A Look at the Four Leading Candidates for San Diego City Council District 2
By David Garrick / San Diego U-T / March 27, 2026
Four leading candidates to represent areas including Clairemont and Point Loma on the San Diego City Council differ sharply in their experience, neighborhood involvement and how they would solve the city’s budget crisis.
Deputy City Attorney Nicole Crosby — who got key endorsements this week from the county Democratic Party and the city’s firefighters union — said she would bring strong institutional knowledge and deep community roots. Crosby, 46, has worked on housing issues for the city and has served on the Clairemont Town Council and as president of the parent-teacher association of Holmes Elementary, where her daughter goes to school.
Josh Coyne, who at the start of the year was leading in campaign fundraising, knows the district well as former policy director for termed-out incumbent Jennifer Campbell. Coyne, 46, now works for the Downtown San Diego Partnership merchants group. A Point Loma resident, Coyne says he would bring predictable leadership and reduce acrimony at City Hall.
Richard Bailey, a former two-term Republican mayor of Coronado who moved recently to Point Loma, says he would bring major change to City Hall, including with his plan to shrink and restructure city government. Bailey, 39, said he would provide the badly needed perspective of a small-business owner to the council, contending many of the city’s problems stem from having too many career politicians in charge.
Mandy Havlik, a Point Loma neighborhood leader, says she is the only candidate who has successfully fought City Hall and contends that she exemplifies what standing up for your neighborhood means. Havlik, 44, helped overturn a ballot measure that lifted the height limit in the Midway District around the sports arena. Since then, she’s broadened her focus to include infrastructure, environmental issues and e-bike safety.


By Gabriella Rubio
Chula Vista
By The Associated Press /
By Alex Cheney /
by Mariana Martínez Barba /
Editordude: Two Rag writers take aim today at the city’s rollout of the new trash cans. South OB Girl and Abby (who has writes under Csaba) offer their observations.
A pedestrian died after being struck by a vehicle early Thursday morning, March 26th in the Midway District (some call it Point Loma Heights) neighborhood, San Diego police said.
As we finish up the four weeks of Trump’s war on Iran, it’s time to offer some key observations from Southern California.
Earlier this week, an opinion piece appeared in the San Diego Union-Tribune, written by occasional Rag writer Jillian Butler, with the headline, “Why Ocean Beach needs ‘broken windows’ policing.” It decried the sad state of OB and complained of the graffiti, drug use and fights visible in public. Butler stated:




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