Editor’s note: The Riverside County Registrar of Voters Office says there are about 128,000 votes to count. As of 3:20 a.m. June 8, 250,000 votes have been counted. The countywide turnout is approximately 27 percent. The results for individual precincts are not available yet.

Statewide elections
According to the Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton has easily won the California Democratic Presidential Primary. With nearly 100 percent of all precincts reporting, she garnered 1.9 millions, a half million more than Sanders, to win the primary with 56 percent of the ballots cast in her favor.

Clinton’s win dominated statewide. Sanders prevailed in only two districts and Clinton earned more than 60 percent of the vote in nine of the state’s 53 congressional districts. In District 36, which includes the Hill, she had 66.1 percent of the vote, which was the highest percentage of all the districts. Riverside County voters gave Clinton nearly 60 percent of their votes.

In the Republican primary, for which Donald Trump has already claimed the nomination, he easily received the majority of votes. Statewide, nearly three-quarters of Republican voters cast a ballot for him. John Kasich was second with 11 percent of the vote and Ted Cruz was third with 9 percent.

In Riverside County, Trump’s support was slightly higher at 82 percent and Kasich was second at 7.4 percent, narrowly beating Cruz by 300 votes.

In the race to replace retiring U.S. Senator Barbara Box, state Attorney General Kamala Harris collected 40 percent of the vote among 34 candidates. The second highest vote getter is fellow Democrat, Congresswoman Loretta Sanchez who received 18.5 percent of the vote.

Riverside County voters only gave Harris 29 percent of the vote and Sanchez finished with 19 percent. Sundheim was still the leading Republican with 12 percent of the total vote.

In a “top-two” election, the two candidates with the most votes, regardless of party, face-off in the general election. Thus Harris and Sanchez, both Democrats, will vie to replace Boxer in the U.S. Senate next December

The leading Republican candidate was Duf Sundheim with only 8 percent of the Republican votes.

Proposition 50, which would authorize suspending certain legislators, was easily approved, receiving 75.3 percent of the vote statewide and 73 percent in Riverside County.

Local Races

3rd District Supervisor
The race for the County’s 3rd District Supervisor will continue to the November election. Incumbent Chuck Washington was the leading vote getter with 40 percent. Challenging him in the fall campaign will be Hemet’s City Councilwoman Shellie Milne who received 32 percent of the vote. Randon Lane, the Murrieta mayor, trailed Milne by 1,800 votes. His total was 28.3 percent.

In the other supervisorial race, 1st District Supervisor Kevin Jeffries easily was re-elected with nearly 60 percent of the vote.

Congressional District 36
U.S. Congressman Dr. Raul Ruiz was the leading vote getter with 57 percent of ballots cast. But in a top-two race, he will still face State Sen. Jeff Stone in November, who received 33 percent. In a distant third place finish with 10 percent was Stephan “Steven” Wolkowicz.
State Assembly District 71

Most of State Assembly District 71 is in San Diego County, but a small portion of Riverside County, including the Hill precincts, are in the District. All three candidates seeking to replace term-limit Assemblyman Brian Jones are Republican.

Randy Voepel gained 60 percent of all votes, followed by Leo Hamel with 28 percent, although he said before the election that he had withdrawn from the race. Tony Teora trailed in third with 12 percent.

In Riverside County, the order was the same, but Voepel’s support was barely 52 percent and Hamel earned 33 percent of the vote.