Padilla, Becerra, Ma among statewide victors in California
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — California Attorney General Xavier Becerra, Secretary of State Alex Padilla and Controller Betty Yee will all return to office.
The three are among several statewide offices voters cast ballots for Tuesday.
Eleni Kounalakis leads in the race for lieutenant governor, and in the contest for insurance commissioner, Republican-turned-independent Steve Poizner had the edge over Democratic Sen. Ricardo Lara.
Here’s a look at the down-ballot races:
ATTORNEY GENERAL
Xavier Becerra, who was appointed California’s first Latino attorney general last year after Kamala Harris left for the U.S. Senate, was elected to stay on the job.
Becerra defeated Republican Steven Bailey, a former state court judge, with 58 percent of the vote on Tuesday.
“I’m honored and elated by the voters’ confidence to continue as Attorney General of our great state,” he said.
Becerra vowed to continue battling the Trump administration. Formerly a longtime Los Angeles congressman, Becerra regularly makes national headlines challenging the GOP president’s efforts to change environmental and immigration policies.
Bailey called the focus on Trump policies “a waste of taxpayer resources.”
In his short time as chief law enforcement officer , Becerra said he has secured more than 20 legal victories in federal court in cases involving health care, fraudulent college lenders and gun safety laws.
He also previously served as a state assemblyman and California deputy attorney general.
Bailey lagged in fundraising and ethics questions further complicated his efforts. He denied allegations he used his judgeship to aid his political campaign, improperly accepted gifts and steered business to a firm where his son worked.
A judicial ethics panel is reviewing the case and a decision is expected after the election.
LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR
Eleni Kounalakis, a former diplomat, was leading Ed Hernandez, a state senator, had about 58 percent of the vote in the race for lieutenant governor after more than three million ballots were in.
The contest is a Democrat-on-Democrat matchup after no Republican finished in the top two spots during June’s blanket primary.
Both Kounalakis and Hernandez advanced after raising substantial money to get their names in front of voters and replace Gavin Newsom, the heavy favorite to be the next governor.
Although the job holds little real power, it’s seen as a launching pad into higher office.
The lieutenant governor serves as a University of California regent, a California State University trustee and as a state lands commissioner overseeing conservation and public access. The lieutenant also acts as governor when the top executive is away.
Both candidates say they want to lower college costs, and both oppose oil drilling off the California coast.
If elected, Kounalakis would be the first woman to hold the position. She emphasizes her background as a developer and former ambassador to Hungary.
Kounalakis vows to stop sexual harassment in workplaces, hold perpetrators accountable, and ensure women receive equal pay for equal work.
Hernandez, chair of the Senate Health Committee, authored a bill increasing transparency around drug pricing last year. It passed over opposition from pharmaceutical companies.
He also had a hand in passing laws to protect access to clean air and water, increase funding for schools and career education programs, and provide one year of free community college.
He says he wants to protect against sexual harassment, hold abusers accountable, and remove offenders from office.
INSURANCE COMMISSIONER
Republican-turned-independent Steve Poizner had the edge over Democratic Sen. Ricardo Lara as they vie for insurance commissioner.
Poizner held 57 percent of the vote with 3.5 million ballots tallied Tuesday.
Either candidate will break ground for a California statewide office. Poizner, a former insurance commissioner, would be the first independent to win such an election and Lara would be the first openly gay statewide officeholder.
The Department of Insurance enforces insurance laws, licenses and regulates companies and investigates fraud.
Poizner, a wealthy Silicon Valley technology entrepreneur who lost a bid for the GOP gubernatorial nomination in 2010, ran as an independent because he said the office should be free of politics.
Lara, who authored a failed bill that would have provided state-run health insurance, said that remains a top priority.
Poizner has said he would focus on making sure homeowners have adequate protection against wildfires and other natural disasters.
Both have promised not to take insurance money, though Lara had to give back money he took from the political action committee of the nation’s largest physician-owned medical malpractice insurer.
SECRETARY OF STATE
California’s Democratic Secretary of State Alex Padilla was re-elected after campaigning on his record of sparring with President Donald Trump.
Padilla defeated Republican Mark Meuser Tuesday to keep his position as the top state official overseeing elections. He won with 59 percent of the vote.
Padilla often denounced the president’s unsubstantiated claims of widespread voter fraud in California.
He also refused to comply with the Trump administration’s requests to provide data on California voters, arguing it was politically motivated.
Padilla was elected to his first term in November 2014.
Meuser ran on a platform of purging voter rolls of people who have moved or died and conducting audits to ensure ineligible people aren’t registered to vote.
TREASURER
Democrat Fiona Ma is the voters’ choice to replace outgoing Treasurer John Chiang.
Ma defeated Republican Greg Conlon with 59 percent of the vote.
The treasurer manages the state’s money and sits on the boards of California’s public employee pension funds.
Ma, a State Board of Equalization member and former assemblywoman, vowed to build a “fiscal wall” against what she called harmful policies coming out of the White House.
She said her experience as a certified public accountant will help keep the state’s fiscal house in order.
California is on the right track, she said, outpacing the rest of the nation in job growth, economic development and record-low unemployment.
Conlon, also an accountant, challenged Chiang in the last general election. He served on the California Public Utilities Commission as president for two years and commissioner for four.
CONTROLLER
Democrat Betty Yee fended off a Republican challenger and won re-election as California controller.
Yee, a certified public accountant, defeated Konstantinos Roditis with nearly 61 percent of the vote.
The controller serves as the state’s top accountant and audits various state programs, and has seats on several state boards and the State Lands Commission.
Yee vowed to “build a fiscal wall against the harmful policies coming out of the White House.”
She said California is on the right track by outpacing the rest of the nation in job growth, economic development and record-low unemployment.
The daughter of Chinese immigrants, Yee has promoted tax policies that are equitable for vulnerable populations, including people living in poverty and LGBT people.
SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION
Los Angeles schools executive Marshall Tuck is leading with 52 percent of the vote as he vies to be the state’s top public education official.
After more than 3.2 million ballts were counted Tuesday night, Tuck led Assemblyman Tony Thurmond in the superintendent of public instruction race.
The race has become a proxy battle in a larger fight over how best to improve California schools. On one side of the debate are powerful teachers unions, which back Thurmond. On the other side are wealthy charter-school and education-reform proponents, which support Tuck.
Thurmond has stressed opposing the Trump administration’s agenda, including proposals to transfer money from traditional public schools to charters.
Tuck has emphasized giving families a choice in the schools their children attend, including nonprofit charter schools. His donors include charter school advocates such as Netflix CEO Reed Hastings and former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg.
Tuck ran for the seat unsuccessfully in 2014. Incumbent Tom Torlakson beat him with union backing.
Tuck and Thurmond both want to spend more on public schools and ban for-profit charter schools.
Thurmond and Tuck are Democrats, but the race is nonpartisan and their party affiliation won’t appear on the ballot.

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