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2010 United States Senate election in California

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2010 United States Senate election in California

← 2004November 2, 20102016 →
 
NomineeBarbara BoxerCarly Fiorina
PartyDemocraticRepublican
Popular vote5,218,1374,217,386
Percentage52.18%42.17%

County results
Congressional district results
Boxer:     40–50%     50–60%     60–70%     70–80%     80–90%
Fiorina:     40–50%     50–60%     60–70%     70–80%

U.S. senator before election

Barbara Boxer
Democratic

Elected U.S. Senator

Barbara Boxer
Democratic

Elections in California
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U.S. President primary
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Legislature
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Elections by year

The2010 United States Senate election in California took place on November 2, 2010. The election was held alongside 33 otherUnited States Senate elections in addition to congressional, state, and various local elections. Incumbent Democratic U.S. SenatorBarbara Boxer won re-election to a fourth term.

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]

Campaign

[edit]

In 2009, Boxer was criticized for correcting a general who called her "ma'am". Brigadier General Michael Walsh was testifying on the Louisiana coastal restoration process in the wake ofHurricane Katrina and answered Boxer's query with "ma'am" when Boxer interrupted him. "Do me a favor," Boxer said. "can you say 'senator' instead of 'ma'am?'" "Yes, ma'am," Walsh interjected. "It's just a thing, I worked so hard to get that title, so I'd appreciate it. Thank you," she said. The Army's guide to protocol instructs service members to call members of the U.S. Senate "sir", "ma'am" or "senator".[2][3][4] Fiorina used this incident prominently in campaign ads, as didDavid Zucker, who directed a humorous commercial forRightChange.com titled 'Call Me Senator'.

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
PartyCandidateVotes%
DemocraticBarbara Boxer (incumbent)1,957,92081.0
DemocraticBrian Quintana338,44213.9
DemocraticMickey Kaus123,5735.1
Total votes2,419,935100.0

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]

Declined

[edit]

Campaign

[edit]

Through 2009, the race largely shaped up as a campaign between formerHewlett-Packard executiveCarly Fiorina andIrvine assemblymanChuck DeVore. In November 2009, theLos Angeles Times reported that Fiorina had failed to vote in most elections. Fiorina apologized by saying, "I'm a lifelong registered Republican but I haven't always voted, and I will provide no excuse for it. You know, people die for the right to vote. And there are many, many Californians and Americans who exercise that civic duty on a regular basis. I didn't. Shame on me."[5][6]

In January 2010,Tom Campbell joined the race. He had previously been running for governor and had run unsuccessful campaigns for Senate in 1992 and 2000. Campbell led in initial public polling over Fiorina and DeVore. However, his campaign declined after sustained negative attacks from Fiorina and controversy over his past support for and association withSami Al-Arian.

In February, Fiorina put out a campaign ad attacking Campbell as awolf in sheep's clothing for his relatively liberal voting record. The ad, which became known as theDemon Sheep ad, gained international, mostly negative, publicity for its bizarre visuals, including a man in a sheep costume with glowing red eyes.[7][8]

Fiorina was more successful in attacking Campbell in February over his associations withSami Al-Arian, a computer engineering professor at theUniversity of South Florida who had pleaded guilty in 2006 after a lengthy trial for conspiracy to help thePalestinian Islamic Jihad, adesignated terrorist group.[9][10] In 2000, Campbell had received campaign contributions from Al-Arian, and in January 2002, Campbell wrote a letter opposing academic discipline for Al-Arian.[11][12][13]

Campbell initially denied that he had received contributions from Al-Arian, which proved to be untrue.[14] He defended the letter by arguing that he had not been aware of the charges against Al-Arian when he wrote it and had also not been aware of comments Al-Arian had recorded inCleveland, Ohio in 1988, when he shouted, "Jihad is our path. Victory to Islam.Death to Israel." Al-Arian had previously defended the remarks on a September 26, 2001 episode ofThe O'Reilly Factor; Campbell initially claimed that his letter had been sent before the O'Reilly interview, but Al-Arian was placed on initial academic leave shortly after the interview.[14] Despite this, Campbell maintained,

I did not hear, I did not read, I was not aware of statements Sami Al-Arian had made relative to Israel. And I would not have written the letter had I known about those. ... To say 'Death to Israel' is abhorrent; it's horrible.[15]

As a result of his Al-Arian associations, Fiorina accused Campbell of being unfriendly to the interests ofIsrael. In late February, former California Secretary of State and state senator Bruce McPherson claimed that Fiorina campaign manager Marty Wilson, a longtime Sacramento political operative, had called Campbell an antisemite and expressed surprise that McPherson was endorsing Campbell.[16] Wilson strongly denied McPherson's charge.

A live March 5 debate between the three main candidates was hosted byKTKZ inSacramento and focused on the issue at Campbell's behest.[17] Campbell responded strongly to Fiorina's accusations, saying, "I called for this debate today so that both of my opponents can bring up absolutely any charge they want. Air it, and let me respond to it. But there's no place for calling me antisemitic, then denying it. That whispering campaign, that 'silent slander,' stops today."[18] Campbell maintained that he had not been aware of Al-Arian's statements and attributed his earlier inaccurate claims to failures of memory,[14] but he apologized for not researching the matter more thoroughly before writing the letter.[11][15][19][20]

After the March debate, Campbell appeared to maintain his lead in polling, with polls throughout the spring showing him leading Fiorina in the primary and leading or even with Boxer in the general election. However, Fiorina surged into the lead in May after dedicating a significant portion of her personal fortune, including a $5.5 million loan to her campaign, to a late advertising push. She additionally secured the endorsement of Alaska governor and 2008 vice presidential nomineeSarah Palin, who remained popular with rank-and-file Republican voters.

Polling

[edit]
Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin
of error
Tom CampbellCarly FiorinaChuck DeVoreOtherUndecided
The Field Poll (report)Feb. 20 – March 1, 2009298±3.6%31%19%36%
The Field Poll (report)Sept. 18 – October 6, 2009373±4.5%21%20%59%
Los Angeles Times (report)Oct. 27 – November 3, 200949927%27%2%40%
The Field Poll (report)January 5–17, 2010202±7.1%30%25%6%39%
PPIC (report)January 27, 20102,001±2.0%27%16%8%1%48%
M4 Strategies (report)February 26, 201042732%19%11%39%
Research 2000 (report)March 10, 2010400±5.0%33%24%7%36%
PPIC (report)March 24, 20102,002±2.0%23%24%8%1%44%
Los Angeles Times (report)March 23–30, 20101,515±2.6%29%25%9%4%33%
Survey USA (report)April 19–21, 2010538±4.3%34%27%14%3%23%
Survey USA (report)May 6–9, 2010548±4.3%35%24%15%3%23%
Research 2000 (report)May 17–19, 2010400±5.0%37%22%14%27%
PPIC (report)May 9–16, 20101,168±3.0%23%25%16%36%
Public Policy Polling (report)May 21–23, 2010417±4.8%21%41%16%18%
Survey USA (report)May 21–23, 2010612±4.3%23%46%14%6%11%
Los Angeles Times (report)May 19–26, 20101,506±2.6%23%38%16%23%
Survey USA (report)June 3–6, 2010569±4.2%22%48%16%9%

Results

[edit]
Results by county:
  Fiorina
  •   40–50%
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
  Campbell
  •   40–50%
Republican primary results
PartyCandidateVotes%
RepublicanCarly Fiorina1,315,42956.4
RepublicanTom Campbell504,28921.7
RepublicanChuck DeVore452,57719.3
RepublicanAl Ramirez42,1491.8
RepublicanTim Kalemkarian19,5980.8
Total votes2,334,042100.0

Third party primaries

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]

American Independent

California American Independent Senate primary, 2010
PartyCandidateVotes%
American IndependentEdward Noonan16,70439.5
American IndependentDon Grundmann14,17033.5
American IndependentAl Salehi11,42327.0
Total votes42,297100.0

Green

  • Duane Roberts, community volunteer[1]
California Green Senate primary, 2010
PartyCandidateVotes%
GreenDuane Roberts19,983100.00%
Total votes19,983100.0

Libertarian

  • Gail Lightfoot, retired nurse[1]
California Libertarian Senate primary, 2010
PartyCandidateVotes%
LibertarianGail Lightfoot17,791100.00%
Total votes17,791100.0

Peace and Freedom

California Peace and Freedom Senate primary, 2010
PartyCandidateVotes%
Peace and FreedomMarsha Feinland4,070100.00%
Total votes4,070100.0

General election

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]

The following were certified by theCalifornia Secretary of State as candidates in the general election for Senator.[21]

Campaign

[edit]

Boxer criticized Fiorina's choice "to become a CEO, lay off 30,000 workers, ship jobs overseas [and] have two yachts." A spokesman for Fiorina responded that the Fiorinas were a two-yacht family because they spent time in both California and Washington, D.C.[22] Boxer also claimed that Fiorina "skirted the law" by selling equipment toIran during her tenure as HP's CEO, also claiming that the equipment may have ended up in the hands of the Iranian military.[23]

Debate

[edit]

The only debate took place on September 1 atSaint Mary's College of California inMoraga. It was sponsored bySan Francisco Chronicle,KTVU, andKQED.[24]

2010 United States Senate election in California debate
No.DateHostModeratorLinkDemocraticRepublican
Key:
 P Participant  A Absent  N Not invited  I Invited W  Withdrawn
BoxerFiorina
1Sep. 1, 2010KQED-FM
KTVU
San Francisco Chronicle
Randy ShandobilC-SPANPP

Predictions

[edit]
SourceRankingAs of
Cook Political Report[25]TossupOctober 26, 2010
Rothenberg[26]Tilt DOctober 22, 2010
RealClearPolitics[27]TossupOctober 26, 2010
Sabato's Crystal Ball[28]Lean DOctober 21, 2010
CQ Politics[29]Lean DOctober 26, 2010

Polling

[edit]
Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin
of error
Barbara Boxer (D)Carly Fiorina (R)OtherUndecided
The Field Poll (report)Feb. 20 – March 1, 2009761± 3.6%55%25%20%
Rasmussen Reports (report)March 9, 2009500± 4.5%47%38%10%5%
Rasmussen Reports (report)July 22, 2009500± 4.5%45%41%7%7%
Research 2000 (report)August 9–12, 2009600± 4.0%52%31%17%
Rasmussen Reports (report)September 23, 2009500± 4.5%49%39%4%8%
The Field Poll (report)Sept. 18 – October 6, 20091,005± 3.2%49%35%16%
Rasmussen Reports (report)November 17, 2009500± 4.5%46%37%5%12%
Rasmussen Reports (report)January 14, 2010500± 4.5%46%43%3%8%
The Field Poll (report)January 5–17, 20101,005± 3.2%50%35%15%
PPIC (report)January 27, 20102,001± 2.0%48%40%12%
Rasmussen Reports (report)February 11, 2010500± 4.5%46%42%7%5%
Research 2000 (report)March 10, 2010600± 4.0%49%40%11%
Rasmussen Reports (report)March 11, 2010500± 4.5%46%40%4%10%
The Field Poll (report)March 18, 2010748± 3.7%45%44%11%
PPIC (report)March 24, 20102,002± 2.0%44%43%13%
Rasmussen Reports (report)April 12, 2010500± 4.5%42%38%7%13%
Rasmussen Reports (report)May 12, 2010500± 4.5%45%38%4%12%
PPIC (report)May 9–16, 20102,003± 2.0%48%39%13%
Research 2000 (report)May 17–19, 2010600± 4.0%48%39%
Los Angeles Times (report)May 19–26, 201044%38%
Public Policy Polling (report)May 21–23, 2010921± 3.2%45%42%13%
Rasmussen Reports (report)June 9, 2010500± 4.5%48%43%5%5%
Reuters (report)June 30, 2010600± 4.5%45%41%1%13%
Survey USA (report)July 8–11, 2010614± 4.0%45%47%3%5%
Rasmussen Reports (report)July 12, 2010500± 4.5%49%42%4%5%
Public Policy Polling (report)July 23–25, 2010614± 3.95%49%40%11%
Rasmussen Reports (report)August 3, 2010750± 4.0%45%40%5%10%
Survey USA/CBS 5 (report)August 9–11, 2010602± 4.0%42%47%11%
Rasmussen Reports (report)August 24, 2010750± 4.0%44%43%5%8%
Survey USA (report)August 31 – September 1, 2010569± 4.2%46%48%5%1%
CNN(reportArchived September 9, 2010, at theWayback Machine)September 2–7, 2010866± 3.5%48%44%5%3%
Rasmussen Reports (report)September 6, 2010750± 4.0%42%47%
Rasmussen Reports (report)September 6, 2010750± 4.0%47%48%2%3%
Fox News (report)September 11, 20101,000± 3.0%46%44%4%6%
Public Policy Polling (report)September 14–16, 2010630± 3.9%50%42%8%
Fox News/Pulse Opinion Research (report)September 18, 20101,000± 3.0%47%46%3%4%
Rasmussen Reports (report)September 20, 2010750± 4.0%47%43%4%6%
Survey USA (report)September 19–21, 2010610± 4.0%49%43%6%2%
CNN/Time/Opinion Research Corporation (report)September 24–28, 2010786± 3.5%52%43%3%2%
PPICreportSeptember 19–26, 20101,104± 3%42%35%6%17%
USC pollreportSeptember 27, 20101,00339%34%23%
Rasmussen Reports (report)October 3, 2010750± 4.0%49%45%2%5%
Angus Reid Public Opinion (report)October 6, 2010501± 4.5%55%39%6%
Rasmussen Reports (report)October 13, 2010750± 4.0%49%46%2%3%
Reuters (report)October 12–14, 2010601± 4.0%46%45%2%6%
PPIC (report)October 10–17, 20101,067± 3.5%43%38%6%13%
Tarrance Group (report)October 17–19, 2010± 4.1%44%44%6%5%
USC/LA Times (report)October 13–20, 2010878± 3.2%50%42%4%4%
Rasmussen Reports (report)October 21, 2010750± 4.0%48%46%3%3%
Public Policy Polling (report)October 21–23, 2010622± 3.2%52%43%0%5%
Fox/Pulse Opinion Research (report)October 23, 20101,000± 3.0%48%44%5%3%
Suffolk University (reportArchived November 4, 2010, at theWayback Machine)October 21–24, 2010600± 4.0%52%43%4%2%
SurveyUSA (report)October 21–25, 2010594± 4.1%45%40%7%8%
Field Poll (report)October 14–26, 20101,501± 3.2%49%41%10%
CNN/Time/Opinion Research (report)October 20–26, 20101,527± 2.5%50%45%1%
Rasmussen Reports (report)October 27, 2010750± 4.0%49%46%2%3%
Angus Reid Public Opinion (report)October 28–29, 2010485± 4.5%51%44%5%
SurveyUSA (report)October 26–31, 2010587± 4.1%46%38%6%10%
Public Policy Polling (report)October 29–31, 2010882± 3.3%50%46%3%
Hypothetical polling
Poll sourceDates administeredBarbara BoxerChuck DeVore
Research 2000[30]August 9–12, 200953%29%
Rasmussen Reports[31]September 23, 200946%37%
The Field Poll[32]September 18 – October 6, 200950%33%
Rasmussen Reports[33]November 17, 200946%36%
Rasmussen Reports[34]January 14, 201046%40%
The Field Poll[35]January 5–17, 201051%34%
PPIC[36]January 27, 201047%39%
Rasmussen Reports[37]February 11, 201047%42%
Research 2000[38]March 10, 201049%39%
Rasmussen Reports[39]March 11, 201046%40%
Field Research[40]March 18, 201045%41%
PPIC[41]March 24, 201046%40%
Rasmussen Reports[42]April 12, 201042%39%
Rasmussen Reports[42]May 12, 201046%40%
Public Policy Institute of California (Report)May 201050%39%
Research 2000[43]May 17–19, 201047%38%
Public Policy Polling[44]May 21–23, 201046%40%
USC/Los Angeles Times (Report)May 19–26, 201046%36%
Poll sourceDates administeredBarbara BoxerTom Campbell
Rasmussen Reports[34]January 14, 201046%42%
The Field Poll[35]January 5–17, 201048%38%
PPIC[36]January 27, 201045%41%
Rasmussen Reports[37]February 11, 201045%41%
Research 2000[38]March 10, 201047%43%
Rasmussen Reports[39]March 11, 201043%41%
Field Research[40]March 18, 201043%44%
PPIC[41]March 24, 201043%44%
Rasmussen Reports[42]April 12, 201042%41%
Rasmussen Reports[42]May 12, 201042%41%
Public Policy Institute of California (Report)May 201046%40%
Research 2000[43]May 17–19, 201047%40%
Public Policy Polling[44]May 21–23, 201047%40%
USC/Los Angeles Times (Report)May 19–26, 201038%45%

Fundraising

[edit]
Candidate (party)ReceiptsDisbursementsCash on handDebt
Barbara Boxer (D)$20,314,189$22,178,746$2,271,034$0
Carly Fiorina (R)$17,935,605$16,664,055$1,271,550$805,844
Jerry Carroll (I)$140$140$10$1,305
Marsha Feinland (P&F)$0$0$0$0
Neil Goldberg (I)$0$0$0$0
Gail Lightfoot (L)$0$0$0$0
Edward Noonan (AI)$0$0$0$0
Duane Roberts (G)$0$0$0$12,562
Source:Federal Election Commission (FEC)[45]
(Note that some candidates filed with the FEC, but did not pursue their candidacy.)

Results

[edit]

Despite the last poll before the election showed Fiorina only trailing by 4 points, on election night Boxer defeated Fiorina by a ten-point margin, and around a one million vote majority. Boxer performed extremely well inLos Angeles County, and theSan Francisco Bay Area. Boxer was declared the winner shortly after the polls closed. Fiorina conceded defeat to Boxer at 11:38 P.M.

United States Senate election in California, 2010[46]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
DemocraticBarbara Boxer (incumbent)5,218,13752.18%−5.53%
RepublicanCarly Fiorina4,217,38642.17%+4.37%
LibertarianGail Lightfoot175,2351.75%−0.05%
Peace and FreedomMarsha Feinland135,0881.35%−0.67%
GreenDuane Roberts128,5121.29%N/A
American IndependentEdward Noonan125,4351.25%+0.58%
Write-in670.00%±0.00%
Total votes9,999,860100.0%
Democratichold

By county

[edit]

Results from theSecretary of State of California.[47]

CountyBoxerVotesFiorinaVotesNoonanVotesRobertsVotesLightfootVotesFeinlandVotes
Alameda73.9%338,63222.1%100,9890.7%3,3621.3%5,5601.1%5,3340.9%4,537
Alpine50.9%28244.0%2440.7%40.7%42.5%141.2%7
Amador31.9%5,13759.6%9,6172.3%3641.2%2093.0%4802.0%334
Butte37.0%27,82754.5%40,9581.8%1,3931.9%1,4352.9%2,1811.9%1,456
Calaveras32.1%6,29458.6%11,4953.0%5931.6%3263.1%6171.6%324
Colusa30.3%1,56763.4%3,2881.4%761.2%672.2%1091.5%81
Contra Costa59.8%206,27035.9%123,9341.0%3,4921.0%3,6071.4%4,9960.9%3,181
Del Norte39.4%3,21252.0%4,2402.1%1771.8%1543.0%2451.7%139
El Dorado32.7%25,08561.0%46,7711.3%1,0431.1%9102.4%1,8221.5%1,129
Fresno37.5%74,70557.0%113,5831.3%2,6331.2%2,4311.5%3,0671.5%3,079
Glenn25.5%2,02066.3%5,2572.1%1741.6%1282.7%2081.8%143
Humboldt54.6%27,08137.6%18,6590.8%4203.2%1,5742.5%1,2841.3%653
Imperial55.6%14,80237.2%9,8871.2%3411.9%5161.9%5112.2%570
Inyo33.8%2,35356.2%3,9092.4%1691.7%1203.5%2412.4%170
Kern30.0%51,36462.0%106,4481.9%3,3021.4%2,4352.6%4,5222.1%3,641
Kings30.0%7,81662.7%16,3622.2%5601.1%3091.9%5202.1%542
Lake49.0%10,26540.8%8,5342.8%5852.4%5053.0%6252.0%440
Lassen24.0%2,20066.7%6,1271.6%1551.7%1574.0%3742.0%185
Los Angeles62.3%1,432,45032.6%749,3531.0%23,1981.2%29,3231.5%33,4311.4%32,168
Madera30.3%10,30862.9%21,4131.7%6011.3%4621.9%6321.9%630
Marin69.3%78,23627.5%31,0010.6%7560.9%9821.1%1,2370.6%710
Mariposa31.8%2,59360.4%4,9391.9%1581.7%1472.8%2231.4%118
Mendocino61.6%19,42229.9%9,4262.0%6432.8%8672.3%7491.4%472
Merced40.2%19,05853.4%25,2801.7%8271.2%5761.8%8541.7%831
Modoc20.9%78770.6%2,6662.2%841.4%563.1%1161.8%68
Mono43.5%1,15550.1%1,4551.7%1541.5%812.1%761.1%556
Monterey59.1%58,57435.0%34,7211.1%1,1821.3%1,3152.0%1,9141.5%1,497
Napa56.2%26,19438.1%17,7431.4%6581.5%7321.8%8361.0%511
Nevada40.9%18,50452.7%23,8750.6%3101.8%8603.1%1,3670.9%424
Orange37.1%323,47757.7%502,7561.1%10,4321.1%10,1371.7%14,6251.3%10,904
Placer33.6%47,33160.2%84,9051.5%2,1421.0%1,5182.2%3,2391.5%2,132
Plumas32.1%2,93460.3%5,5211.7%1611.4%1312.8%2571.7%160
Riverside40.7%195,41853.2%255,7381.6%8,1171.2%6,0461.8%8,3211.5%7,404
Sacramento50.4%210,16443.5%181,3001.6%6,8331.1%4,9812.1%8,6671.3%5,560
San Benito49.7%7,90943.8%6,9771.3%2151.1%1912.2%3371.9%307
San Bernardino42.7%185,16449.9%216,4411.8%8,1111.4%6,3022.4%10,4241.8%7,926
San Diego43.5%389,80650.7%454,3011.3%11,7251.3%11,8081.8%16,5781.4%12,585
San Francisco80.0%213,25216.2%43,1080.6%1,6301.5%3,8631.0%2,7800.7%1,937
San Joaquin44.5%70,03148.5%76,3421.6%2,6081.3%2,1222.1%3,3582.0%3,175
San Luis Obispo42.8%44,79951.2%53,6951.2%1,3471.1%1,2502.5%2,5211.2%1,293
San Mateo66.5%146,53729.9%65,8030.8%1,8661.0%2,2081.2%2,6050.6%1,480
Santa Barbara49.8%64,77145.2%58,8171.0%1,4251.0%1,4321.8%2,2431.2%1,578
Santa Clara63.3%320,73432.0%161,9861.0%5,1051.1%5,7111.6%8,1481.0%5,295
Santa Cruz68.6%65,04925.4%24,0650.9%9231.6%1,5792.2%2,0482.3%1,257
Shasta26.4%17,20466.1%43,0562.0%1,2661.3%9022.6%1,6831.6%1,060
Sierra29.1%52962.3%1,1352.4%451.4%272.8%512.0%37
Siskiyou33.7%6,13257.2%10,4302.2%4051.4%2703.6%6481.9%360
Solano55.1%64,65839.2%45,9951.3%1,6001.2%1,4292.0%2,2891.2%1,460
Sonoma64.3%116,99629.5%53,6781.4%2,6861.5%2,8062.1%3,7201.2%2,281
Stanislaus39.6%47,15853.6%63,8141.6%2,0071.5%1,7892.0%2,4551.7%2,029
Sutter31.9%8,12161.2%15,6061.9%4871.1%2922.4%6071.5%408
Tehama26.6%5,35264.3%12,9502.6%5241.5%3213.1%6221.9%397
Trinity37.1%2,02951.4%2,8132.0%1123.5%1924.4%2421.6%90
Tulare30.6%24,74262.9%50,8561.5%1,2641.1%9211.8%1,5092.1%1,625
Tuolumne33.4%7,43058.6%13,0572.6%5761.6%3592.5%5641.3%304
Ventura44.8%115,33749.9%128,6191.3%3,3941.1%3,0951.8%4,5861.12,965
Yolo59.0%34,92535.9%21,2631.1%6831.2%7641.7%9731.1%677
Yuba32.4%5,21258.6%9,4522.4%3941.4%2313.3%5361.9%210
Shift by county
Trend by county
Legend
  •   Republican — >15%
  •   Republican — +12.5−15%
  •   Republican — +10−12.5%
  •   Republican — +7.5−10%
  •   Republican — +5−7.5%
  •   Republican — +2.5−5%
  •   Republican — +0−2.5%
  •   Democratic — +0−2.5%
  •   Democratic — +2.5−5%
  •   Democratic — +5−7.5%
  •   Democratic — +7.5-10%
Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican

By congressional district

[edit]

Boxer won 33 of 53 congressional districts, with the remaining 20 going to Fiorina, including one that elected a Democrat.[48]

DistrictBoxerFiorinaRepresentative
1st57%36%Mike Thompson
2nd32%60%Wally Herger
3rd41%53%Dan Lungren
4th34%60%Tom McClintock
5th62%31%Doris Matsui
6th67%28%Lynn Woolsey
7th65%29%George Miller
8th81%15%Nancy Pelosi
9th85%12%Barbara Lee
10th56%39%John Garamendi
11th44%51%Jerry McNerney
12th68%28%Jackie Speier
13th69%26%Pete Stark
14th65%30%Anna Eshoo
15th62%33%Mike Honda
16th64%31%Zoe Lofgren
17th63%31%Sam Farr
18th48%45%Dennis Cardoza
19th34%59%George Radanovich (111th Congress)
Jeff Denham (112th Congress)
20th48%43%Jim Costa
21st30%64%Devin Nunes
22nd29%64%Kevin McCarthy
23rd56%38%Lois Capps
24th40%55%Elton Gallegly
25th39%54%Buck McKeon
26th42%53%David Dreier
27th58%37%Brad Sherman
28th70%25%Howard Berman
29th61%35%Adam Schiff
30th63%34%Henry Waxman
31st78%16%Xavier Becerra
32nd64%30%Judy Chu
33rd83%13%Diane Watson (111th Congress)
Karen Bass (112th Congress)
34th71%23%Lucille Roybal-Allard
35th79%16%Maxine Waters
36th56%39%Jane Harman
37th74%21%Laura Richardson
38th67%26%Grace Napolitano
39th60%34%Linda Sánchez
40th37%57%Ed Royce
41st35%57%Jerry Lewis
42nd34%61%Gary Miller
43rd60%32%Joe Baca
44th39%55%Ken Calvert
45th42%52%Mary Bono
46th38%56%Dana Rohrabacher
47th56%37%Loretta Sanchez
48th36%59%John B. T. Campbell III
49th34%59%Darrell Issa
50th40%55%Brian Bilbray
51st56%37%Bob Filner
52nd35%59%Duncan L. Hunter
53rd58%36%Susan Davis

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdefghijklmn"2010 Gubernatorial Primary Official Certified List of Candidates"(PDF).California Secretary of State. April 9, 2010. RetrievedJuly 31, 2023.
  2. ^"Sen. Boxer to officer: Don't call me ma'am".Washington Times. June 19, 2009. RetrievedMay 25, 2010.
  3. ^Sen. Boxer Offers No Apology for Rebuking Brigadier General Who Called Her 'Ma'am'
  4. ^Barbara Boxer is a Senator, damn it, and don't you forget it (video)
  5. ^Hiltzik, Michael (November 5, 2009)."Carly Fiorina's Senate campaign an uninspiring product launch".Los Angeles Times. RetrievedNovember 8, 2009.
  6. ^Lin, Judy (November 7, 2009)."Fiorina: 'Shame on me' for not voting more".KTVK.Associated Press. Archived fromthe original on June 16, 2011. RetrievedNovember 8, 2009.
  7. ^Garofoli, Joe (February 5, 2010)."Demon sheep' ad may be bad move, experts say".San Francisco Chronicle. RetrievedJune 8, 2010.
  8. ^snu (April 28, 2010). "Wackelnder demokratischer Senatssitz" [Uncertain Democratic Senate seat].Neue Zürcher Zeitung (in German).Zürich. p. 9.Sie dürfte sich indes mit ihren filmtechnisch stümperhaften, inhaltlich dümmlichen Werbespots gegen ihren innerparteilichen Widersacher Tom Campbell komprimittiert haben. Darin zeichnet Fiorina den allgemein als kompetent und freundlich geltenden Abgeordneten als gefährlichen Wolf im Schafspelz.
  9. ^"Plea Agreement; U.S. v. Al-Arian"(PDF).Nine Eleven Finding Answers Foundation. February 28, 2006. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on March 1, 2012. RetrievedMarch 8, 2010.
  10. ^MegLaughlin,In his plea deal, what did Sami Al-Arian admit to?,St. Petersburg Times, April 23, 2006.
  11. ^abMehta, Seema (March 15, 2010)."Letter on Muslim radical roils GOP Senate race; Website posts text contradicting Tom Campbell's claim of writing on behalf of donor Sami Al-Arian before 9/11".Los Angeles Times. RetrievedMarch 15, 2010.
  12. ^"Fiorina aide accused of calling Campbell an anti-Semite – San Jose Mercury News".Mercurynews.com. February 25, 2010. RetrievedMarch 16, 2010.
  13. ^The Associated Press.""Calif. Senate candidate on defensive over Israel",Associated Press, March 9, 2010, accessed March 15, 2010".Mercurynews.com. RetrievedMarch 30, 2010.[dead link]
  14. ^abcMehta, Seema (January 21, 2002)."Republican Senate candidate's professorial style may be out of step".Los Angeles Times. RetrievedMarch 30, 2010.
  15. ^ab"Tom Campbell letter stokes controversy over ties to jihadist".Mercury News. March 9, 2010. RetrievedMarch 14, 2010.
  16. ^Mehta, Seema (February 25, 2010)."GOP Senate race grows heated over Israel".Los Angeles Times. RetrievedJune 8, 2010.
  17. ^Freking, Kevin & Hindery, Robin (March 5, 2010)."Calif. Senate debate focuses on support for Israel".Boston.com. Associated Press. RetrievedDecember 11, 2022.
  18. ^Hogue NewsArchived August 19, 2010, at theLibrary of Congress Web Archives, "Spirited CA GOP Senatorial Debate," by Eric Hogue (March 5, 2010 – retrieved on March 5, 2010).
  19. ^Marelius, John (March 14, 2010)."Fiorina lashes out at Boxer, 'destructive elitism'; Senate candidate, opponents squabble at GOP convention".San Diego Union Tribune. RetrievedMarch 17, 2010.
  20. ^"McLaughlin, Ken, "Candidates for California governor promise to release income tax returns,"Mercury News, March 13, 2010, accessed March 17, 2010".Mercurynews.com. March 12, 2010. RetrievedMarch 30, 2010.
  21. ^"Certified List of Candidates 2010 Gubernatorial General"(PDF).California Secretary of State. August 26, 2010. RetrievedJuly 31, 2023.
  22. ^Matier, Phillip; Andrew Ross (July 19, 2010)."Boxer calls out Fiorina as multiple yacht owner".San Francisco Chronicle.San Francisco, California. RetrievedJuly 28, 2010.
  23. ^"Fiorina-led HP sold to Iran, Boxer charges". Archived fromthe original on May 18, 2015. RetrievedMay 16, 2015.
  24. ^"Barbara Boxer for U.S. Senate – News – News Coverage | Boxer and Fiorina set to debate". Barbaraboxer.com. August 6, 2010. Archived fromthe original on August 19, 2010. RetrievedAugust 21, 2010.
  25. ^"Senate".Cook Political Report. RetrievedOctober 26, 2010.
  26. ^"Senate Ratings".Rothenberg Political Report. RetrievedOctober 26, 2010.
  27. ^"Battle for the Senate".RealClearPolitics. RetrievedOctober 26, 2010.
  28. ^"2010 Senate Ratings".Sabato's Crystal Ball. Archived fromthe original on October 28, 2010. RetrievedOctober 26, 2010.
  29. ^"Race Ratings Chart: Senate".CQ Politics. Archived fromthe original on October 28, 2010. RetrievedOctober 26, 2010.
  30. ^Research 2000
  31. ^Rasmussen Reports
  32. ^The Field Poll
  33. ^Rasmussen Reports
  34. ^abRasmussen Reports
  35. ^abThe Field Poll
  36. ^abPPIC
  37. ^abRasmussen Reports
  38. ^abResearch 2000
  39. ^abRasmussen Reports
  40. ^abField Research
  41. ^abPPIC
  42. ^abcdRasmussen Reports
  43. ^abResearch 2000
  44. ^abPublic Policy Polling
  45. ^"2010 House and Senate Campaign Finance for California".Federal Election Commission. RetrievedJuly 25, 2010.[permanent dead link]
  46. ^"Statement of the Vote – November 2, 2010 General Election"(PDF).California Secretary of State.
  47. ^"2010 General Election - United States Senator"(PDF). California Secretary of State.
  48. ^"Counties by Congressional Districts for United States Senator"(PDF). November 2, 2010.Archived(PDF) from the original on October 7, 2024. RetrievedJanuary 27, 2025.

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