California Globe (Early) Election Night Results
The Globe covers the races across California as votes are counted
By Evan Symon, November 8, 2022 9:43 pm
UPDATED 11/9/2022 6:30a.m.:
The Globe will keep an updated tally of races across the state. Many races are not expected to be called tonight because of how close many are and because of the high number of mail-in ballots that could turn a race later on.
The early results are tallied mail-in ballots, and not today’s votes.
Governor
Gavin Newsom (D) 58.1% 3,148,084
Brian Dahle (R) 41.9% 2,266,461
Propositions
Proposition 1
Yes 67.9% 3,099,111
No 32.1% 1,465,395
Proposition 26
Yes 29.2% 1,346,812
No 70.8% 3,261,007
Proposition 27
Yes 16% 736,345
No 84% 3,860,085
Proposition 28
Yes 62.9% 2,859,606
No 37.1% 1,689,567
Proposition 29
Yes 69.9% 3,168,859
No 30.1% 1,363,995
Proposition 30
Yes 42.6% 1,946,912
No 57.4% 2,620,309
Proposition 31
Yes 64.5% 2,929,494
No 35.5% 1,615,859
United States House of Representatives: Secretary of State reports “100% of Precincts Partially Reporting
3rd District
Kevin Kiley (R) 53.1% 76,989
Kermit Jones (D) 46.9% 67,972
9th District
Josh Harder (D) 56.4% 44,108
Tom Patti (R) 436% 34,166
13th District
Adam Gray (D) 49.9% 34,512
John Duarte (R) 50.1% 34,715
22nd District
David Valadao (R) 54% 23,034
Rudy Salas (D) 46% 19,648
26th District
Julia Brownley (D) 53.9% 72,588
Matt Jacobs (R) 46.1% 62,177
27th District
Mike Garcia (R) 57.6% 65,545
Christy Smith (D) 42.4% 48,285
41st District
Ken Calvert (R) 43.8% 33,960
Will Rollins (D) 56.2% 43,584
45th District
Michelle Steele (R) 55.3% 73,264
Jay Chen (D) 44.7% 59,269
47th District
Katie Porter (D) 50.3% 84,614
Scott Baugh (R) 49.7% 83,676
49th District
Mike Levin (D) 51.% 89,204
Brian Maryott (R) 49% 85,560
State Senate
District 6
Roger Niello (R) 54.8% 61,612
Paula Villescaz (D) 45.2% 50,739
District 16
Melissa Hurtado (D) 47.5% 28,727
David Shepard (R) 52.5% 31,727
District 36
Kim Carr (D) 41.6% 91,611
Janet Nguyen (R) 58.4% 128,670
District 38
Catherine Blakespear (D) 50.9% 103,486
Matt Gunderson (R) 49.1% 91,636
District 40
Brian W. Jones (R) 55.2% 95,760
Joseph C. Rocha (D) 44.8% 77,621
District 45
Michelle Steel (R) 55.3% 73,272
Brian W. Jones (R) 44.7% 59,313
Mayoral
Los Angeles
Brian Caruso 50.8% 244,102
Karen Bass 49.2% 236,017
Oakland
Loren Taylor 35% 12,076
Sheng Thao 29.2% 10,072
Ignacio de la Fuente 12.8% 4,430
San Jose
Cindy Chavez 48.2% 63,604
Matt Mahan 51.8% 68,234
Everyone’s tired, I get it. But please correct to “Rick” Caruso, L.A. Mayor (not “Brian”). Prop 29, the kidney dialysis clinic union-building effort, was doomed from the beginning, and now is almost 70% NO. Rep. Michelle Steele ultimately won her congressional seat big against Jay Chen, as noted. But she didn’t run for state senate against Brian Jones, also shown. Thank you.
For Brian Dahle to not have name recognition and $$$, I think he did well. Same for Caruso, L.A., if he does well
in L.A., it’s a good start for Governor candidates for a Newsom RECALL election. How many signatures are needed again? God’s wrath is coming for Prop 1, people were ‘tricked’ by the wording ‘reproductive health’ without understanding the veracity of the decision…. good vs evil, no mercy for Cali.
Marilyn, agree with you about Dahle and Caruso and Prop 1.
I live in L.A. County (10 million people, 88 cities, HUGE population center, largest in the country). Yesterday, after a period of heavy rain, a blaring and startling Emergency Alert was sent out to all phones by the “L.A. County Office of the National Weather Service,” I think it was in the early afternoon. It made it sound as though anyone in all of L.A. County who ventured one foot outdoors would be risking their lives, caught in a flood, sunk in mud, buried by a landslide, with boulders flying by. Sure there were SPECIFIC areas in the hills, directly underneath burn scar areas from fires a couple of years ago, where flash flooding and mudslides might occur after a period of heavy rain. And there were voluntary and some mandatory evacuations in SPECIFIC residential hill areas; e.g., Duarte, Azusa. 99% of L.A. County residents and roads, however, were NOT affected.
To me this was clearly a dirty trick by L.A. County (probably Board of Supervisors) who wanted to depress voting for certain candidates by any means necessary. Also remember L.A. County is a significant voter bloc in CA. I think this specifically and directly hurt, and was meant to hurt, L.A. County Sheriff Alex Villanueva, who now appears (inexplicably) to be losing badly, and to a lesser extent it hurt, and was meant to hurt, a larger turnout for Caruso, if one assumes most Dems had their ballots mailed in already and most Repubs were waiting to vote in person on election day.
I could find NO coverage or commentary AT ALL of this blaring weather Emergency Alert for all of L.A. County in any day-after-election local reporting. At least it’s not showing up so far.