PLACERVILLE, Calif. — Political speculation surrounding the 2026 El Dorado County Board of Supervisors race intensified this week after social media posts questioned the political background of potential candidate Greg Clark and his relationship with District 4 Supervisor Lori Parlin.
The discussion began when local resident Colleen Hearn publicly asked Clark to address rumors regarding his political affiliation and whether Parlin encouraged him to change voter registration status in preparation for a campaign against fellow candidate Gina Posey.
“Integrity first please, I would like to know if that is the case and what is your relationship to Ms. Parlin?”
Hearn wrote in a public social media post.
Another commenter, Lee Tannenbaum, responded by claiming Clark
“has been a lifelong Democrat and just switched to NPP, not Republican,”
while also alleging that Parlin recruited Clark to run and has publicly supported his candidacy through campaign donations and comments.
As of Sunday, neither Clark nor Parlin had publicly responded to the claims referenced in the online exchange, and the allegations could not be independently verified.
Residents discussing the upcoming El Dorado County District 4 supervisor race debated whether candidates’ political affiliations and past voter registrations are relevant in a technically nonpartisan election. Several commenters argued that party background matters because future supervisors will likely weigh in on controversial housing and land-use proposals, including the proposed Bass Lake Apartments project, Dorado Oaks, Lime Rock and Native Solutions developments.
Some participants questioned the political history of potential candidate Greg Clark, with commenters alleging he previously identified as a Democrat before switching to No Party Preference registration. Others claimed Supervisor Lori Parlin encouraged Clark to run, though no evidence was presented in the discussion to independently verify those assertions. Additional commenters referenced campaign finance filings and prior political donations as indicators of ideological alignment.
The conversation also expanded into a broader debate over whether party registration accurately predicts how local officials govern. Some residents argued that Republicans on the Board of Supervisors have previously supported or opposed development projects in ways that did not align neatly with partisan expectations. Specific references were made to past Board actions involving the Bass Lake Apartments proposal, with commenters recalling that supervisors voted to uphold a citizen appeal that temporarily halted the project.
Other commenters dismissed party affiliation as less important than candidates’ positions on county spending, growth, transparency and quality-of-life issues. Several participants criticized what they described as increasing polarization in local politics, while others defended the importance of understanding candidates’ ideological leanings before voting.
The exchange also included sharp criticism and personal accusations directed at several potential candidates, particularly surrounding development interests, campaign donations and fiscal conservatism. While opinions varied widely, the overall discussion reflected growing public attention on land-use policy, housing growth and political identity ahead of the 2026 supervisor election cycle in El Dorado County.
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El Dorado County Board of Supervisors races are officially nonpartisan under California law, meaning candidates do not run with party labels on the ballot. However, party affiliation and political alliances often become part of local campaign discussions, particularly in closely watched county races.
Parlin currently serves as the District 4 supervisor and has announced she will not seek reelection in 2026, according to recent election coverage by The Sacramento Bee.
The District 4 seat has historically attracted strong public interest because of its influence over county growth policy, wildfire preparedness, public safety funding and land-use decisions affecting communities across the western slope.
No formal statement regarding Clark’s candidacy, party registration history or campaign structure was immediately available through public county election records reviewed Sunday.
California voter registration information is generally protected from broad public disclosure, though candidates sometimes voluntarily disclose party affiliation histories during campaigns.
Political observers say early online disputes may signal an increasingly competitive supervisor race as candidates seek to define themselves before the June 2026 primary election.
The El Dorado County Board of Supervisors oversees county budgeting, land-use policy, public health services and countywide governance affecting more than 190,000 residents.









