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California state legislative special elections, 2016
One seat was vacated in the California State Legislature in 2016. The seat in state Assembly District 31 was filled through a special election.
Vacancy filled
- State Assembly District 31: The seat was vacant following Henry T. Perea's (D) resignation on December 31, 2015.
Breakdown of 2016 special elections
Across the country in 2016, special elections for state legislative positions were held for a variety of reasons:
- 23 were due to appointment, election, or the seeking of election to another position
- 11 were due to a retirement
- 11 were due to the incumbent accepting another job
- 12 were due to a death
- 4 were due to a conviction
- 3 were due to filling a remaining term
- 1 was due to an expulsion
The partisan breakdown for vacancies were as follows:
- 37 Democratic seats
- 28 Republican seats
Partisan Change from Special Elections | |||
---|---|---|---|
Party | As of Vacancy | After Special Election | |
Democratic Party | 37 | 39 | |
Republican Party | 28 | 24 | |
Independent | 0 | 2 | |
Total | 65 | 65 |
Note: The table above reflected information for elections that were held—not total vacant seats.
How vacancies are filled
If there is a vacancy in the California State Legislature, the governor must call for a special election. The governor must call the election within 14 calendar days of the vacancy. No special election shall be held if the vacancy occurs after the nominating deadline has passed in the final year of the term of office.[1]
See sources: California Code, 1773 and California Cons. Art. IV, § 2
Special elections
April 5, 2016
☑ California State Assembly District 31 | |
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A special election for the position of California State Assembly District 31 was called for April 5. The filing deadline for candidates wishing to run in this election was February 11.[2][3] The seat was vacant following Henry T. Perea's (D) resignation on December 31, 2015.[4] Joaquin Arambula (D) defeated Ted Miller (D) and Clint Olivier (R) in the special election. Since Arambula received more than 50% of vote, he avoided the runoff election that was scheduled for June 7th.[5][6]
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See also
- State legislative special elections, 2016
- California State Senate elections, 2014
- California State Assembly elections, 2014
- California State Senate elections, 2012
- California State Assembly elections, 2012
- California State Legislature
- California state legislative special elections: 2015, 2011
Footnotes
- ↑ California Legislative Information, "California Code," accessed February 9, 2021 (Statute, 1773-California Government Code)
- ↑ The Fresno Bee, "Gov. Brown sets April 5 special election to fill Perea’s 31st District Assembly seat," accessed January 6, 2016
- ↑ California Secretary of State, "Special Election Calendar," accessed January 6, 2016
- ↑ The Sacramento Bee, "Assemblyman Henry Perea to resign," December 1, 2015
- ↑ California Secretary of State, "Final Official Election Results - Assembly District 31," accessed May 19, 2016
- ↑ California Secretary of State, "Candidates for April 5, 2016, Special Primary Election," accessed February 16, 2016
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