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Coconino County updating results from statewide primary elections; Crane, Rogers advance

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7:30 am Update: Several statewide races received significant updates overnight, from 33% to 97% of constituencies reported this morning.

In CD2, Republican Eli Crane looks set to take on Democrat Tom O’Halleran, who went out of the ballot in the primary. From his pool of seven Republican candidates, including Walt Blackman (19,127, 24.2%) and Mark Delgio (14,186, 17.9%), Crane won his 26,824 votes (33.9%). Williams Mayor John Moore finished a distant fifth.

Wendy Rogers (16,929 votes, 59%) fended off the Republican primary from Kerry Townsend (11,749 votes, 41%) in District 7, which includes Flagstaff, to Democratic Kyle Nitschke (who was not opposed in the primary) and We are going to fight. – At the November elections.

Most of the races were further cemented overnight with extra results, but one important change occurred: Kari Lake overtook Karin Taylor-Robson’s 9% lead at 10pm, now on the Republican side. Has a gubernatorial edge. She has 294,259 votes (46.2%) against Taylor Robson’s 282,935 votes (44.5%).

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10:30 PM Update: In CD2, Eli Crane leads by almost the same margin with 19,346 votes (33.5%). Walt Blackman holds his 2nd place (14,176, 24.5%) and Marc Delgio his 3rd place (10,241, 17.7%), with his other four candidates by a considerable margin. are separated by

Wendy Rogers’ lead increased slightly in LD7 with 10,271 votes (55.8%) compared to Kelly Townsend’s 8,128 votes (44.2%).

Original post: Arizona’s 2022 primary elections took place on Tuesday to determine candidates for county and city offices, as well as candidates for statewide representative offices.

The first unofficial results took place on Tuesday at 8:00 pm, one hour after the voting closed.

Results will be updated regularly until early Wednesday morning.

Coconino County has 92,988 registered voters. As of the first Tuesday update, the county reported a 17.41% turnout for her, with a total of 16,190 votes cast. As of the 8:00 pm update, none of its 75 districts have reported results.

Coconino County election results can be found here. results.arizona.vote/#/featured/32/3the results of federal and state elections are results.arizona.vote/#/featured/32/0.

Arizona

Incumbent Tom O’Halleran is running as an independent for the Democratic nomination for the Second District of Congress, with seven Republican candidates.

As of the first Tuesday update, Crane received the most votes (15,365 or 33.20%) among the Republican candidates, followed by Blackman (11,123 votes or 24.03%) and Delgio (8,610 or 18.60%). Continue. Yates (8.08%), Moore (6.77%), Christofiak (6.22%) and Watkins (3.10%) are less than his 10% of the total votes at the moment.

District 7 has two Republican candidates for state senators, incumbents Wendy Rogers and Kelly Townsend. Democrat Kyle Nitschke is his only candidate running.

As of Tuesday’s first update, Rogers leads with 55.14% (7,188 total votes), compared to Townsend’s total of 5,847 votes (44.86%).

Coconino County

Two Democrats are running for two-year terms on the County Oversight Board of District 2. Tommy Hernandez and incumbent Jeronimo Vazquez.

Vasquez leads with 67.39% of the votes as of Tuesday’s 8pm update. He has his 1,021 votes against Hernandez’s 494.

Many candidates run as independents in the Coconino County partisan office. Countywide positions include Democratic High Court Clerk Valerie Wyant and School Superintendent Sheryl Mango Padgett, a Democrat.

For Justice for Peace, Democrat Howard Grodman ran for Flagstaff as an independent, Republican Selina Katchen for Fredonia, Democrat Don Roberts for Page, and Republican Rob Crombin for Williams. ing. The Constable’s position was similarly unopposed, with Democrat Danny Thomas running for Flagstaff and Republican Gregory King running for Williams.

The county’s nonpartisan elections include several mayoral elections in addition to the Flagstaff election. These include Page’s Bill Diack and Rich Yankee, Williams’ independent Donald Dent, Fredona’s Kimley Purvis and Christy Riddle, Tusayan’s Brady Harris and Clarinda Vail, Sedona’s Kurt Gerbach and Sameer.・Includes Armstrong, Sandy Moriarty and Scott Jabrough.

In Page, Diack leads the mayoral race (354 votes, 63.67%), Lidl in Fredonia (43 votes, 50.59%), Tusayan in Vail (24 votes, 63.16%) and Jabro in Sedona (310 votes, or 45.52%).

Information about Coconino County elections is available at: coconino.az.gov/195/election.

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