Voting in California finished on November 8 after tens of millions of dollars had been spent, thousands of door-to-door canvasses, and hundreds of attack commercials; the results are now coming in. Californians voted in favor of adding “reproductive freedom” to the state constitution among the seven ballot proposals, although they opposed expensive campaigns that would have legalized sports betting online and at Native American casinos, as well as a tax on the wealthy to fight climate change.
No Republican was currently leading in the vote count for statewide offices, which previously occurred in 2006. Will Democrats maintain a supermajority and maintain their grip on the legislature? In terms of overall control of the U.S. House, did either party flip any congressional seats?
In landslides, the predicted winners were declared shortly after the early voting results and polls closed at 8 p.m. However, close races might not be settled for several days or even weeks. All registered voters in California are now sent postal ballots, and any ballots postmarked on Election Day will still be counted through November 15. Final findings, which will be confirmed in early December, could be delayed as a result.
The secretary of state’s office reported on Thursday that more than 4.8 million ballots still remained to be processed in the governor’s race after more than 5.6 million had been counted. For the most recent results in the contests for the U.S. Senate, governor, attorney general, and secretary of state, click on the headings below. More information on these races is provided below. As well as a summary of the closest races around California, this website’s link leads to the secretary of state’s official results page.
Gov. Gavin Newsom was hoping toward reconciliation Tuesday night after months spent on the national stage portraying the liberal warrior and sparring with his Republican opponents. In a few brief remarks at a Sacramento celebration for the abortion rights initiative Proposition 1, Newsom hinted that he would like to use his second term to bring people together in a harsh and bitter political environment where many leaders have made oppressing people and limiting their freedoms a top priority.
The dream, according to Newsom, “is premised on all of us living and progressing together across every imaginable difference.” “We all need to step up our efforts a bit more to meet people where they are,” Shortly after California’s 8 p.m. polls closed, his race was declared. In accordance with his first campaign in 2018 and his triumph over a recall attempt last year, both of which the governor won by almost 24 percentage points, Newsom appears to be on track for another victory.
However, you could be excused for not remembering that Newsom was up for reelection this year. With the exception of one low-key debate against Republican opponent Brian Dahle, the Democratic incumbent rarely acknowledged his campaign for a second and final term as governor of California after easily winning the June primary.
Newsom spent more time and money assisting Proposition 1 backers as his attention shifted to national battles and possibly higher office. Dahle found it difficult to attract support in the highly Democratic state of California, even in a year where the electorate is predicted to lean Republican.
It is challenging for the state senator from Bieber to spread his campaign message sharply criticizing Democratic policies that, in his view, have rendered California unaffordable for the majority of residents because he has raised less than $1 million since the summer, a fraction of the nearly $6 million Newsom raised in the same time frame. In a statement released on Wednesday, Dahle announced his defeat, adding that his “grassroots campaign” had provided “an opportunity to offer a voice to so many who have been left behind.”