
Approximately a quarter of registered California voters voted in the June Primary, according to data from the Secretary of State’s website. Please make your voice count and be sure to vote in the General Election on November 3, 2026.
Here are the results from the recent election, as of this writing:

Governor
Xavier Becerra (D) and Steve Hilton (R) are the top two candidates who will advance.

Attorney General
Rob Bonta (D) and Michael Gates (R) will be advancing.

Insurance Commissioner
Jane Kim (D) and Ben Allen (D) are the top two candidates who will advance.
San Francisco Results

U.S. House of Representatives, District 11
Scott Wiener (D) and Connie Chan (D) will advance.

U.S. House of Representatives, District 15
Kevin Mullin (D) and Charles Hoelter (R) will advance.

State Assembly, District 17
Matt Haney (D), the incumbent, won the June Primary.

State Assembly, District 19
Catherine Stefani (D), the incumbent, and Philip Wing (R) will advance.

Superior Court Judge
Phoebe H. Maffei won the June Primary.

Board of Education
Phil Kim, the incumbent, won the June Primary.

Board of Supervisors, District 2
Stephen Sherrill, the incumbent, won the June Primary.

Board of Supervisors, District 4
Alan Wong, the incumbent, won the June Primary.
Proposition A
(The city will issue $535 million in bonds for infrastructure improvements related to earthquake safety and emergency response. There will also be a property tax of $7.45 per $100,000 of assessed property value.)
Yes
Proposition B
(Establishes lifetime term limits of two four-year terms for the mayor and members of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors.)
Yes, but the votes are more closely divided.
Proposition C
(This would have increased the tax exemption for certain businesses while also temporarily raising taxes for larger companies.)
No
Proposition D
(This would raise taxes on companies where the CEO earns at least 100 times more than the median employee. The AFL-CIO is among the groups tracking such information. For a list of company pay ratios for last year, reflecting the most recent data, go to: https://bit.ly/49ISZ0e )
No, but the votes are more closely divided on this one.
Election 2026
Published on June 11, 2026
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