(SACRAMENTO, CA.) — As the Sacramento City Council District 1 race enters its final stretch, mailers targeting challenger Jenn Chawla are drawing criticism and reigniting debate over campaign messaging and negative advertising.
The mailers, funded by the California Apartment Association Housing Solutions Committee and supporting incumbent Councilmember Lisa Kaplan, highlight "alleged past statements" by Jenn Chawla on homelessness sweeps and police funding, while contrasting them with Kaplan’s public safety record. The committee is a major real estate lobbying group with interests in local housing policy.
The Kaplan mailers say the comparisons highlight clear policy differences between the candidates, particularly on public safety and homelessness enforcement. However, the messaging removes nuance from policy discussions and turns them into political attack lines designed to mislead voters.

(The flyers ask voters, “Who do you trust to keep your family safe?” and includes endorsements for Kaplan from law enforcement organizations, including Sacramento County Sheriff Jim Cooper and the Sacramento Police Officers Association. It also states Chawla has “No Law Enforcement Support.”)
The flyers ask voters, “Who do you trust to keep your family safe?” and includes endorsements for Kaplan from law enforcement organizations, including Sacramento County Sheriff Jim Cooper and the Sacramento Police Officers Association. It also states Chawla has “No Law Enforcement Support.”

(One of the California Apartment Association Housing Solutions Committee flyers that target Chawla, includes a pull quote that was completely taken out of context and reproduced in this mailer. Lead Earth (typo on them) should read “Lead4Earth,” which is the IRS certified 501(c)(3) organization that founded the Open Governance Initiative.)
For Chawla, the mailers reflect a broader pattern in local politics rather than a single attack.

“I spent 13 years working for the FBI. I understand public safety, investigations, emergency response, and the importance of having trained professionals focused on the work they are actually meant to do. Public safety is one of the main reasons I am running for Sacramento City Council,” Chawla said. “What I said in that interview, and what I still believe, is this: police should be focused on public safety — and we should not keep asking officers to be the default response for every problem our city has failed to address properly.”
She also addressed her comments on homelessness sweeps:
“I was not saying encampments are acceptable or that neighborhoods should be left to deal with unsafe conditions. I said the opposite. Homelessness is a problem we obviously need to fix. But sweeps that simply move people from one block to another are not a smart use of taxpayer dollars. When people lose their IDs, medications, and belongings in a sweep, we are not solving the problem — we are resetting the clock and making it harder to connect people with shelter, treatment, and housing. That is not a public safety strategy. That is a cycle. District 1 families deserve better,” Chawla said.
OpGov.news is committed to government transparency. As the Sacramento County reporter for Open Governance Initiative, this reporter, along with Founder Chirag Kathrani, conducted and recorded the full interview with Jenn Chawla, which was hosted on the Lead 4 Earth YouTube channel.
The complete, unedited March 2 interview can be viewed here:
Chawla has outlined support for dedicated District 1 patrols that cannot be reassigned away from neighborhoods, stronger traffic enforcement to address speeding and dangerous intersections, and increased accountability for unsafe behavior in the community. She also supports greater transparency in how public safety funds are allocated.
“If money inside the police budget is going toward youth programming, homelessness response, or other non-law-enforcement functions, we should ask whether those dollars belong elsewhere — under proper oversight — while keeping officers focused on what they are trained to do,” she said. “That is not ‘defunding.’ That is accountability.”
The mailers also raise broader questions about campaign financing and influence, noting the role of the California Apartment Association in local elections and its interest in zoning, development fees, and housing policy.
“I am running to represent the people of Natomas and Robla, not outside special interests,” Chawla said. “Our neighborhoods need safer streets, real solutions on homelessness, and leadership that is honest about what works.”
“Voters do not need more fear mail,” she added. “They need honest answers. Mine is clear: I will fight for public safety, dedicated District 1 patrols, accountability, and solutions that actually work. I would be honored to earn your vote by June 2.”
Chawla’s campaign has centered on economic development, mixed-use zoning, transparency in government, and community-driven decision-making. A first-generation immigrant who came to the United States from India as a child, she has emphasized her working-class background and public service experience as shaping her perspective on Sacramento families’ needs.
Her message has resonated with voters concerned about homelessness, rising costs, development pressures, and what some describe as District 1 losing its local identity.

(Incumbent Lisa Kaplan stating in a social media post that she is the only female to sign the Code of Fair Campaign Practices. Credit: Jenn Chawla.)
It’s worth noting, California candidates commonly sign the Code of Fair Campaign Practices, a voluntary and nonbinding pledge encouraging truthful, respectful campaigning. Although widely referenced in discussions about negative advertising, the pledge carries no enforcement mechanism, and campaign messaging is ultimately governed by disclosure rules rather than content restrictions.
The 2026 city of Sacramento race is expected to remain closely watched heading into 2026, as voters weigh experience and institutional support against calls for change and increased accountability.
Chawla concluded:
“People deserve leadership that listens before decisions are made for them. That’s what this campaign is about.”
Jenn Chawla’s campaign also highlights a growing list of endorsements from community members and supporters who align with her focus on transparency, accountability, and public safety. These endorsements reflect a broad base of grassroots and civic engagement across Sacramento’s District 1, underscoring her message of restoring trust in local government and bringing more community voices into City Hall. A full list of her endorsements can be viewed here: https://www.vote4jenn.org/endorsements-for-jenn-chawla.
OpGov.news reached out to Councilmember Lisa Kaplan early in her campaign to request a general interview and an opportunity to speak about her priorities. No response was received by Kaplan or members of her campaign. (The offer is still on the table.)
Jenn Chawla is a candidate for Sacramento City Council District 1 and can be reached at jennchawla@vote4jenn.org.
If you’d like to add or correct anything in this report, feel free to reach out to me or leave a comment below. Have tips or story ideas from around Sacramento County? Send them to Sarah Denos at sarahkdenos@gmail.com.
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