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June 2012 California elections
The California state elections, June 2012 were held on June 5, 2012, and included two propositions , primary elections for each party's nominee for President , and primary elections to determine the top-two candidates for California's Class I seat to the United States Senate , all of California's seats to the House of Representatives , all of the seats of the State Assembly , and all odd-numbered seats of the State Senate , who will compete against each other in a run-off on November 6, 2012.
This was the first election with California's newly implemented nonpartisan blanket primary in effect, pursuant to Proposition 14 , which passed with 53% voter approval in June 2010. Additionally, in November 2010, voters approved Proposition 20 , which authorized a California Citizens Redistricting Commission to re-draw congressional district lines , in addition to its current job of drawing state senate district lines and state assembly district lines , taking away that job from the California state legislature . This was the first election which used the Citizens Redistricting Commission's maps.
President of the United States [ edit ]
Incumbent president Barack Obama ran unopposed on the Democratic primary ballot. Governor Mitt Romney and Rep. Ron Paul competed in the Republican primary .
Results by county. Mitt Romney won all of California's 58 counties.
California Republican primary, 2012[ 1]
Candidate
Votes
Percentage
Delegates
Mitt Romney
1,151,197
79.6%
169
Ron Paul
147,893
10.2%
0
Rick Santorum
75,802
5.2%
0
Newt Gingrich
55,458
3.8%
0
Buddy Roemer
9,714
0.7%
0
Fred Karger
6,481
0.4%
0
Unpledged delegates:
3
Total:
1,446,545
100%
172
Key:
Withdrew prior to contest
United States Senate [ edit ]
Results by county. Dianne Feinstein won all of California's 58 counties.
United States House of Representatives [ edit ]
100% ( 21,993 of 21,993 ) precincts partially or fully reporting as of June 22, 2012, 4:49 p.m
Results by county.
Proposition 28 is an initiative constitutional amendment that would change California state legislature term limits from a limit of 8 years for the Senate and 6 years for the Assembly , to a limit of 12 years on combined service.
Limits on Legislators' Terms in Office[ 3]
Choice
Votes
%
Yes
3,001,137
61.0
No
1,915,154
39.0
Results by county.
Proposition 29 is an initiative statute that would add a $1 tax on cigarettes to fund cancer research.
Tax on Cigarettes for Cancer Research[ 4]
Choice
Votes
%
No
2,553,137
50.3
Yes
2,523,572
49.7
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