How City of San Diego - District 1 Voted
2022 General
How they voted in other elections
40 races analyzed
|
Statewide & Federal
16
U.S. Senator
Alex Padilla
+28.2%
Alex Padilla
+28.2%
Mark P. Meuser
-28.2%
Governor
Gavin Newsom*
+24.6%
Gavin Newsom*
+24.6%
Brian Dahle
-24.6%
Lieutenant Governor
Eleni Kounalakis*
+25.8%
Eleni Kounalakis*
+25.8%
Angela E. Underwood Jacobs
-25.8%
Attorney General
Rob Bonta
+20.8%
Rob Bonta
+20.8%
Nathan Hochman
-20.8%
Secretary of State
Shirley N. Weber
+25.2%
Shirley N. Weber
+25.2%
Rob Bernosky
-25.2%
Treasurer
Fiona Ma*
+23.4%
Fiona Ma*
+23.4%
Jack M. Guerrero
-23.4%
Controller
Malia M. Cohen
+10.2%
Malia M. Cohen
+10.2%
Lanhee J. Chen
-10.2%
Insurance Commissioner
Ricardo Lara*
+24.4%
Ricardo Lara*
+24.4%
Robert Howell
-24.4%
Superintendent of Public Education
Tony K. Thurmond*
+29.6%
Tony K. Thurmond*
+29.6%
Lance Ray Christensen
-29.6%
Proposition 1
Constitutional Right to Reproductive Freedom
PASSED
Yes
+48.8%
Constitutional Right to Reproductive Freedom
Yes
+48.8%
No
-48.8%
Proposition 26
Sports Wagering on Tribal Lands
FAILED
Yes
-19.0%
Sports Wagering on Tribal Lands
Yes
-19.0%
No
+19.0%
Proposition 27
Online Sports Wagering Outside of Tribal Lands
FAILED
Yes
-55.6%
Online Sports Wagering Outside of Tribal Lands
Yes
-55.6%
No
+55.6%
Proposition 28
Public School Arts and Music Education Funding
PASSED
Yes
+24.2%
Public School Arts and Music Education Funding
Yes
+24.2%
No
-24.2%
Proposition 29
Regulates Kidney Dialysis Clinics
FAILED
Yes
-39.2%
Regulates Kidney Dialysis Clinics
Yes
-39.2%
No
+39.2%
Proposition 30
Tax to Fund ZEV/Wildfire Programs
FAILED
Yes
-4.2%
Tax to Fund ZEV/Wildfire Programs
Yes
-4.2%
No
+4.2%
Proposition 31
Prohibition on Sale of Certain Tobacco Products
PASSED
Yes
+35.8%
Prohibition on Sale of Certain Tobacco Products
Yes
+35.8%
No
-35.8%
Legislative Races
7
Assembly Total (2 races)
Democrat Vote
+23.6%
Democrat Vote
+23.6%
Republican Vote
-23.6%
Congressional Total (2 races)
Democrat Vote
+29.4%
Democrat Vote
+29.4%
Republican Vote
-29.4%
Senate Total (2 races)
Democrat Vote
+24.6%
Democrat Vote
+24.6%
Republican Vote
-24.6%
Catherine Blakespear
+25.8%
Matt Gunderson
-25.8%
Joseph C. Rocha
+14.0%
Brian W. Jones
-14.0%
Mike Schaefer
+7.6%
David Dodson
-7.6%
Scott Peters
+29.4%
Corey Gustafson
-29.4%
Sara Jacobs
+0.0%
Stan Caplan
0.0%
Brian Maienschein
+16.8%
Kristie Bruce Lane
-16.8%
Tasha Boerner Horvath
+25.2%
Dan Downey
-25.2%
Overlapping Local Races
11
Kent Lee
+40.0%
Tommy Hough
-40.0%
Del Mar Union School District Governing Board Member
89% of contest
Scott Wooden
+1.5%
View full race results
Scott Wooden
+1.5%
Katherine Fitzpatrick
-1.5%
Douglas Rafner
-3.4%
Danielle Roybal
-6.5%
Cinda Peck
-7.5%
William Bill A. Porter Iii
-9.0%
Maniza Sheikhani
-14.0%
Esther R. Sheffrey
-19.0%
Palomar Community College District Governing Board Member Trustee Area 1
1% of contest
Frank Xu
+5.8%
View full race results
Frank Xu
+5.8%
Judy Patacsil
-5.8%
San Diego County Assessor Recorder County Clerk
6% of contest
Barbara Bry
+6.6%
View full race results
Barbara Bry
+6.6%
Jordan Marks
-6.6%
San Diego County Board of Education Board of Education District 5
11% of contest
Rick Shea
+27.4%
View full race results
Rick Shea
+27.4%
Emily Ortiz Wichmann
-27.4%
Kelly Anne Martinez
+16.4%
John Hemmerling
-16.4%
Dan Mcallister
+45.8%
Greg Hodosevich
-45.8%
San Diego Unified School District Board of Education District C
43% of contest
Cody Petterson
+10.4%
View full race results
Cody Petterson
+10.4%
Becca Williams
-10.4%
San Dieguito Union High School District Governing Board Member Trustee Area 3
9% of contest
Jane Lea Smith
+28.0%
View full race results
Jane Lea Smith
+28.0%
Sheila King
-28.0%
Daniel Hale
-55.3%
Summer Stephan
Solana Beach School District Governing Board Member Trustee Area 4
83% of contest
Gaylin Allbaugh
+6.8%
View full race results
Gaylin Allbaugh
+6.8%
Chuck Ringer
-6.8%
Overlapping Ballot Measures
6
Shall the measure to fund general County purposes including but not limited to parks, fire safety, roads, health, and social equity, by taxing cannabis businesses in the unincorporated area on gross receipts at maximum 6% for retail, 3% for distribution, 2% for testing, cultivation at 3% or $10 (inflation adjustable) per canopy square foot, and 4% for other businesses, generating an estimated $2,930,000 to $5,600,000 annually until repealed by voters, be adopted?
Yes
+24.0%
No
-24.0%
Shall the San Diego Municipal Code be amended so that all City residents receive comparable trash, recycling, and other solid waste management services, by allowing the City to recover its cost of providing these services to eligible residential properties, which could allow the City to provide additional services, such as weekly recycling, bulky item pickup, and curbside container replacement and delivery, at no extra charge?
Yes
-4.0%
No
+4.0%
Shall People’s Ordinance O-10960 be amended to exclude the Midway-Pacific Highway Community Plan area, which includes the Sports Arena, from the 30-foot height limit on buildings in the Coastal Zone, with any future development still required to comply with other governing laws?
Yes
+3.4%
No
-3.4%
Shall the San Diego Municipal code be amended to provide that the City of San Diego may preserve its ability to receive State infrastructure funding by allowing the use of Project Labor Agreements on City Construction Projects; requiring provisions in the agreements to prohibit employment discrimination and ensure open competition; expanding public disclosure; tracking local hiring requirements; and establishing a Citizens’ Oversight Board?
Yes
+7.8%
No
-7.8%
Shall Article V, Section 55 be amended to authorize childcare on dedicated parkland property with “childcare” meaning any State-licensed facility, other than in-home family day care, in which nonmedical care and supervision is provided for children under age 18 in a group setting for less than 24 hours per day, excluding educational or instructional use provided by public, private, home, or charter schools?
Yes
+34.4%
No
-34.4%
To improve all public schools by: • Repairing leaky roofs/plumbing; • Providing safe drinking water; • Removing asbestos, lead paint, mold; • Improving classroom security/communications, systems, cameras, door locks to protect against school shootings; • Upgrading career, science, technology, engineering, math classrooms; shall San Diego Unified School District’s measure authorizing $3,200,000,000 in bonds at legal rates, levying approximately 6 cents per $100 of assessed value, averaging $330,000,000 annually while bonds are outstanding, requiring public spending disclosures, audits, citizens oversight, be adopted?
Yes
+21.4%
No
-21.4%