Why an office hub matters
City, county, district, and special-district campaigns have different outreach shapes, but public search often starts with the office itself. An office hub gives campaigns a cleaner path into the race page that actually matches the work.
It also makes the public site easier to crawl: one place for mayor, sheriff, Assembly, school board, city council, county supervisor, community college board, and water district pages.
- Office-first navigation for campaigns
- Clearer internal linking across race pages
- A stronger crawl path for race-specific search terms
- Faster movement from search query to waitlist CTA
Race coverage now live
The live race pages cover both partisan and nonpartisan California contests. That includes local executive races, district races, county contests, and special-district workflows that still need geography-aware voter targeting.
These pages are meant to connect naturally to county hubs, pricing, permitted-use guidance, and the waitlist so campaigns can answer both workflow and compliance questions before they reach out.
How campaigns use the race pages
Start with the office that matches your race, then move to county pages or workflow pages if the campaign needs more geography or targeting detail. That creates a shorter path from search intent to the pages that actually explain product fit.
CA Voter remains a private beta product, but the race pages are designed to make the intended campaign workflow legible before onboarding.
Need voter data for this California race?
Join the waitlist for pricing, eligibility review, and onboarding tied to the campaign office and workflow you care about.
Questions
Does this include every California race type?
No. It is a growing hub for the race and office pages currently live on the site.
Are these race pages meant for local campaigns too?
Yes. Most of the current race pages are aimed at local and district-level California campaigns, not just large statewide operations.