Ballot: Overview —June 5, 2018 —California Primary Election
Senator, United States Senate
- 1555,738 votes (8.3%)
350,554 votes (5.3%)
323,313 votes (4.9%)
267,213 votes (4%)
204,924 votes (3.1%)
146,909 votes (2.2%)
135,209 votes (2%)
126,837 votes (1.9%)
93,702 votes (1.4%)
89,800 votes (1.3%)
87,569 votes (1.3%)
67,060 votes (1%)
59,922 votes (0.9%)
56,119 votes (0.8%)
42,574 votes (0.6%)
39,177 votes (0.6%)
30,259 votes (0.5%)
30,075 votes (0.5%)
27,411 votes (0.4%)
24,601 votes (0.4%)
23,499 votes (0.4%)
22,788 votes (0.3%)
20,378 votes (0.3%)
18,167 votes (0.3%)
18,157 votes (0.3%)
15,096 votes (0.2%)
13,512 votes (0.2%)
12,542 votes (0.2%)
8,469 votes (0.1%)
2,982 votes (0%)
District 1, U.S. House of Representatives
- 122,306 votes (11.7%)
16,032 votes (8.4%)
11,660 votes (6.1%)
5,707 votes (3%)
2,191 votes (1.2%)
There may be more contests here than on your official ballot.
Enter your full address to show only the contests on your ballot.
District 4, U.S. House of Representatives
- 126,303 votes (12.4%)
14,433 votes (6.8%)
13,621 votes (6.4%)
4,593 votes (2.2%)
Governor, State of California
- 1926,018 votes (13.3%)
657,147 votes (9.4%)
655,590 votes (9.4%)
234,641 votes (3.4%)
93,376 votes (1.3%)
44,628 votes (0.6%)
31,666 votes (0.5%)
27,297 votes (0.4%)
21,817 votes (0.3%)
19,059 votes (0.3%)
18,027 votes (0.3%)
16,092 votes (0.2%)
14,447 votes (0.2%)
12,010 votes (0.2%)
11,547 votes (0.2%)
11,094 votes (0.2%)
9,373 votes (0.1%)
8,940 votes (0.1%)
7,310 votes (0.1%)
5,363 votes (0.1%)
5,338 votes (0.1%)
4,961 votes (0.1%)
4,630 votes (0.1%)
4,017 votes (0.1%)
3,967 votes (0.1%)
Lieutenant Governor, State of California
- 11,142,957 votes (17.5%)
647,335 votes (9.9%)
515,347 votes (7.9%)
419,092 votes (6.4%)
404,663 votes (6.2%)
263,049 votes (4%)
99,835 votes (1.5%)
78,144 votes (1.2%)
44,068 votes (0.7%)
Secretary of State, State of California
- 1354,733 votes (5.4%)
330,040 votes (5%)
155,659 votes (2.4%)
136,571 votes (2.1%)
61,310 votes (0.9%)
48,647 votes (0.7%)
Treasurer, State of California
- 1Attorney General, State of California
- 1Insurance Commissioner, State of California
- 1Superintendent Of Public Instruction, State of California
- 1Member, District 1, California Board of Equalization
- 1District 1, California State Assembly
- 1Judge, Office 2, Placer County Superior Court
- 1Clerk-Recorder-Registrar of Voters, Placer County
- 1Council Member, Duplicate of Stockton City Council District 3
- 1819 votes (12.25%)
Council Member, Duplicate of Stockton City Council District 5
- 1562 votes (14.95%)
Candidates are rotated and randomly ordered based on how much information they have supplied.
Learn more
State of California
Proposition 68 — Bonds for Environment, Parks and Water
Passed3,455,226 votes yes (57.6%)2,544,854 votes no (42.4%)
Authorizes $4 billion in general obligation bonds for: parks, natural resources protection, climate adaptation, water quality and supply, and flood protection. Fiscal Impact: Increased state bond repayment costs averaging $200 million annually over 40 years. Local government savings for natural resources-related...
Learn MoreProposition 69 — Transportation Funding
Passed4,886,924 votes yes (81.3%)1,121,924 votes no (18.7%)
Requires that certain revenues generated by a 2017 transportation funding law be used only for transportation purposes and generally prohibits Legislature from diverting funds to other purposes. Fiscal Impact: No direct effect on the amount of state and local revenues or costs but could affect how some...
Learn MoreProposition 70 — Cap-and-Trade Amendment
Failed2,017,549 votes yes (35%)3,746,434 votes no (65%)
Beginning in 2024, requires that cap-and-trade revenues accumulate in a reserve fund until the Legislature, by a two-thirds majority, authorizes use of the revenues. Fiscal Impact: Beginning in 2024, potential temporary increase in state sales tax revenue, ranging from none to a few hundred million dollars...
Learn MoreProposition 71 — Ballot Measure Effective Date
Passed4,527,073 votes yes (77.8%)1,288,385 votes no (22.2%)
Provides that ballot measures approved by a majority of voters shall take effect five days after the Secretary of State certifies the results of the election. Fiscal Impact: Likely little or no effect on state and local finances.
Learn MoreProposition 72 — Taxes for Rainwater Capture Systems
Passed4,979,651 votes yes (84.2%)932,263 votes no (15.8%)
Permits Legislature to allow construction of rain-capture systems, completed on or after January 1, 2019, without requiring property-tax reassessment. Fiscal Impact: Probably minor reduction in annual property tax revenues to local governments.
Learn MoreSierra Joint Community College District
Measure E
Passed60,579 votes yes (55.6%)48,415 votes no (44.4%)
To bring older buildings to code/standards for continued use, improve workforce job training facilities to affordably prepare, train/retrain students/veterans for quality jobs, repair, construct, acquire classrooms, facilities, equipment, shall the measure for Sierra Joint...
Learn More