Sacramento County results will arrive in three separate waves on election night, with the first released shortly after the polls closed at 8 p.m., around 10:15 p.m. then finally around midnight.
The county will release another batch of results later this week and will continue to issue reports every Friday and Tuesday until all the ballots are counted.
As of Tuesday at 8:15 p.m., county data estimated roughly 278,871 ballots had been counted.
See full California primary election results here.
Sacramento mayor
Early results show Assembly member Kevin McCarty holds a lead with 56% of the 74,603 ballots counted so far. Epidemiologist Dr. Flojaune Cofer follows with 43%.
Sacramento City Council District 2
Early results show Former state Assembly member is in the lead with 63% of the 4,782 ballots counted so far. Del Paso Heights native follows with 36% of the vote.
District 2 includes Del Paso Heights, Hagginwood and Woodlake.
Council member Shoun Thao has represented District 2 since April, after he was appointed to temporarily fill the seat until the winner of this election takes office. Thao is serving the remainder of former Council member Sean Loloee’s term. Loloee resigned in January after pleading not guilty to a 25-count federal indictment related to his Viva Supermarket grocery store businesses.
Local ballot measures
Measure D:
Early results show out of 54,243 ballots counted, 70% were for and 29% were against Sacramento City Unified School District’s request to issue $543 million in bonds. Funds raised through Measure D would be used to upgrade facilities at Earl Warren Elementary School, Elder Creek Elementary School and Hiram Johnson High School, among other projects.
The measure requires 55% approval to pass.
Measure E:
Early results show out of 73,633 ballots counted, 71% were for and 28% were against renewing and combining two existing library parcel taxes into a single tax with no expiration date. If passed, Measure E would generate approximately $9.6 million yearly for Sacramento County library services.
The measure requires a two-thirds majority to pass.
Measure G:
Early results show out of 20,144 ballots counted, 60% were against and 39% were for imposing an additional 1-cent sales tax on items sold in Folsom. Funds raised through Measure G would be spent on first responder services, public infrastructure and economic development.
The measure requires a simple majority to pass.
Measure H:
Early results show out of 5,637 ballots counted, 53% were for and 46% were against Galt Joint Union Elementary School District’s request to issue $27 million in bonds. Funds raised through Measure H would go towards upgrading infrastructure at Marengo Ranch Elementary School, Lake Canyon Elementary School and River Oaks Elementary School, among others.
The measure requires 55% approval to pass.
Measure J:
Early results show out of 419 ballots counted, 51% were for and 48% were against Elverta Joint Elementary School District’s request to issue $4.3 million in bonds. Funds raised through Measure J would be used to upgrade infrastructure across its three schools.
The measure requires 55% approval to pass.
Measure K:
Early results show out of 6,928 ballots counted, 56% were against and 43% were for San Joaquin Delta Community College District’s request to issue $598 million in bonds. Funds raised through Measure K would go towards facilities improvements like lab upgrades, asbestos removal and new classroom construction.
The measure requires 55% approval to pass.
Measure L:
Early results show out of 7,639 ballots counted, 61% were for and 38% were against Orangevale Recreation and Park District’s request to issue $24 million in bonds. Funds raised through Measure L would go towards making security improvements, upgrading playgrounds and renovating the district’s 60-year-old Youth Center, among other projects.
The measure requires two-thirds approval to pass.
Measure M:
Early results show out of 990 ballots counted, 50% were against and 49% were against Arcohe Union School District’s request to issue $5.8 million in bonds. Funds raised through Measure M would be used to upgrade school safety, repair aging facilities, expand classrooms and build a joint-use community center.
The measure requires 55% approval to pass.
Measure N:
Early results show out of 59,343 ballots counted, 57% were for and 42% were against Elk Grove Unified School District’s request to issue $542 million in bonds. Funds raised through Measure N would go toward renovating, upgrading and rehabilitating school facilities, among other projects.
The measure requires 55% approval to pass.
Measure O:
Early results show out of 120,300 ballots counted, 68% were for and 31% were against Sacramento Metropolitan Fire Department’s request to issue $415 million in bonds. Funds raised through Measure O would go toward upgrading facilities and vehicles and completing a new training facility.
The measure needs two-thirds of the vote to pass, unless Proposition 5 is approved, which would lower the threshold to 55%.
Measure P:
Early results show out of 68,119 ballots counted, 58% were for and 41% were against San Juan Unified School District’s request to issue $950 million in bonds. Funds raised through Measure P would go towards building new school facilities, upgrading classrooms and improve the safety of drinking water on campuses.
The measure requires 55% approval to pass.
Measure Q:
Early results show out of 3,764 ballots counted, 72% were for and 27% were against Fulton-El Camino Recreation and Parks District’s request to issue $24 million in bonds. Funds raised through Measure Q would go toward upgrading restrooms, adding lighting and improving accessibility at parks, among other projects.
Measure R:
Early results show out of 8,486 ballots counted, 64% were for and 35% were against Folsom-Cordova Unified School District’s request to issue $144 million in bonds. Funds raised through Measure R would go towards improvements at elementary schools across the district.
The measure requires 55% approval to pass.
Measure S:
Early results show out of 8,438 ballots counted, 63% were for and 36% were against Folsom-Cordova Unified District’s request to issue $144 million in bonds. Funds raised through Measure R would go towards improvements at middle and high schools across the district.
The measure requires 55% approval to pass.
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