Gov. Gavin Newsom will head back to work today after receiving an overwhelming vote of confidence from the state’s voters in the attempt to recall him.
The “no” votes topped the “yes” votes 63.9%-36.1% Wednesday morning, with 100% of the state’s precincts reporting, according to figures released by the Secretary of State’s Office.
Every major network and news organization called the race over less than an hour after polls closed at 8 p.m. Tuesday.
Total voter turnout was 9,176,526 statewide or 41.6% of the state’s total of more than 22 million registered voters. The “no” votes totaled 5,840,283, the “yes” votes 3,297,145.
In Los Angeles County, 70.85% of the voters said “no”—1,598,140 in all. Turnout was 39.77% of the county’s more than 5.6 million registered voters.
In Orange County, the “no” votes totaled 52.59% or 464,164 votes. The “yes” votes totaled 418,362. Turnout was 49% of the county’s more than 1.8 million voters.
Newsom, appearing weary from weeks of intense campaigning, spoke to supporters in Sacramento on Tuesday night and claimed victory, saying the resounding “no” vote was in support of democratic and progressive ideals and a rejection of cynical divisions.
“I want to focus on what we said yes to as a state,” Newsom said.
“We said yes to science. We said yes to vaccines. We said yes to ending this pandemic. We said yes to people’s right to vote without fear of fake fraud or voter suppression. […] We said yes to all those things that we hold dear as Californians, and I would argue as Americans—economic justice, social justice, racial justice, environmental justice. … All of those things were on the ballot this evening and so I’m humbled and grateful to the millions and millions of Californians who exercised their fundamental right to vote and expressed themselves so overwhelmingly by rejecting the division, by rejecting the cynicism.”
The recall ballot contained only two questions: should Newsom be recalled—removed—from office, and if so, which of the 46 candidates on the ballot or seven write-in candidates should replace him?
Newsom needed 50% or more voters to respond “no” to the first question to remain in office. With Newsom convincingly passing that mark, the second question was quickly deemed irrelevant.
“We said yes to all the those things that we hold dear as Californians, and I would argue as Americans—economic justice, social justice, racial justice, environmental justice… All of those things were on the ballot this evening and I’m so humbled and grateful.”
—Gov. Gavin Newsom
Had things gone differently, Republican talk-show host Larry Elder would have claimed the governor’s office. Elder drew 46.9% of the vote in the field of 46 replacement candidates, with Democrat Kevin Paffrath a distant second at 9.8% and Republican former San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer in third with 8.6%.
Faulconer, speaking before any results were in, positioned the recall as “a referendum on Gavin Newsom’s failure,” saying, “That’s why so many Californians not only signed the recall petition, but that’s why Californians in all parts of the state, all party registrations, are ready for a change at the top.”
But he quickly conceded defeat Tuesday night.
Elder was not so quick to concede, but he finally took the stage at his campaign-night party in Costa Mesa at 10 p.m. and admitted defeat.
“Let’s be gracious in defeat,” Elder told the crowd. “We may have lost the battle but we are going to win the war.”
He again rattled off criticisms of Newsom’s leadership, citing rising crime, rampant homelessness and lagging education.
President Joe Biden visited Southern California on Monday night to urge voters to reject the recall, citing Newsom’s record on the coronavirus pandemic, women’s rights, climate change and minimum wage.
“We need science, we need courage, we need leadership. We need Gavin Newsom,” Biden said during an approximately 15-minute address at Long Beach City College. “A governor who follows science, who’s got the courage to do what’s right.”
Elder is an outspoken opponent of government mandates—such as those requiring mask-wearing or receiving COVID vaccines—and had vowed to eliminate them immediately if elected.
Democratic National Committee Chairman Jaime Harrison issued a statement Tuesday night calling the vote an overwhelming victory for the party’s agenda.
“Once again, voters rejected the Republican Party’s denial of the pandemic sweeping our country and their subsequent refusal to address it, rejected Republicans’ disproved theories about our elections and rejected Republicans’ unwavering loyalty to the man who caused it all—Donald Trump,” Harrison said.
From afar, Trump had repeated his refrain of questioning the integrity of the recall election, suggesting without any evidence that the race was rigged—just as he did before and after he lost his presidential re-election bid to Biden.
In recent days, Elder picked up on that theme, with his campaign posting a link to an online election-fraud reporting website and the candidate himself refusing to say whether he would accept the results of the election.
With the victory, Newsom avoided the fate of former California Gov. Gray Davis, who was removed from office by recall in 2003. He was replaced by actor Arnold Schwarzenegger.