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California
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San Francisco County Ballot

551 CONGO ST, 94131

See Also:   Information for the County of San Francisco
(Elections Office, local League of Women Voters, links to other county election sites)

June 5, 2018 Election

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County Results as of June 27 4:04pm, 100.0% of Precincts Reporting (604/604)
52.6% Countywide Voter Turnout (228,779/481,977)
Statewide Results as of Jul 30 11:53am, 52.5% of Precincts Reporting (105/200)

United States Senator | United States Representative | Member of the State Assembly | Judicial | State | San Francisco County | State Propositions | Local Propositions
Click on Name of Contest below.
Polling Location on June 5, 7am - 8pm

Sunnyside Conservatory
Btw Baden & Congo Sts
8.3% Slope - Ramped Access
236 Monterey Blvd
San Francisco, CA

[Poll data last updated 2018/05/22 16:12]
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Precinct 7711
Ballot Type 9
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  • United States Senator

    United States SenatorClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites
    Runoff Election 11/4/2014

    • Dianne Feinstein, Democratic
      2,945,177 votes 44.2%
    • Kevin De Leon, Democratic
      804,965 votes 12.1%
    • James P. Bradley, Republican
      555,738 votes 8.3%
    • Arun K. Bhumitra, Republican
      350,554 votes 5.3%
    • Paul A. Taylor, Republican
      323,313 votes 4.9%
    • Erin Cruz, Republican
      267,213 votes 4.0%
    • Tom Palzer, Republican
      204,924 votes 3.1%
    • Alison Hartson, Democratic
      146,909 votes 2.2%
    • Roque "Rocky" De La Fuente, Republican
      135,209 votes 2.0%
    • Pat Harris, Democratic
      126,837 votes 1.9%
    • John "Jack" Crew, Republican
      93,702 votes 1.4%
    • Patrick Little, Republican
      89,800 votes 1.3%
    • Kevin Mottus, Republican
      87,569 votes 1.3%
    • Jerry Joseph Laws, Republican
      67,060 votes 1.0%
    • Derrick Michael Reid, Libertarian
      59,922 votes 0.9%
    • Adrienne Nicole Edwards, Democratic
      56,119 votes 0.8%
    • Douglas Howard Pierce, Democratic
      42,574 votes 0.6%
    • Mario Nabliba, Republican
      39,177 votes 0.6%
    • David Hildebrand, Democratic
      30,259 votes 0.5%
    • Donnie O. Turner, Democratic
      30,075 votes 0.5%
    • Herbert G. Peters, Democratic
      27,411 votes 0.4%
    • David Moore, No Party Preference
      24,601 votes 0.4%
    • Ling Ling Shi, No Party Preference
      23,499 votes 0.4%
    • John Thompson Parker, Peace and Freedom
      22,788 votes 0.3%
    • Lee Olson, No Party Preference
      20,378 votes 0.3%
    • Gerald Plummer, Democratic
      18,167 votes 0.3%
    • Jason M. Hanania, No Party Preference
      18,157 votes 0.3%
    • Don J. Grundmann, No Party Preference
      15,096 votes 0.2%
    • Colleen Shea Fernald, No Party Preference
      13,512 votes 0.2%
    • Rash Bihari Ghosh, No Party Preference
      12,542 votes 0.2%
    • Tim Gildersleeve, No Party Preference
      8,469 votes 0.1%
    • Michael Fahmy Girgis, No Party Preference
      2,982 votes 0.0%

    United States Representative

    United States Representative; District 12Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Nancy Pelosi, Democratic
      141,365 votes 68.5%
    • Lisa Remmer, Republican
      18,771 votes 9.1%
    • Shahid Buttar, Democratic
      17,597 votes 8.5%
    • Stephen Jaffe, Democratic
      12,114 votes 5.9%
    • Ryan A. Khojasteh, Democratic
      9,498 votes 4.6%
    • Barry Hermanson, Green
      4,217 votes 2.0%
    • Michael Goldstein, No Party Preference
      2,820 votes 1.4%

    Member of the State Assembly

    Member of the State Assembly; District 17Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • David Chiu, Democratic
      93,212 votes 81.9%
    • Alejandro Fernandez, Democratic
      20,639 votes 18.1%

    Judicial

    Superior Court Judge; County of San Francisco; Office 4Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Andrew Y.S. Cheng
      131,468 votes 63.84%
    • Phoenix Streets
      73,560 votes 35.72%
    • (908 Total Other Write-In Votes 0.44%)

    Superior Court Judge; County of San Francisco; Office 7Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Curtis Karnow
      108,648 votes 53.78%
    • Maria Evangelista
      92,425 votes 45.75%
    • (951 Total Other Write-In Votes 0.47%)

    Superior Court Judge; County of San Francisco; Office 9Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Cynthia Ming-Mei Lee
      126,913 votes 62.3%
    • Kwixuan H. Maloof
      55,070 votes 27.03%
    • Elizabeth Zareh
      20,723 votes 10.17%
    • (1,001 Total Other Write-In Votes 0.49%)

    Superior Court Judge; County of San Francisco; Office 11Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Jeffrey S. Ross
      119,131 votes 59.16%
    • Niki Judith Solis
      81,194 votes 40.32%
    • (1,050 Total Other Write-In Votes 0.52%)

    State

    GovernorClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites
    Runoff Election 11/4/2014

    • Gavin Newsom, Democratic
      2,341,815 votes 33.7%
    • John H. Cox, Republican
      1,764,919 votes 25.4%
    • Antonio Villaraigosa, Democratic
      926,018 votes 13.3%
    • Travis Allen, Republican
      657,147 votes 9.4%
    • John Chiang, Democratic
      655,590 votes 9.4%
    • Delaine Eastin, Democratic
      234,641 votes 3.4%
    • Amanda Renteria, Democratic
      93,376 votes 1.3%
    • Robert C. Newman, II, Republican
      44,628 votes 0.6%
    • Michael Shellenberger, Democratic
      31,666 votes 0.5%
    • Peter Y. Liu, Republican
      27,297 votes 0.4%
    • Yvonne Girard, Republican
      21,817 votes 0.3%
    • Gloria Estela La Riva, Peace and Freedom
      19,059 votes 0.3%
    • J. Bribiesca, Democratic
      18,027 votes 0.3%
    • Josh Jones, Green
      16,092 votes 0.2%
    • Zoltan Istvan, Libertarian
      14,447 votes 0.2%
    • Albert Caesar Mezzetti, Democratic
      12,010 votes 0.2%
    • Nickolas Wildstar, Libertarian
      11,547 votes 0.2%
    • Robert Davidson Griffis, Democratic
      11,094 votes 0.2%
    • Akinyemi Agbede, Democratic
      9,373 votes 0.1%
    • Thomas Jefferson Cares, Democratic
      8,940 votes 0.1%
    • Christopher N. Carlson, Green
      7,310 votes 0.1%
    • Klement Tinaj, Democratic
      5,363 votes 0.1%
    • Hakan "Hawk" Mikado, No Party Preference
      5,338 votes 0.1%
    • Johnny Wattenburg, No Party Preference
      4,961 votes 0.1%
    • Desmond Silveira, No Party Preference
      4,630 votes 0.1%
    • Shubham Goel, No Party Preference
      4,017 votes 0.1%
    • Jeffrey Edward Taylor, No Party Preference
      3,967 votes 0.1%
    • Veronika Fimbres (Write-In)

    Lieutenant GovernorClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Eleni Kounalakis, Democratic
      1,586,576 votes 24.2%
    • Ed Hernandez, Democratic
      1,346,848 votes 20.6%
    • Cole Harris, Republican
      1,142,957 votes 17.5%
    • Jeff Bleich, Democratic
      647,335 votes 9.9%
    • David Fennell, Republican
      515,347 votes 7.9%
    • Lydia Ortega, Republican
      419,092 votes 6.4%
    • David R. Hernandez, Republican
      404,663 votes 6.2%
    • Gayle McLaughlin, No Party Preference
      263,049 votes 4.0%
    • Tim Ferreira, Libertarian
      99,835 votes 1.5%
    • Cameron Gharabiklou, Democratic
      78,144 votes 1.2%
    • Danny Thomas, No Party Preference
      44,068 votes 0.7%

    Secretary of StateClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Alex Padilla, Democratic
      3,473,183 votes 52.6%
    • Mark P. Meuser, Republican
      2,046,084 votes 31.0%
    • Ruben Major, Democratic
      354,733 votes 5.4%
    • Raul Rodriguez, Jr., Republican
      330,040 votes 5.0%
    • Gail K. Lightfoot, Libertarian
      155,659 votes 2.4%
    • Michael Feinstein, Green
      136,571 votes 2.1%
    • C. T. Weber, Peace and Freedom
      61,310 votes 0.9%
    • Erik Rydberg, Green
      48,647 votes 0.7%

    ControllerClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Betty T. Yee, Democratic
      4,030,136 votes 62.1%
    • Konstantinos Roditis, Republican
      2,198,777 votes 33.9%
    • Mary Lou Finley, Peace and Freedom
      261,573 votes 4.0%

    TreasurerClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Fiona Ma, Democratic
      2,898,389 votes 44.5%
    • Greg Conlon, Republican
      1,356,535 votes 20.8%
    • Jack M. Guerrero, Republican
      1,256,007 votes 19.3%
    • Vivek Viswanathan, Democratic
      847,342 votes 13.0%
    • Kevin Akin, Peace and Freedom
      148,118 votes 2.3%

    Attorney GeneralClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Xavier Becerra, Democratic
      3,022,467 votes 45.8%
    • Steven C. Bailey, Republican
      1,614,150 votes 24.5%
    • Dave Jones, Democratic
      1,016,556 votes 15.4%
    • Eric Early, Republican
      942,308 votes 14.3%

    Insurance CommissionerClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Steve Poizner, No Party Preference
      2,566,849 votes 41.0%
    • Ricardo Lara, Democratic
      2,536,923 votes 40.5%
    • Asif Mahmood, Democratic
      845,113 votes 13.5%
    • Nathalie Hrizi, Peace and Freedom
      315,828 votes 5.0%

    State Board of Equalization; District 2Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Malia Cohen, Democratic
      719,446 votes 38.6%
    • Mark Burns, Republican
      499,736 votes 26.8%
    • Cathleen Galgiani, Democratic
      472,531 votes 25.4%
    • Barry Chang, Democratic
      170,711 votes 9.2%

    State Superintendent of Public InstructionClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Marshall Tuck
      2,221,908 votes 37.0%
    • Tony K. Thurmond
      2,135,591 votes 35.6%
    • Lily "Espinoza" Ploski
      984,039 votes 16.4%
    • Steven Ireland
      658,037 votes 11.0%

    San Francisco County

    Mayor; City of San FranciscoClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites
    Ranked choice final/initial votes (details)

    • London Breed
      115977/92121 votes 50.5%
    • Mark Leno
      113431/61416 votes 49.4%
    • Jane Kim
      /66043/60738 votes 27.8%
    • Angela Alioto
      /21981/17552 votes 8.9%
    • Ellen Lee Zhou
      /10637/9576 votes 4.2%
    • Richie Greenberg
      /7242/7051 votes 2.8%
    • Amy Farah Weiss
      /1735/1675 votes 0.6%
    • Michelle Bravo
      /900/900 votes 0.3%
    • (495 Total Other Write-In Votes 0.2%)

    State Propositions

    Proposition 68 Bonds for Natural Resources Protection
    Pass: 3,455,226 / 57.6% Yes votes ...... 2,544,854 / 42.4% No votes
    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 projects, likely averaging several tens of millions of dollars annually over the next few decades.

    Proposition 69 Transportation Funding
    Pass: 4,886,924 / 81.3% Yes votes ...... 1,121,924 / 18.7% No votes
    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 monies are spent.

    Proposition 70 Cap-and-Trade Reserve Fund
    Fail: 2,017,549 / 35.0% Yes votes ...... 3,746,434 / 65.0% No votes
    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 annually, and possible changes in how revenue from sale of greenhouse gas emission permits is spent.

    Proposition 71 Sets Effective Sate for Ballot Measures
    Pass: 4,527,073 / 77.8% Yes votes ...... 1,288,385 / 22.2% No votes
    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.

    Proposition 72 Legislature to Exclude Newly Constructed Rain-Capture Systems From Property-Tax Reassessment Requirement
    Pass: 4,979,651 / 84.2% Yes votes ...... 932,263 / 15.8% No votes
    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.

    Local Propositions

    Proposition 3 Bay Area Traffic Relief Plan -- City and County of San Francisco County of Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, Napa, San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Sonoma and Solano (Majority Approval Required)
    Pass: 883,703 / 55.0% Yes votes ...... 722,971 / 45.0% No votes
       173,275 (53.89%) Yes / 148,245 (46.11%) No in Alameda County
       101070 (44.54%) Yes / 125851 (55.46%) No in Contra Costa County
       48090 (60.52%) Yes / 31366 (39.48%) No in Marin County
       17,350 (50.76%) Yes / 16,828 (49.24%) No in Napa County
       212661 (61.44%) Yes / 133488 (38.56%) No in Santa Clara County
       153,812 (65.4%) Yes / 81,383 (34.6%) No in San Francisco County
       24182 (30.0%) Yes / 56334 (70.0%) No in Solano County
       86,257 (54.88%) Yes / 70,920 (45.12%) No in San Mateo County
       67,006 (53.4%) Yes / 58,556 (46.6%) No in Sonoma County
    Shall voters authorize a plan to reduce auto and truck traffic, relieve crowding on BART, unclog freeway bottlenecks, and improve bus, ferry, BART and commuter rail service as specified in the plan in this voter pamphlet, with a $1 toll increase effective in 2019, a $1 increase in 2022, and a $1 increase in 2025, on all Bay Area toll bridges except the Golden Gate Bridge, with independent oversight of all funds?

    Proposition A Public Utilities Revenue Bonds -- City and County of San Francisco (Majority Approval Required)
    Pass: 181,638 / 77.22% Yes votes ...... 53,572 / 22.78% No votes
    Shall the City authorize the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission to issue revenue bonds to build or improve the City's clean power facilities, with approval by two-thirds of the Board of Supervisors, and prohibit the PUC from financing construction of power plants that generate electricity from fossil fuels or nuclear power?

    Proposition B Prohibiting Appointed Commissioners from Running for Office -- City and County of San Francisco (Majority Approval Required)
    Pass: 160,214 / 69.72% Yes votes ...... 69,570 / 30.28% No votes
    Shall the City require appointed members of boards and commissions established by the Charter to forfeit their appointed seat when they file to run for state or local elective office?

    Proposition C Additional Tax on Commercial Rents Mostly to Fund Child Care and Education -- City and County of San Francisco (Majority Approval Required)
    Pass: 120,199 / 50.87% Yes votes ...... 116,085 / 49.13% No votes
    Shall the City impose a new gross receipts tax of 1% on revenues a business receives from leasing warehouse space in San Francisco, and 3.5% on revenues a business receives from leasing some commercial spaces in San Francisco, to fund quality early care and education for young children and for other public purposes?

    Proposition D Additional Tax on Commercial Rents Mostly to Fund Housing and Homelessness Services -- City and County of San Francisco (Majority Approval Required)
    Fail: 105,746 / 44.93% Yes votes ...... 129,611 / 55.07% No votes
    Shall the City impose a new gross receipts tax of 1.7% on revenues a business receives from leasing some commercial spaces in San Francisco, to fund homeless services, housing for extremely low-to middle-income households and for other public purposes?

    Proposition E Prohibiting Tobacco Retailers from Selling Flavored Tobacco Products -- City and County of San Francisco (Majority Approval Required)
    Pass: 164,844 / 68.39% Yes votes ...... 76,193 / 31.61% No votes
    Shall the City ordinance prohibiting the sale of flavored tobacco products in San Francisco take effect?

    Proposition F City-Funded Legal Representation for Residential Tenants in Eviction Lawsuits -- City and County of San Francisco (Majority Approval Required)
    Pass: 133,190 / 55.74% Yes votes ...... 105,774 / 44.26% No votes
    Shall the City establish, fund and run a program to provide legal representation for all residential tenants in San Francisco facing eviction?

    Proposition G Parcel Tax for San Francisco Unified School District -- City and County of San Francisco (Majority Approval Required)
    Pass: 144,686 / 60.76% Yes votes ...... 93,447 / 39.24% No votes
    Shall the City collect an annual tax of $298 per parcel for investment in education, subject to certain exemptions including those for senior citizens?

    Proposition H Policy for the Use of Tasers by San Francisco Police Officers -- City and County of San Francisco (Majority Approval Required)
    Fail: 90,334 / 38.06% Yes votes ...... 146,997 / 61.94% No votes
    Shall the City set a policy for when police officers can use tasers and authorize the Police Department to purchase tasers for all officers, subject to specific conditions?

    Proposition I Relocation of Professional Sports Teams -- City and County of San Francisco (Majority Approval Required)
    Fail: 97,863 / 42.78% Yes votes ...... 130,916 / 57.22% No votes
    Shall the City adopt a policy not to encourage professional sports teams from other cities to move to San Francisco and to oppose any sports team ownership group attempting to avoid payment of an outstanding public debt?

    The order of the contests and candidates on this ballot representation is NOT necessarily the same as your county's official ballot.
    If you print and mark your choices on this page and take it to the polls instead of an official sample ballot, be very careful.


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