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2018 Michigan elections

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2018 Michigan elections

← 2016November 6, 2018 (2018-11-06)2020 →
Elections in Michigan
U.S. President
Presidential Primaries
U.S. Senate
U.S. House
Other localities

TheMichigan general election, 2018 was held on Tuesday, November 6, 2018, throughoutMichigan. The Democrats swept all of the statewide offices formerly held by the Republicans.[1]

Federal

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Congress

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Senate

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Main article:United States Senate election in Michigan, 2018

Incumbent Democratic senatorDebbie Stabenow won re-election to a fourth term.

House of Representatives

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Main article:United States House of Representatives elections in Michigan, 2018

Democrats gained two House seats in theUnited States House of Representatives, giving Michigan's House delegation an even split with seven Democrats and seven Republicans.

State

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Executive

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Governor and lieutenant governor

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Main article:Michigan gubernatorial election, 2018

The Democratic ticket ofGretchen Whitmer andGarlin Gilchrist won the races for governor and lieutenant governor. This was a Democratic gain.

Secretary of state

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Main article:Michigan Secretary of State election, 2018

FormerWayne State University Law School deanJocelyn Benson was elected secretary of state, which was a Democratic gain. She became the first DemocraticMichigan Secretary of State since 1995.

Attorney general

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Main article:Michigan Attorney General election, 2018

Detroit-based attorneyDana Nessel was elected Michigan attorney general, becoming the first Democratic attorney general in 16 years.

State Board of Education

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Michigan State Board of Education, 2018[2]
PartyCandidateVotes%
Democratic PartyJudith Pritchett1,830,31225.2
Democratic PartyTiffany Tilley1,743,37924.0
Republican PartyTami Carlone1,615,12922.3
Republican PartyRichard Zeile (incumbent)1,473,90420.3
Working Class PartyMary Anne Hering125,6931.7
Libertarian PartyScott Boman125,3091.7
Working Class PartyLogan Smith91,0771.3
Libertarian PartyJohn Tatar80,4141.1
U.S. Taxpayers PartyKaren Adams72,6391.0
Green PartySherry A. Wells61,4930.8
U.S. Taxpayers PartyDouglas Levesque32,3260.4
Total votes7,251,675100.0

Legislature

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Senate

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Main article:Michigan State Senate election, 2018

All 38 seats in theMichigan Senate were up for election in 2018. Democrats gained five seats, but Republicans still control 22 seats in the Michigan Senate.

House of Representatives

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Main article:Michigan House of Representatives election, 2018

All 110 seats in theMichigan House of Representatives were up for election in 2018. Democrats gained five seats, but Republicans still control the Michigan House with 58 Republicans and 52 Democrats.

Judiciary

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Supreme Court

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2018 Michigan Supreme Court election

← 2016November 6, 2018 (2018-11-06)2020 →

2 seats of theSupreme Court of Michigan
 Majority partyMinority party
 
PartyRepublicanDemocratic
Last election52
Seats won11
Seats after43
Seat changeDecrease1Increase1

Two seats on the Michigan Supreme Court were up for election in 2018. Justice Kurt Wilder, who was appointed by Governor Snyder to replace retiring justiceRobert P. Young Jr., and Justice Beth Clement, who was named by Governor Snyder to replace JusticeJoan Larsen after the latter was confirmed to a seat on the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals in November, 2017,[3] were eligible to run for re-election. The two winners of the election were Clement andMegan Cavanagh, who unseated Wilder.[4]

Candidates
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Results
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2018 Michigan Supreme Court Associate Justice (2 seats) election[6]
PartyCandidateVotes%
NonpartisanElizabeth Clement (incumbent)1,871,46229.88%
NonpartisanMegan Cavanagh1,584,51225.30%
NonpartisanKurtis Wilder (incumbent)1,519,39424.26%
NonpartisanSamuel Bagenstos717,06211.45%
NonpartisanKerry Lee Morgan360,8585.76%
NonpartisanDoug Dern209,1033.34%
Total votes3,445,563100.0%
Republicanhold
Democraticgain fromRepublican

Court of Appeals

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District 1 (six-year term - 2 positions)
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CandidateVotes%
Kirsten Frank Kelly572,88356.1
Michael Riordan447,65843.9
Total votes1,020,541100.0
District 1 (partial term ending 1/1/2023)
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CandidateVotes%
Thomas Cameron591,516100.00
District 2 (six-year term - 3 positions)
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CandidateVotes%
Kathleen Jansen592,09134.2
Elizabeth L. Gleicher570,85633.0
Deborah Servitto566,77132.8
Total votes1,729,718100.0
District 2 (partial term ending 1/1/2021)
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CandidateVotes%
Jonathan Tukel683,743100.00
District 3 (six-year term - 2 positions)
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CandidateVotes%
Jane M. Beckering678,50552.1
Douglas Shapiro622,68147.9
Total votes1,301,186100.0
District 4 (six-year term)
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CandidateVotes%
Stephen L. Borrello744,970100.00
District 4 (partial term ending 1/1/2023)
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CandidateVotes%
Brock Swartzle730,278100.00

[7]

Ballot initiatives

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Proposal 1

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Main article:2018 Michigan Proposal 1

Proposal 1, an initiative to legalize cannabis, was approved 56–44.

Proposal 1[8]
ChoiceVotes%
Referendum passedYes2,356,42255.9
No1,859,67544.1
Total votes4,216,097100.00

Proposal 2

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Main article:2018 Michigan Proposal 2

Proposal 2 was an initiative to transfer the power to draw state Legislative districts and US Congressional districts from the state legislature to an independent redistricting commission. The proposal passed 61–39.

Proposal 2[8]
ChoiceVotes%
Referendum passedYes2,516,99861.3
No1,590,63838.7
Total votes4,107,636100.00

Proposal 3

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Main article:2018 Michigan Proposal 3

Proposal 3, an initiative to add voting policies such as same-day registration and straight-ticket voting to the state constitution, was approved 67–33.

Proposal 3[8]
ChoiceVotes%
Referendum passedYes2,772,30166.9
No1,370,66233.1
Total votes4,142,963100.00

References

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  1. ^"Michigan Election Results 2018: Live Midterm Map by County & Analysis".www.politico.com. RetrievedMay 15, 2023.
  2. ^"Michigan State Board of Education election, 2018".Ballotpedia.
  3. ^Egan, Paul (November 17, 2017)."Snyder names Chief Legal Counsel Beth Clement to Michigan Supreme Court".Detroit Free Press.
  4. ^Mack, Julie (November 7, 2018)."Beth Clement, Megan Kathleen Cavanagh poised to win Michigan Supreme Court seats".Michigan Live. RetrievedDecember 2, 2018.
  5. ^abcdefRoelofs, Ted (November 2, 2018)."Who's running for Michigan Supreme Court".Bridge MI.
  6. ^"2018 Michigan General Election Results".Michigan Secretary of State.
  7. ^"Michigan intermediate appellate court elections, 2018".Ballotpedia.
  8. ^abc"Michigan Election Results".New York Times. RetrievedJuly 7, 2020.

External links

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