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2018 Orange County Board of Supervisors election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
County election in California, U.S.

Orange County Board of Supervisors elections, 2018

← 2016June 5 and November 6, 20182019 (special) →

3 of 5 seats to theOrange County Board of Supervisors
 Majority partyMinority partyThird party
 
PartyRepublicanDemocraticLibertarian
Last election500
Seats before500
Seats won210
Seats after410
Seat changeDecrease 1Increase 1Steady
Popular vote270,980108,24615,281
Percentage68.7%27.4%3.9%

Winners
Vote share

Republican

  60–70%
  100%

Winners

  Republican hold
  Democratic gain
  No election

Democratic

  50–60%

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The2018 Orange County Board of Supervisors elections were held on June 5, 2018, and November 6, 2018. Three of the five seats of theOrange County, CaliforniaBoard of Supervisors were up for election.

County elections inCalifornia are officially nonpartisan. Atwo-round system was used for the election, starting with the first round in June, followed by a runoff in November between the top two candidates in each district. Runoffs are only held if no candidate receives a majority in each district.

Results

[edit]
  • Note: All elections for the Orange County Board of Supervisors are officially nonpartisan. The parties below identify which party label each candidate would have run under if given the option. Candidates all appear on the ballot asnonpartisan.

Results bycounty supervisorial district

[edit]
  • For districts not displayed, there would be no election until 2020.
Board of Supervisors DistrictIncumbentPartyElected SupervisorParty
2nd[1]Michelle SteelRepublicanMichelle SteelRepublican
4th[2]Shawn NelsonRepublicanDoug ChaffeeDemocratic
5th[3]Lisa BartlettRepublicanLisa BartlettRepublican

Close races

[edit]

Seats where the margin of victory was under 5%:

  1. County Supervisorial district 4, 0.8%

District 2

[edit]
2018 Orange County Board of Supervisors District 2 election

← 2011June 5, 20182021 (Special) →
 
CandidateMichelle SteelBrendon PerkinsMichael Mahony
First round80,854
63.4%
31,387
24.6%
15,281
12.0%

Supervisor before election

Michelle Steel

Elected Supervisor

Michelle Steel

District 2 consists of coastal Orange County, includingHuntington Beach,Costa Mesa,Cypress,La Palma,Los Alamitos,Newport Beach,Seal Beach, most ofFountain Valley, and neighborhoods in southernBuena Park.

General election

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
  • Michael Mahony (Libertarian)
  • Brendon Perkins (Democratic)
  • Michelle Steel (Republican)

Endorsements

[edit]
Michelle Steel

U.S. representatives

[4]

Brendon Perkins

Organizations

[5]

Results

[edit]
2018 Orange County's 2nd supervisorial district general election results by congressional district
Map legend
  •   Steel—60–70%
Orange County Board of Supervisors 2nd district, 2018[6]
CandidateVotes%
Michelle Steel (incumbent)80,85463.4
Brendon Perkins31,38724.6
Michael Mahony15,28112.0
Total votes127,522100.0

District 4

[edit]
2018 Orange County Board of Supervisors District 4 election

← 2011June 5 and November 6, 20182022 →
 
CandidateDoug ChaffeeTim ShawJoe Kerr
First round18,093
20.5
31,387
24.6%
17,717
20.1%
Runoff76,859
50.4
75,537
49.6
Eliminated

 
CandidateLucille KringRose EspinozaCynthia Aguirre
First round15,347
17.4%
10,397
11.8%
8,419
9.6%
RunoffEliminatedEliminatedEliminated

Supervisor before election

Shawn Nelson

Elected Supervisor

Doug Chaffee

District 4 consists of inland northwestern Orange County, taking inFullerton,La Habra,Placentia,Brea, westernAnaheim, and most ofBuena Park. Incumbent Shawn Nelson retired to run forCalifornia's 39th congressional district.[7]

General election

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
  • Cynthia Aguirre (Democratic)
  • Doug Chaffee (Democratic)
  • Rose Espinoza (Democratic)
  • Joe Kerr (Democratic)
  • Lucille Kring (Republican)
  • Tim Shaw (Republican)

Endorsements

[edit]
Tim Shaw

U.S. representatives

  • Ed Royce, U.S. representative from California (R-CA-39)

[8]

Results

[edit]
2018 Orange County's 4th supervisorial district general election initial round results by congressional district
Map legend
  •   Shaw—50–60%
  •   Chaffee—<30%
  •   Kring—<30%
Orange County Board of Supervisors 4th district, 2018[6]
CandidateVotes%
Tim Shaw18,17120.6
Doug Chaffee18,09320.5
Joe Kerr17,71720.1
Lucille Kring15,34717.4
Rose Espinoza10,39711.8
Cynthia Aguirre8,4199.6
Total votes88,141100.0

Runoff

[edit]

Results

[edit]
2018 Orange County's 4th supervisorial district general election runoff results by congressional district
Map legend
  •   Chaffee—60–70%
  •   Chaffee—50–60%
  •   Shaw—50–60%
Orange County Board of Supervisors 4th district runoff, 2018[9]
CandidateVotes%
Doug Chaffee76,85950.4
Tim Shaw75,53749.6
Total votes152,396100.0

District 5

[edit]
2018 Orange County Board of Supervisors District 5 election

← 2011June 5, 20182022 →
 
CandidateLisa Bartlett
First round113,567
100.00%

Supervisor before election

Lisa Bartlett

Elected Supervisor

Lisa Bartlett

District 5 encompasses southern Orange County, includingAliso Viejo,Laguna Hills,Laguna Niguel,Laguna Woods,Lake Forest,Mission Viejo,Rancho Santa Margarita,San Juan Capistrano,Laguna Beach,San Clemente, andDana Point.

General election

[edit]

Results

[edit]
2018 Orange County's 5th supervisorial district general election results by congressional district
Map legend
  •   Bartlett—100%
Orange County Board of Supervisors 5th district, 2018[6]
CandidateVotes%
Lisa Bartlett (incumbent)113,567100.0
Total votes113,567100.0

References

[edit]
  1. ^2nd
  2. ^4th
  3. ^5th
  4. ^Endorsements
  5. ^Endorsements
  6. ^abc"Orange County Statewide Direct Primary Election June 5, 2018".Orange County Elections.
  7. ^Mai-Duc, Christine (January 10, 2018)."Ed Royce's retirement from Congress started an Orange County edition of musical chair".Los Angeles Times.
  8. ^Endorsements
  9. ^"Orange County 2018 General Election November 6, 2018".Orange County Elections.

External links

[edit]

Official campaign websites of second district candidates

Official campaign websites of fourth district candidates

Official campaign websites of fifth district candidates

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