Thanks to Brad Jensen of the San Gabriel Valley Economic Partnership for this report on the election results:
The Senate: Republicans won control of the United States Senate, picking up seven seats. Two senate races have not yet been called: one in Virginia, where incumbent Democrat Sen. Mark Warner holds a 12,000 vote lead over Republican Ed Gillespie, and the other in Alaska, where Republican Dan Sullivan is leading the Democratic incumbent Sen. Mark Begich by 8,000 votes. A third senate race, this one in Louisiana, is headed to a December runoff between Sen. Mary Landrieu (D) and Bill Cassidy (R). Republicans currently hold 52 seats in the chamber and Democrats 44 with one seat held by an Independent (Sen. Bernie Sanders - VT).
The House: Republicans are currently projected to add 14 seats in the House of Representatives, maintaining control of the chamber and adding to their majority, with 13 races still undecided. There are at present 243 Republicans and 179 Democrats in the House. Republicans have a 25-seat majority although several close races across the country remain undecided.
Governorships: Incumbent governors of both parties did well on Tuesday night. Democratic incumbents retained the governorship in seven states including New York, Colorado and here in California. Democrats won two open governorships in Hawaii and Rhode Island and also defeated a Republican incumbent, Gov. Tom Corbett, in Pennsylvania. Republican incumbents won re-election in 16 states including close races in Wisconsin, Ohio, Michigan, Maine, Georgia, and Florida. The GOP won five open seat races, notably in Texas and in two very Democratic states: Massachusetts and Maryland. Republican Bruce Rauner also defeated the incumbent Gov. Pat Quinn in Illinois. Republicans now hold the governorship in 31 states.
For additional national election coverage :
David Wasserman, Cook Political Report: An Historic GOP Majority
Dan Balz, Washington Post: An Unhappy Electorate
Rucker and Costa, Washington Post: Battle for the Senate
New York Times: How Big Were Tuesday's Republican Swings?
House, State Senate and State Assembly
Despite a record low turnout of only 25.2% of registered voters in Los Angeles County, every SGV incumbent was re-elected to their offices, most with healthy margins of victory. In the closest race of the night, Asm. Ian Calderon narrowly won re-election by 1,383 votes, defeating Republican Rita Topalian. Click here for full results for our SGV legislative officials.
Several new legislators will represent parts of the San Gabriel Valley next year. Former Assembly member Tony Mendoza (D) narrowly defeated Downey city councilman Mario Guerra (R) to replace Sen. Ron Calderon who will leave the Senate due to term limits. Democrat Connie Leyva won the senate seat vacated by Sen. Norma Torres. Sen. Torres was elected to replace Rep. Gloria Negrete-McLeod in the House of Representatives. Both the state senate seat and the House district cover Pomona, Montclair, and Ontario. Republican Ling-Ling Chang was elected to the open Assembly seat held by Asm. Curt Hagman. That seat covers Walnut, Diamond Bar, and Rowland Heights. In related news, Asm. Hagman defeated Rep. Gloria Negrete-McLeod 52%-48% to win a seat on the San Bernardino County Board of Supervisors.
It appears Democrats will not retain their super majorities in either the state senate or state assembly. The Sacramento Bee has all the details on where things stand in the state legislature.
Complete Los Angeles County Election Results
State Ballot Propositions
The state water bond, Prop 1, passed easily with a commanding 67% of the vote. The state rainy day fund, Prop 2, also passed as did Prop 47 which reduces the sentences for drug and other related felonies. Prop 45, which granted discretionary authority to the state insurance commissioner to set health insurance rates, and Prop 46, which would have required mandatory drug testing for doctors and increased medical malpractice non-injury damages, were both soundly defeated.
Here are the results of the recent election: (Pasadena Chamber Board of Directors does not endorse individual candidates for office, positions on ballot measures in parentheses)
From the Los Angeles Times:
Governor
Precincts reporting: 24,435 / 24,435 (100.0%)Name | Party | Votes | Pct. | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Jerry Brown* | Dem | 3,049,385 | 58.7% | |
Neel Kashkari | GOP | 2,147,271 | 41.3% |
Lieutenant Governor
Precincts reporting: 24,435 / 24,435 (100.0%)Name | Party | Votes | Pct. | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Gavin Newsom* | Dem | 2,856,458 | 55.9% | |
Ron Nehring | GOP | 2,250,038 | 44.1% |
Attorney General
Precincts reporting: 24,435 / 24,435 (100.0%)Name | Party | Votes | Pct. | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Kamala Harris* | Dem | 2,858,461 | 56.3% | |
Ronald Gold | GOP | 2,222,395 | 43.7% |
Secretary of State
Precincts reporting: 24,435 / 24,435 (100.0%)Name | Party | Votes | Pct. | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Alex Padilla | Dem | 2,647,758 | 52.5% | |
Pete Peterson | GOP | 2,396,986 | 47.5% |
Superintendent of Public Instruction
Precincts reporting: 24,435 / 24,435 (100.0%)Name | Party | Votes | Pct. | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Tom Torlakson* | NP | 2,266,425 | 52.1% | |
Marshall Tuck | NP | 2,084,936 | 47.9% |
Insurance Commissioner
Precincts reporting: 24,435 / 24,435 (100.0%)Name | Party | Votes | Pct. | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Dave Jones* | Dem | 2,818,433 | 56.3% | |
Ted Gaines | GOP | 2,186,878 | 43.7% |
Controller
Precincts reporting: 24,435 / 24,435 (100.0%)Name | Party | Votes | Pct. | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Betty Yee | Dem | 2,650,965 | 52.8% | |
Ashley Swearengin | GOP | 2,374,530 | 47.2% |
Treasurer
Precincts reporting: 24,435 / 24,435 (100.0%)Name | Party | Votes | Pct. | |
---|---|---|---|---|
John Chiang | Dem | 2,914,904 | 57.7% | |
Greg Conlon | GOP | 2,140,404 | 42.3% |
Prop. 1: Water bonds (Chamber Board supported)
Precincts reporting: 24,435 / 24,435 (100.0%)Name | Votes | Pct. | |
---|---|---|---|
Yes | 3,378,826 | 66.8% | |
No | 1,681,733 | 33.2% |
Prop. 2: State reserve funds (Chamber Board supported)
Precincts reporting: 24,435 / 24,435 (100.0%)Name | Votes | Pct. | |
---|---|---|---|
Yes | 3,421,992 | 68.7% | |
No | 1,557,990 | 31.3% |
Prop. 45: Health insurance rate changes (Chamber Board opposed)
Precincts reporting: 24,435 / 24,435 (100.0%)Name | Votes | Pct. | |
---|---|---|---|
Yes | 2,032,272 | 40.2% | |
No | 3,024,584 | 59.8% |
Prop. 46: Medical malpractice (Chamber Board opposed)
Precincts reporting: 24,435 / 24,435 (100.0%)Name | Votes | Pct. | |
---|---|---|---|
Yes | 1,671,163 | 32.9% | |
No | 3,415,996 | 67.1% |
Prop. 47: Criminal sentence reduction
Precincts reporting: 24,435 / 24,435 (100.0%)Name | Votes | Pct. | |
---|---|---|---|
Yes | 2,955,506 | 58.5% | |
No | 2,100,278 | 41.5% |
Prop. 48: Indian gaming referendum
Precincts reporting: 24,435 / 24,435 (100.0%)Name | Votes | Pct. | |
---|---|---|---|
Yes | 1,929,202 | 39.1% | |
No | 3,009,380 | 60.9% |
U.S. House of Representatives District 28 - Districtwide Results
Precincts reporting: 387
Total Precincts: 387
Party: Democratic
Candidate: Adam B. Schiff
Votes: 69944
Percent of votes: 76.0
US House of Representatives District 27
Judy Chu (Dem) 61%
Jack Orswell (Rep) 39%
State Assembly
District 41, Pasadena
Precincts reporting: 302 / 302 (100.0%)
Name | Votes | Pct. | |
---|---|---|---|
Chris Holden (Dem) * | 48,065 | 59.0% | |
Nathaniel Tsai (GOP) | 33,384 | 41.0% |
District 43, Glendale
Precincts reporting: 245 / 245 (100.0%)Name | Votes | Pct. | |
---|---|---|---|
Mike Gatto (Dem) * | 40,167 | 65.8% | |
Todd Royal (GOP) | 20,883 | 34.2% |
Los Angeles County Measure P
P - PARCEL SPECIAL TAX LEVY - YES 645,889 62.04 (2/3 OF VOTES CAST) - NO 395,123 37.96 TOTAL PRECINCTS 5,027 PRECINCTS REPORTING 5,027 100 REGISTRATION 4,544,455Los Angeles County Assessor
JEFFREY PRANG 442,453 50.52 JOHN MORRIS 433,417 49.48 TOTAL PRECINCTS 5,027 PRECINCTS REPORTING 5,027 100 REGISTRATION 4,544,455Los Angeles County Sheriff
JIM MCDONNELL 703,662 74.83 PAUL TANAKA 236,665 25.17 TOTAL PRECINCTS 5,027 PRECINCTS REPORTING 5,027 100 REGISTRATION 4,544,455City of Altadena Libraries
MEASURE A A - LIBRARY PARCEL TAX - YES 8,005 85.32 (2/3 OF VOTES CAST) - NO 1,377 14.68 TOTAL PRECINCTS 31 PRECINCTS REPORTING 31 100 REGISTRATION 27,357