template image.jpg
During the 2016 election cycle Caforio was one of the candidates endorsed by President Barack Obama

Full list of Obama's 2016 endorsements

The following issues were listed on Caforio's campaign website. For a full list of campaign themes, click here.

  • Increase the nation’s minimum wage: No one who works full time should live in poverty. California is leading the way by raising the minimum wage, but Congress continues to ignore the issue, widening our nation’s income gap and making it harder for families to get ahead.
  • Stop handouts and tax breaks for big banks and corporations: Instead of giving handouts to big banks and tax breaks to corporations that ship jobs overseas, we need to focus on projects that grow our economy and create jobs right here in the 25th District. We need to invest in our roads, bridges, water infrastructure, and renewable energy sources to stay ahead and create the jobs of the future.
  • End wage discrimination: Everyone deserves equal pay for equal work regardless of race or gender. It’s time to end wage discrimination so that every American worker earns what they deserve.
  • Give our kids the education they deserve: We must make our public schools a priority, by investing in STEM education, offering advanced vocational training and reforming our student loan system to make college affordable for everyone.
  • Defending Medicare and Social Security: After a lifetime of hard work, every senior deserves a secure and healthy retirement. Yet every year the career politicians in Washington try to dismantle Medicare and Social Security, attempting to balance the budget on the backs of our seniors. I will fight any attempt to privatize Social Security or turn Medicare into a voucher system.

[17]

—Brian Caforio's campaign website, http://bryancaforio.com

Recent news

The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for the terms Bryan Caforio California Congress. These results are automatically generated from Google. Ballotpedia does not curate or endorse these articles.

See also

External links

Footnotes

  1. Los Angeles Times, "Democratic lawyer announcing challenge to GOP Rep. Steve Knight," December 10, 2015
  2. Bryan Caforio 2018 campaign website, "Meet Bryan," accessed March 30, 2018
  3. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named caforioendorsements
  4. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named hillendorsements
  5. Elisabeth Moore, "Email exchange with Carlos Phoenix," May 22, 2018
  6. Smith initially endorsed Caforio but changed her endorsement to Hill in February 2018.
  7. The Signal, "Dems choice for 38th Assembly District changes support for 25th Congressional District," February 27, 2018
  8. Los Angeles Times, "Democrat Lou Vince says he will challenge Rep. Stephen Knight," April 30, 2015
  9. Daily KOS, "Daily Kos Elections Morning Digest: Steve Knight might be the one who gets 'dropped on his ass'," April 23, 2015
  10. Evan Thomas' campaign website, "2016 campaign announcement," June 25, 2015
  11. Los Angeles Times, "Democratic lawyer announcing challenge to GOP Rep. Steve Knight," December 10, 2015
  12. California Secretary of State, "Certified List of Candidates for Voter-Nominated Offices June 7, 2016, Presidential Primary Election," accessed April 4, 2016
  13. The New York Times, "California Primary Results," June 7, 2016
  14. Roll Call, "Democrats Land Colorado Recruit to Expand House Playing Field," April 8, 2016
  15. DCCC, "DCCC Chairman Luján Announces First 31 Districts In Red To Blue Program," February 11, 2016
  16. Bryan Caforio 2018 campaign website, Bryan's Plan," accessed May 14, 2018
  17. Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.


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