Mychal Schwartz

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Mychal Schwartz

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Elections and appointments
Last election

August 7, 2018

Mychal Schwartz ran for election for the Northeast Division judge of the King County District Court in Washington. Schwartz lost in the primary on August 7, 2018.

Elections

2018

See also: Municipal elections in King County, Washington (2018)

General election

Marcus Naylor defeated Joshua Schaer in the general election for King County District Court Northeast Division on November 6, 2018.


General election

General election for King County District Court Northeast Division

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Marcus Naylor
Marcus Naylor (Nonpartisan)
 
65.7
 
133,500
Image of Joshua Schaer
Joshua Schaer (Nonpartisan)
 
33.8
 
68,684
 Other/Write-in votes
 
0.6
 
1,148

Total votes: 203,332
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Top-two primary

Marcus Naylor and Joshua Schaer defeated Mychal Schwartz in the primary for King County District Court Northeast Division on August 7, 2018.


Nonpartisan primary election

Nonpartisan primary for King County District Court Northeast Division

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Marcus Naylor
Marcus Naylor (Nonpartisan)
 
50.1
 
62,488
Image of Joshua Schaer
Joshua Schaer (Nonpartisan)
 
34.5
 
43,042
Mychal Schwartz (Nonpartisan)
 
15.3
 
19,081

Total votes: 124,611
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Selection method

See also: Nonpartisan election of judges

Judges of the district courts are chosen in nonpartisan elections. They serve four-year terms, after which they must run for re-election if they wish to continue serving.[1][2]

Qualifications
To serve on a district court, a judge must be:[3]

  • a resident and registered voter of his or her district;
  • one of the following: licensed to practice law in the state; a former district judge, municipal judge, police judge or justice of the peace; able to pass a qualifying exam (in districts of more than 5000 people); and
  • under the age of 75.*[2]

*No judge is eligible to run for office after attaining the age of 75. If a sitting judge turns 75 while serving, he or she may continue serving until the end of that calendar year.[4]

See also


External links

Footnotes

  1. Washington Courts, "A Citizen's Guide to Washington Courts, Eleventh Edition," 2008
  2. 2.0 2.1 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named limited
  3. Washington State Legislature, "Washington State Constitution," accessed September 24, 2014 (Scroll to Article IV)
  4. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named const