Jump to content

2022 United States House of Representatives elections in California

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Nathan Magsig)

2022 United States House of Representatives elections in California

← 2020 November 8, 2022[1] 2024 →

All 52 California seats to the United States House of Representatives
  Majority party Minority party
 
Party Democratic Republican
Last election 42 11
Seats won 40 12
Seat change Decrease 2 Increase 1
Popular vote 6,743,737 3,859,666
Percentage 63.28% 36.22%
Swing Decrease 2.99% Increase 2.49%

The 2022 United States House of Representatives elections in California were held on November 8, 2022, to elect representatives for the 52 seats in California (reduced from 53 in the redistricting cycle following the 2020 United States census). This marked the first time in the state's history where it lost a seat.[2]

This was the second election using congressional districts drawn by the California Citizens Redistricting Commission (after 2012 following the 2010 census). The commission submitted the final maps to the California Secretary of State on December 27, 2021.[3] These new districts are considered "enacted" as of December 27, 2021. However, there was a 90-day period that ended on March 27, 2022, for any referendum petition to be filed to prevent the maps from becoming effective. Even after becoming effective, these newly redrawn districts did not become official until the 2022 primary and general elections, and the new districts will not actually exist until the 2023 inaugurations.[4]

Of the fifty-three incumbents, six retired. All remaining incumbents were re-elected, and five new representatives were elected, two of which were from newly drawn districts.

Overview

[edit]

Statewide

[edit]
United States House of Representatives elections in California, 2022
primary election — June 7, 2022
Party Votes Percentage Candidates Advancing to general Seats contesting
Democratic 4,272,322 61.95 115 58 52
Republican 2,525,467 36.62 124 45 45
No party preference 65,986 0.96 19 0 0
Green 26,314 0.38 3 1 1
Peace and Freedom 3,343 0.05 1 0 0
Libertarian 1,836 0.03 1 0 0
American Independent 1,460 0.02 1 0 0
Totals 6,896,728 100.00 264 104
Popular vote
Democratic
63.28%
Republican
36.22%
Green
0.50%
House seats
Democratic
76.92%
Republican
23.08%

District

[edit]

Results of the 2022 United States House of Representatives elections in California by district:

District Democratic Republican Green Total Result
Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes %
District 1 93,386 37.93% 152,839 62.07% 0 0.00% 246,225 100.0% Republican hold
District 2 229,720 74.40% 79,029 25.60% 0 0.00% 308,749 100.0% Democratic hold
District 3 156,761 46.35% 181,438 53.65% 0 0.00% 338,199 100.0% Republican hold
District 4 176,900 67.80% 84,007 32.20% 0 0.00% 260,907 100.0% Democratic hold
District 5 109,506 38.69% 173,524 61.31% 0 0.00% 283,030 100.0% Republican hold
District 6 121,058 55.95% 95,325 44.05% 0 0.00% 216,383 100.0% Democratic hold
District 7 150,618 68.26% 70,033 31.74% 0 0.00% 220,651 100.0% Democratic hold
District 8 145,501 75.73% 46,634 24.27% 0 0.00% 192,135 100.0% Democratic hold
District 9 95,598 54.82% 78,802 45.18% 0 0.00% 174,400 100.0% Democratic hold
District 10 198,415 78.93% 0 0.00% 52,965 21.07% 251,380 100.0% Democratic hold
District 11 220,848 83.95% 42,217 16.05% 0 0.00% 263,065 100.0% Democratic hold
District 12 217,110 90.47% 22,859 9.53% 0 0.00% 239,969 100.0% Democratic hold
District 13 66,496 49.79% 67,060 50.21% 0 0.00% 133,556 100.0% Republican gain
District 14 137,612 69.34% 60,852 30.66% 0 0.00% 198,464 100.0% Democratic hold
District 15 194,874 100.00% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 194,874 100.0% Democratic hold
District 16 241,007 100.00% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 241,007 100.0% Democratic hold
District 17 127,853 70.93% 52,400 29.07% 0 0.00% 180,253 100.0% Democratic hold
District 18 99,776 65.85% 51,737 34.15% 0 0.00% 151,513 100.0% Democratic hold
District 19 194,494 68.65% 88,816 31.35% 0 0.00% 283,310 100.0% Democratic hold
District 20 74,934 32.75% 153,847 67.25% 0 0.00% 228,776 100.0% Republican hold
District 21 68,074 54.18% 57,573 45.82% 0 0.00% 125,647 100.0% Democratic hold
District 22 49,862 48.48% 52,994 51.52% 0 0.00% 102,852 100.0% Republican hold
District 23 65,908 38.97% 103,197 61.03% 0 0.00% 169,105 100.0% Republican hold
District 24 159,019 60.57% 103,533 39.43% 0 0.00% 262,552 100.0% Democratic hold
District 25 87,641 57.38% 65,101 42.62% 0 0.00% 152,742 100.0% Democratic hold
District 26 134,575 54.53% 112,214 45.47% 0 0.00% 246,789 100.0% Democratic hold
District 27 91,892 46.76% 104,624 53.24% 0 0.00% 196,516 100.0% Republican hold
District 28 150,062 66.24% 76,495 33.76% 0 0.00% 226,557 100.0% Democratic hold
District 29 119,435 100.00% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 119,435 100.0% Democratic hold
District 30 211,068 100.00% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 211,068 100.0% Democratic hold
District 31 91,472 59.54% 62,153 40.46% 0 0.00% 153,625 100.0% Democratic hold
District 32 167,411 69.17% 74,618 30.83% 0 0.00% 242,029 100.0% Democratic hold
District 33 76,588 57.71% 56,119 42.29% 0 0.00% 132,707 100.0% Democratic hold
District 34 121,467 100.00% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 121,467 100.0% Democratic hold
District 35 75,121 57.36% 55,832 42.64% 0 0.00% 130,953 100.0% Democratic hold
District 36 194,299 69.75% 84,264 30.25% 0 0.00% 278,563 100.0% Democratic hold
District 37 131,880 100.00% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 131,880 100.0% Democratic hold
District 38 101,260 58.09% 73,051 41.91% 0 0.00% 174,311 100.0% Democratic hold
District 39 75,896 57.67% 55,701 42.33% 0 0.00% 131,597 100.0% Democratic hold
District 40 122,722 43.16% 161,589 56.84% 0 0.00% 284,311 100.0% Republican hold
District 41 112,769 47.65% 123,869 52.35% 0 0.00% 236,638 100.0% Republican hold
District 42 99,217 68.37% 45,903 31.63% 0 0.00% 145,120 100.0% Democratic hold
District 43 95,462 77.33% 27,985 22.67% 0 0.00% 123,447 100.0% Democratic hold
District 44 100,160 72.21% 38,554 27.79% 0 0.00% 138,714 100.0% Democratic hold
District 45 103,466 47.59% 113,960 52.41% 0 0.00% 217,426 100.0% Republican hold
District 46 78,041 61.79% 48,257 38.21% 0 0.00% 126,298 100.0% Democratic hold
District 47 137,374 51.72% 128,261 48.28% 0 0.00% 265,635 100.0% Democratic hold
District 48 101,900 39.64% 155,171 60.36% 0 0.00% 257,071 100.0% Republican hold
District 49 153,541 52.63% 138,194 47.37% 0 0.00% 291,735 100.0% Democratic hold
District 50 168,816 62.84% 99,819 37.16% 0 0.00% 268,635 100.0% Democratic hold
District 51 144,186 61.86% 88,886 38.14% 0 0.00% 233,072 100.0% Democratic hold
District 52 100,686 66.67% 50,330 33.33% 0 0.00% 151,016 100.0% Democratic hold
Total 6,743,737 63.28% 3,859,666 36.22% 52,965 0.50% 10,656,368 100.0%

District 1

[edit]
2022 California's 1st congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Doug LaMalfa Max Steiner
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 152,839 93,386
Percentage 62.1% 37.9%

County results
LaMalfa:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%

U.S. Representative before election

Doug LaMalfa
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Doug LaMalfa
Republican

Republican Doug LaMalfa, who had represented the district since 2013, was re-elected with 57.0% of the vote in 2020.[5] LaMalfa was running for re-election.

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Tim Geist (Republican), biopsychology researcher[8]
  • Rose Penelope Yee (no party preference), businesswoman[8]

Endorsements

[edit]
Doug LaMalfa

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid R December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid R December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe R January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid R April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe R June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid R July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid R July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid R June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe R September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 1st congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Doug LaMalfa (incumbent) 96,858 57.1
Democratic Max Steiner 55,549 32.8
Republican Tim Geist 11,408 6.7
No party preference Rose Penelope Yee 5,777 3.4
Total votes 169,592 100.0
General election
Republican Doug LaMalfa (incumbent) 152,839 62.1
Democratic Max Steiner 93,386 37.9
Total votes 246,225 100.0
Republican hold

District 2

[edit]
2022 California's 2nd congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Jared Huffman Douglas Brower
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 229,720 79,029
Percentage 74.4% 25.6%

County results
Huffman:      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%
Brower:      50–60%

U.S. Representative before election

Jared Huffman
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Jared Huffman
Democratic

Democrat Jared Huffman, who had represented the district since 2013, was re-elected with 75.7% of the vote in 2020.[5]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Chris Coulombe (Republican), businessman[22]
  • Darian Elizondo (Republican), business owner[24]
  • Beth Hampson (Democratic), educator[25]
  • Archimedes Ramirez (Republican), neurosurgeon[22]

Endorsements

[edit]
Douglas Brower (R)

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Safe D November 3, 2022
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 2nd congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Jared Huffman (incumbent) 145,245 68.7
Republican Douglas Brower 18,102 8.6
Republican Chris Coulombe 17,498 8.3
Democratic Beth Hampson 14,262 6.7
Republican Archimedes Ramirez 12,202 5.8
Republican Darian J. Elizondo 4,012 1.9
Total votes 211,321 100.0
General election
Democratic Jared Huffman (incumbent) 229,720 74.4
Republican Douglas Brower 79,029 25.6
Total votes 308,749 100.0
Democratic hold

District 3

[edit]
2022 California's 3rd congressional district election

2024 →
 
Candidate Kevin Kiley Kermit Jones
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 181,438 156,761
Percentage 53.6% 46.4%

County results
Kiley:      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%
Jones:      50–60%      60–70%

U.S. Representative before election

None (new seat)

Elected U.S. Representative

Kevin Kiley
Republican

This seat was open after Democrat John Garamendi, who had represented the 3rd district since 2013, opted to run in the 8th district.[5]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Withdrew

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Likely R December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Likely R December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Likely R January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Likely R November 7, 2022
RCP[15] Likely R June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Likely R August 22, 2022
DDHQ[17] Likely R July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid R October 19, 2022
The Economist[19] Likely R September 7, 2022

Polling

[edit]
Hypothetical polling

Scott Jones vs. Kevin Kiley

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Scott
Jones
(R)
Kevin
Kiley
(R)
Undecided
Public Opinion Strategies (R)[42][b][A] May 10–12, 2022 350 (LV) ± 5.2% 13% 28% 59%

Results

[edit]
California's 3rd congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Kevin Kiley 93,552 39.7
Democratic Kermit Jones 91,217 38.7
Republican Scott Jones 38,288 16.2
Democratic David Peterson 12,675 5.4
Total votes 235,732 100.0
General election
Republican Kevin Kiley 181,438 53.6
Democratic Kermit Jones 156,761 46.4
Total votes 338,199 100.0
Republican win (new seat)

District 4

[edit]
2022 California's 4th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Mike Thompson Matt Brock
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 176,900 84,007
Percentage 67.8% 32.2%

Block Group results
Thompson:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%      90-100%
Brock:      50-60%      60-70%
No results:      

U.S. Representative before election

Mike Thompson
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Mike Thompson
Democratic

The boundaries of the district were redrawn during the 2020 redistricting cycle and incumbent Tom McClintock opted to run in the 5th district.[43] Democrat Mike Thompson, who had represented the 5th district since 2013, was re-elected with 76.1% of the vote in 2020.[5]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]
  • Matt Brock (Republican), water utility supervisor[44]
  • Mike Thompson (Democratic), incumbent U.S. Representative[45]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Andrew Engdahl (Democratic), community organizer and business leader[46]
  • Scott Giblin (Republican), information services technician and runner-up for this district in 2020[47][48]
  • Jimih Jones (Republican), parts advisor[49]
  • Jason Kishineff (no party preference), homemaker[49]

Endorsements

[edit]
Matt Brock (R)

Organizations

Mike Thompson (D)

U.S. senators

Organizations

Labor unions

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 4th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Mike Thompson (incumbent) 115,041 66.2
Republican Matt Brock 28,260 16.3
Republican Scott Giblin 16,914 9.7
Democratic Andrew Engdahl 8,634 5.0
No party preference Jason Kishineff 2,477 1.4
Republican Jimih L. Jones 2,363 1.4
No party preference Seth T. Newman (write-in) 15 0.0
Total votes 173,704 100.0
General election
Democratic Mike Thompson (incumbent) 176,900 67.8
Republican Matt Brock 84,007 32.2
Total votes 260,907 100.0
Democratic hold

District 5

[edit]
2022 California's 5th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Tom McClintock Michael J. Barkley
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 173,524 109,506
Percentage 61.3% 38.7%

County results
McClintock:      50-60%      60-70%

U.S. Representative before election

Tom McClintock
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Tom McClintock
Republican

Due to redistricting, the incumbent changed from Democrat Mike Thompson to Republican Devin Nunes. Nunes initially ran for re-election, but resigned his seat on January 1, 2022, in order to become the CEO of Trump Media & Technology Group. After this, fellow Republican Tom McClintock switched to running in this district. McClintock, who had represented the 4th district since 2009, was re-elected with 55.9% of the vote in 2020.[5]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]
  • Michael J. Barkley (Democratic), lawyer[8]
  • Tom McClintock (Republican), incumbent U.S. Representative[37]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Withdrew

[edit]

Declined

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Tom McClintock (R)

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid R December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid R December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe R January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid R April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe R June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid R July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid R July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid R June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe R September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 5th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Tom McClintock (incumbent) 87,010 45.5
Democratic Michael J. Barkley 64,285 33.6
Republican Nathan F. Magsig 25,299 13.2
No party preference Steve Wozniak 6,045 3.2
Republican David Main 5,927 3.1
Republican Kelsten Charles Obert 2,864 1.5
Total votes 191,430 100.0
General election
Republican Tom McClintock (incumbent) 173,524 61.3
Democratic Michael J. Barkley 109,506 38.7
Total votes 283,030 100.0
Republican hold

District 6

[edit]
2022 California's 6th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Ami Bera Tamika Hamilton
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 121,058 95,325
Percentage 55.9% 44.1%

U.S. Representative before election

Ami Bera
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Ami Bera
Democratic

Due to redistricting, 6th district incumbent Ami Bera and 7th district incumbent Doris Matsui, both Democrats, swapped districts. Bera, who had represented the 7th district since 2013, was re-elected with 56.6% of the vote in 2020.[5]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Chris Bish (Republican), realtor and small business owner[81][82]
  • Karla Black (Republican)[8]
  • Bret Daniels (Republican), Citrus Heights city councilor[83]
  • Mark Gorman (Democratic), retail worker[8]
  • D. Keith Langford Jr. (Republican)[8]

Endorsements

[edit]
Tamika Hamilton (R)

Organizations

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Likely D November 7, 2022
RCP[15] Likely D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D October 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Likely D November 1, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 6th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Ami Bera (incumbent) 76,317 52.6
Republican Tamika Hamilton 27,339 18.8
Republican Bret Daniels 16,612 11.5
Republican Christine Bish 11,421 7.9
Democratic Mark Gorman 7,528 5.2
Republican Karla Black 3,553 2.4
Republican D. Keith Langford, Jr. 2,272 1.6
Green Chris Richardson (write-in) 15 0.0
Total votes 145,057 100.0
General election
Democratic Ami Bera (incumbent) 121,058 55.9
Republican Tamika Hamilton 95,325 44.1
Total votes 216,383 100.0
Democratic hold

District 7

[edit]
2022 California's 7th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Doris Matsui Max Semenenko
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 150,618 70,033
Percentage 68.3% 31.7%

U.S. Representative before election

Doris Matsui
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Doris Matsui
Democratic

Due to redistricting, 6th district incumbent Ami Bera and 7th district incumbent Doris Matsui, both Democrats, swapped districts. Matsui, who had represented the 6th district since 2013, was re-elected with 73.3% of the vote in 2020.[5]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]
  • Doris Matsui (Democratic), incumbent U.S. Representative[78]
  • Max Semenenko (Republican), small business owner[86]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Withdrawn

[edit]
  • Mathew Ray Jedeikin (Democratic)[88]

Endorsements

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 7th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Doris Matsui (incumbent) 94,896 63.2
Republican Max Semenenko 42,728 28.5
Democratic Jimmy Fremgen 12,550 8.3
Total votes 150,174 100.0
General election
Democratic Doris Matsui (incumbent) 150,618 68.3
Republican Max Semenenko 70,033 31.7
Total votes 220,651 100.0
Democratic hold

District 8

[edit]
2022 California's 8th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate John Garamendi Rudy Recile
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 145,501 46,634
Percentage 75.7% 24.3%

U.S. Representative before election

John Garamendi
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

John Garamendi
Democratic

Due to redistricting, the incumbent changed from Republican Jay Obernolte to Democrat John Garamendi. Garamendi, who had represented the 3rd district since 2013, was re-elected with 54.7% of the vote in 2020.[5] Garamendi was running for re-election.

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Christopher Riley (Democratic), teacher[92]
  • Edwin Rutsch (Democratic), community organizer[92]
  • Cheryl Sudduth (Democratic), vice president of the West County Wastewater District board of directors[92]

Disqualified

[edit]

Withdrew

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Rudy Recile (R)

Organizations

Tamika Hamilton (R) (withdrew)

Organizations

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 8th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic John Garamendi (incumbent) 72,333 63.1
Republican Rudy Recile 23,518 20.5
Democratic Cheryl Sudduth 11,378 9.9
Democratic Christopher Riley 3,926 3.4
Democratic Edwin Rutsch 3,268 2.9
Democratic Demnlus Johnson (write-in) 234 0.2
Total votes 114,657 100.0
General election
Democratic John Garamendi (incumbent) 145,501 75.7
Republican Rudy Recile 46,634 24.3
Total votes 192,135 100.0
Democratic hold

District 9

[edit]
2022 California's 9th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Josh Harder Tom Patti
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 95,598 78,802
Percentage 54.8% 45.2%

U.S. Representative before election

Jerry McNerney (Democrat)
Josh Harder (Democrat)

Elected U.S. Representative

Josh Harder (Democrat)

Democrat Jerry McNerney, who had represented the district since 2013, was re-elected with 57.6% of the vote in 2020.[5] McNerney decided to retire rather than seek re-election, and fellow Democrat Josh Harder then switched to run in this district.[96]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Mark Andrews (no party preference), businessman
  • Harpreet Chima (Democratic), union organizer and researcher[98][25]
  • Karena Feng (Democratic), political consultant[99]
  • Khalid Jafri (Democratic), engineer and farmer
  • Jonathan Madison (Republican), business owner and former staffer for U.S. Representative
  • Jim Shoemaker (Republican), businessman

Declined

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Lean D November 1, 2022
Inside Elections[12] Likely D July 15, 2022
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Lean D July 13, 2022
Politico[14] Lean D August 12, 2022
RCP[15] Tossup October 27, 2022
Fox News[16] Lean D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Likely D July 20, 2022
538[18] Likely D November 5, 2022
The Economist[19] Likely D September 7, 2022

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Josh
Harder (D)
Tom
Patti (R)
Other Undecided
RMG Research[107] July 19–26, 2022 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 38% 38% 3% 21%

Results

[edit]
California's 9th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Josh Harder (incumbent) 39,026 36.7
Republican Tom Patti 30,843 29.0
Republican Jim Shoemaker 15,443 14.5
Democratic Harpreet Chima 8,433 7.9
Republican Jonathan Madison 5,992 5.6
Democratic Khalid Jafri 3,174 3.0
Democratic Karena Feng 2,632 2.5
No party preference Mark Andrews 758 0.7
Total votes 106,301 100.0
General election
Democratic Josh Harder (incumbent) 95,598 54.8
Republican Tom Patti 78,802 45.2
Total votes 174,400 100.0
Democratic hold

District 10

[edit]
2022 California's 10th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Mark DeSaulnier Michael Kerr
Party Democratic Green
Popular vote 198,415 52,965
Percentage 78.9% 21.1%

U.S. Representative before election

Mark DeSaulnier
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Mark DeSaulnier
Democratic

Due to redistricting, the incumbent changed from Democrat Josh Harder to fellow Democrat Mark DeSaulnier. DeSaulnier, who had represented the 11th district since 2015, was re-elected with 73.0% of the vote in 2020.[5] DeSaulnier was running for re-election.

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 10th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Mark DeSaulnier (incumbent) 124,787 84.0
Green Michael Ernest Kerr 22,210 14.9
Republican Katherine Piccinini (write-in) 1,638 1.1
Total votes 148,635 100.0
General election
Democratic Mark DeSaulnier (incumbent) 198,415 78.9
Green Michael Ernest Kerr 52,965 21.1
Total votes 251,380 100.0
Democratic hold

District 11

[edit]
2022 California's 11th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Nancy Pelosi John Dennis
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 220,848 42,217
Percentage 84.0% 16.0%

U.S. Representative before election

Nancy Pelosi
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Nancy Pelosi
Democratic

Due to redistricting, the incumbent changed from Democrat Mark DeSaulnier to fellow Democrat Nancy Pelosi. Pelosi, who had represented the 12th district since 2013, was re-elected with 77.6% of the vote in 2020.[5] Pelosi was running for re-election.

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Declined

[edit]
  • Joseph Roberts (Republican)[115]

Endorsements

[edit]
Shahid Buttar (D)

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 11th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Nancy Pelosi (incumbent) 133,798 71.7
Republican John Dennis 20,054 10.7
Democratic Shahid Buttar 19,471 10.4
Republican Eve Del Castello 7,319 3.9
Democratic Jeffrey Phillips 3,595 1.9
Democratic Bianca Von Krieg 2,499 1.3
Total votes 186,736 100.0
General election
Democratic Nancy Pelosi (incumbent) 220,848 84.0
Republican John Dennis 42,217 16.0
Total votes 263,065 100.0
Democratic hold

District 12

[edit]
2022 California's 12th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Barbara Lee Stephen Slauson
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 217,110 22,859
Percentage 90.5% 9.5%

Block Group results
Lee:      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%      90-100%
No results:      

U.S. Representative before election

Barbara Lee
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Barbara Lee
Democratic

Due to redistricting, the incumbent changed from Democrat Nancy Pelosi to fellow Democrat Barbara Lee. Lee, who had represented the 13th district since 2013, was re-elected with 90.4% of the vote in 2020.[5] Lee was running for re-election.

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]
  • Barbara Lee (Democratic), incumbent U.S. Representative[119]
  • Stephen Slauson (Republican), electrical engineer[109]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Glenn Kaplan (no party preference), small business owner[109]
  • Ned Nuerge (Republican), retired driving instructor[109]
  • Eric Wilson (Democratic), nonprofit organization employee[109]

Endorsements

[edit]

General election

[edit]

Prediction

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 12th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Barbara Lee (incumbent) 135,892 87.7
Republican Stephen Slauson 8,274 5.3
No party preference Glenn Kaplan 5,141 3.3
Democratic Eric Wilson 3,753 2.4
Republican Ned Nuerge 1,902 1.2
Total votes 154,962 100.0
General election
Democratic Barbara Lee (incumbent) 217,110 90.5
Republican Stephen Slauson 22,859 9.5
Total votes 239,969 100.0
Democratic hold

District 13

[edit]
2022 California's 13th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate John Duarte Adam Gray
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 67,060 66,496
Percentage 50.2% 49.8%

Block Group results
Duarte:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%      90-100%
Gray:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      90-100%

U.S. Representative before election

None (New seat)

Elected U.S. Representative

John Duarte
Republican

Due to redistricting, the incumbent changed from Democrat Barbara Lee to fellow Democrat Josh Harder. Harder, who had represented the 10th district since 2019, was re-elected with 55.2% of the vote in 2020.[5] Harder was running for re-election in District 9, leaving this seat open.[122] On December 2, the race was called for Duarte, leading with a margin of 564 raw votes.[123]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Withdrew

[edit]

Declined

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Adam Gray (D)

Federal officials

State officials

Organizations

Phil Arballo (D)

Individuals

Organizations

Labor unions

General election

[edit]

Debates and forums

[edit]
2022 California's 13th congressional district general election debates and forums
No. Date Host Moderator Link Participants
 P  Participant   A  Absent   N  Non-invitee   I  Invitee W  Withdrawn
Gray Duarte
1[140] September 26, 2022 McClatchy Garth Stapley & Joe Kieta [141] P P

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Tossup June 28, 2022
Inside Elections[12] Tossup November 3, 2022
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Lean R (flip) November 7, 2022
Politico[14] Lean R (flip) November 7, 2022
RCP[15] Tossup June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Tossup July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Tossup October 17, 2022
538[18] Lean D October 19, 2022
The Economist[19] Lean D September 7, 2022

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Adam
Gray (D)
John
Duarte (R)
Other Undecided
Moore Information Group (R)[142][B] August 3–7, 2022 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 47% 43% 10%
RMG Research[143] July 26 – August 2, 2022 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 37% 37% 4% 23%
Hypothetical polling

Generic Democrat vs. generic Republican

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Generic
Democrat
Generic
Republican
Undecided
Public Policy Polling (D)[144][C] October 18, 2022 40% 37% 23%
Moore Information Group (R)[142][B] August 3–7, 2022 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 46% 43% 11%

Results

[edit]
California's 13th congressional district, 2022[20]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican John Duarte 26,163 34.2
Democratic Adam Gray 23,784 31.1
Democratic Phil Arballo 13,099 17.1
Republican David Giglio 11,320 14.8
Republican Diego Martinez 2,026 2.7
Total votes 76,392 100.0
General election
Republican John Duarte 67,060 50.2
Democratic Adam Gray 66,496 49.8
Total votes 133,556 100.0
Republican gain from Democratic

District 14

[edit]
2022 California's 14th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Eric Swalwell Alison Hayden
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 137,612 60,852
Percentage 69.3% 30.7%

Block Group results
Swalwell:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%
Hayden:      50-60%      60-70%

U.S. Representative before election

Eric Swalwell
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Eric Swalwell
Democratic

Due to redistricting, 14th district incumbent Jackie Speier and 15th district incumbent Eric Swalwell, both Democrats, swapped districts. Swalwell, who had represented the 15th district since 2013, was re-elected with 70.9% of the vote in 2020.[5]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Sri "Steve" Iyer (Republican), international renewables executive[109]
  • James Peters (Democrat), team builder and waiter
  • Liam Miguel Simard (no party preference)[109]
  • Major Singh (no party preference)[109]
  • Tom Wong (Republican), small business owner[109]

Endorsements

[edit]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 14th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Eric Swalwell (incumbent) 77,120 63.6
Republican Alison Hayden 12,503 10.3
Republican Tom Wong 11,406 9.4
Republican Sri "Steve" Iyer 10,829 8.9
Democratic James Peters 6,216 5.1
No party preference Major Singh 2,495 2.1
No party preference Liam Miguel Simard 657 0.5
Total votes 121,226 100.0
General election
Democratic Eric Swalwell (incumbent) 137,612 69.3
Republican Alison Hayden 60,852 30.7
Total votes 198,464 100.0
Democratic hold

District 15

[edit]
2022 California's 15th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Kevin Mullin David Canepa
Party Democratic Democratic
Popular vote 108,077 86,797
Percentage 55.5% 44.5%

U.S. Representative before election

Jackie Speier
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Kevin Mullin
Democratic

Due to redistricting, 14th district incumbent Jackie Speier and 15th district incumbent Eric Swalwell, both Democrats, swapped districts. Jackie Speier, who had represented the 14th district since 2013, was re-elected with 79.3% of the vote in 2020.[5] In November 2021, Speier announced that she would not seek reelection after her next term.[148]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Emily Beach (Democratic), Burlingame city councilmember and U.S. Army veteran[151]
  • Jim Garety (no party preference), security safety manager[109]
  • Gus Mattammal (Republican), math teacher[152]
  • Ferenc Pataki (no party preference), realtor[109]
  • Andrew Watters (Democratic), attorney[152]

Declined

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Emily Beach (D)

Organizations

David Canepa (D)

Municipal officials

Kevin Mullin (D)

U.S. representatives

State officials

State legislators

County officials

Organizations

Labor unions

Primary election

[edit]

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Emily
Beach (D)
David
Canepa (D)
Jim
Garrity (I)
Gus
Mattamal (R)
Kevin
Mullin (D)
Ferenc
Pataki (I)
Andrew
Watters (D)
Other Undecided
RMG Research[163] May 19–20, 2022 500 (LV) ± 4.5% 4% 9% 16% 16% 54%
FM3 Research (D)[164][D] Mar 27–30, 2022 427 (LV) ± 4.9% 8% 17% 3% 9% 31% 5% 1% 27%
Tulchin Research (D)[165][E] Feb 1–6, 2022 500 (LV) ± 4.4% 7% 19% 13% 17% 2% 43%

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 15th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Kevin Mullin 58,806 41.1
Democratic David Canepa 34,488 24.1
Republican Gus Mattammal 23,625 16.5
Democratic Emily Beach 20,816 14.6
No party preference Jim Garrity 3,081 2.2
Democratic Andrew G. Watters 1,551 1.1
No party preference Ferenc Pataki 671 0.5
Total votes 143,038 100.0
General election
Democratic Kevin Mullin 108,077 55.5
Democratic David Canepa 86,797 44.5
Total votes 194,874 100.0
Democratic hold

District 16

[edit]
2022 California's 16th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Anna Eshoo Rishi Kumar
Party Democratic Democratic
Popular vote 139,235 101,772
Percentage 57.8% 42.2%

Block Group results
Eshoo:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%
Kumar:      50-60%      90-100%
No results:      

U.S. Representative before election

Anna Eshoo
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Anna Eshoo
Democratic

Due to redistricting, the incumbent changed from Democrat Jim Costa to fellow Democrat Anna Eshoo. Eshoo, who had represented the 18th district since 2013, was re-elected with 63.2% of the vote in 2020.[5]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Richard Fox (Republican), attorney and physician[109]
  • John Fredrich (no party preference), teacher[109]
  • Peter Ohtaki (Republican), former mayor of Menlo Park[167]
  • Ajwang Rading (Democratic), attorney[167]
  • Benjamin Solomon (Republican), fintech startup owner[109]
  • Greg Tanaka (Democratic), Palo Alto city councilor[168]

Endorsements

[edit]
Greg Tanaka (D)

Organizations

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 16th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Anna Eshoo (incumbent) 81,100 47.9
Democratic Rishi Kumar 26,438 15.6
Republican Peter Ohtaki 21,354 12.6
Republican Richard Fox 13,187 7.8
Democratic Ajwang Rading 11,418 6.7
Democratic Greg Tanaka 11,107 6.6
Republican Benjamin Solomon 2,659 1.6
No party preference John Fredrich 2,120 1.3
Democratic Travis Odekirk (write-in) 2 0.0
Total votes 169,385 100.0
General election
Democratic Anna Eshoo (incumbent) 139,235 57.8
Democratic Rishi Kumar 101,772 42.2
Total votes 241,007 100.0
Democratic hold

District 17

[edit]
2022 California's 17th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Ro Khanna Ritesh Tandon
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 127,853 52,400
Percentage 70.9% 29.1%

Block Group results
Khanna:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%
Tandon:      90-100%
No results:      

U.S. Representative before election

Ro Khanna
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Ro Khanna
Democratic

Democrat Ro Khanna, who had represented the district since 2017, was re-elected with 71.3% of the vote in 2020.[5] Khanna was running for re-election.

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]
  • Ro Khanna (Democratic), incumbent U.S. Representative[119]
  • Ritesh Tandon (Republican), researcher, entrepreneur, and CEO[109]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Joe Dehn (Libertarian), square dance caller
  • Stephen Forbes (Democratic), accountant[109]
  • Rao Ravul (Democratic), investor and businessman[109]

Endorsements

[edit]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 17th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Ro Khanna (incumbent) 74,892 66.0
Republican Ritesh Tandon 28,730 25.3
Democratic Stephen Forbes 5,694 5.0
Democratic Rao Ravul 2,394 2.1
Libertarian Joe Dehn 1,836 1.6
Total votes 113,546 100.0
General election
Democratic Ro Khanna (incumbent) 127,853 70.9
Republican Ritesh Tandon 52,400 29.1
Total votes 180,253 100.0
Democratic hold

District 18

[edit]
2022 California's 18th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Zoe Lofgren Peter Hernandez
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 99,776 51,737
Percentage 65.9% 34.1%

Block Group results
Lofgren:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%
Hernandez:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      90-100%
Tie:      50%
No results:      

U.S. Representative before election

Zoe Lofgren
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Zoe Lofgren
Democratic

Due to redistricting, the incumbent changed from Democrat Anna Eshoo to fellow Democrat Zoe Lofgren. Lofgren, who had represented the 19th district since 2013, was re-elected with 71.7% of the vote in 2020.[5] Lofgren was running for re-election.

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Luis Acevedo-Arreguin (Democratic), U.S. citizenship instructor[109]

Endorsements

[edit]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 18th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Zoe Lofgren (incumbent) 50,104 56.1
Republican Peter Hernandez 27,935 31.3
Democratic Luis Acevedo-Arreguin 11,253 12.6
Total votes 89,292 100.0
General election
Democratic Zoe Lofgren (incumbent) 99,776 65.9
Republican Peter Hernandez 51,737 34.1
Total votes 151,513 100.0
Democratic hold

District 19

[edit]
2022 California's 19th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Jimmy Panetta Jeff Gorman
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 194,494 88,816
Percentage 68.7% 31.3%

U.S. Representative before election

Jimmy Panetta
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Jimmy Panetta
Democratic

Due to redistricting, the incumbent changed from Democrat Zoe Lofgren to fellow Democrat Jimmy Panetta. Panetta, who had represented the 20th district since 2017, was re-elected with 76.8% of the vote in 2020.[5]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Douglas Deitch (Democratic), water policy CEO[109]
  • Dalila Epperson (Republican), community organizer and retired nurse[172][25]

Endorsements

[edit]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 19th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Jimmy Panetta (incumbent) 127,545 67.3
Republican Jeff Gorman 44,181 23.3
Republican Dalila Epperson 12,082 6.4
Democratic Douglas Deitch 5,700 3.0
Total votes 189,508 100.0
General election
Democratic Jimmy Panetta (incumbent) 194,494 68.7
Republican Jeff Gorman 88,816 31.3
Total votes 283,310 100.0
Democratic hold

District 20

[edit]
2022 California's 20th congressional district election

 
Candidate Kevin McCarthy Marisa Wood
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 153,847 74,934
Percentage 67.2% 32.8%

County results
McCarthy:      60–70%

U.S. Representative before election

Kevin McCarthy
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Kevin McCarthy
Republican

Due to redistricting, the incumbent changed from Democrat Jimmy Panetta to Republicans Kevin McCarthy and Connie Conway. McCarthy, who had represented the 23rd district since 2013, was re-elected with 62.1% of the vote in 2020.[5][173] Conway, who was elected in a 2022 special election to replace Devin Nunes after his resignation to become CEO of Trump Media & Technology Group, declined to run for a full term.[63][174]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • James Davis (Republican), engineer, economist, and author[109]
  • Ben Dewell (Democratic), photographer[176]
  • James Macaulay (Republican), retired accountant[109]

Withdrawn

[edit]

Declined

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Kevin McCarthy

Executive branch officials

Organizations

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid R December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid R December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe R January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid R April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe R June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid R July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid R July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid R June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe R September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 20th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Kevin McCarthy (incumbent) 85,748 61.3
Democratic Marisa Wood 33,511 24.0
Democratic Ben Dewell 8,757 6.3
Republican James Davis 6,382 4.6
Republican James Macaulay 5,488 3.9
Total votes 139,886 100.0
General election
Republican Kevin McCarthy (incumbent) 153,847 67.2
Democratic Marisa Wood 74,934 32.8
Total votes 228,781 100.0
Republican hold

District 21

[edit]
2022 California's 21st congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Jim Costa Michael Maher
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 68,074 57,573
Percentage 54.2% 45.8%

U.S. Representative before election

Jim Costa
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Jim Costa
Democratic

Due to redistricting, the incumbent changed from Republican David Valadao to Democrat Jim Costa, who had represented the 16th district since 2013, was re-elected with 59.4% of the vote in 2020.[5] Costa was running for re-election.

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]
  • Jim Costa (Democratic), incumbent U.S. Representative[184]
  • Michael Maher (Republican), aviation business owner[109]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Eric Garcia (Democratic), therapist[109]
  • Matt Stoll (Republican), small business owner[109]

Withdrew

[edit]
  • Nathan Brown (Republican), attorney[185]

Endorsements

[edit]
Jim Costa (D)

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D September 29, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Likely D October 7, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D October 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Jim
Costa (D)
Michael
Maher (R)
Undecided
The Trafalgar Group (R)[186] September 30 – October 3, 2022 515 (LV) ± 4.2% 44% 44% 12%

Results

[edit]
California's 21st congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Jim Costa (incumbent) 33,850 47.0
Republican Michael Maher 19,040 26.4
Republican Matt Stoll 11,931 16.6
Democratic Eric Garcia 7,239 10.0
Total votes 72,060 100.0
General election
Democratic Jim Costa (incumbent) 68,074 54.2
Republican Michael Maher 57,573 45.8
Total votes 125,647 100.0
Democratic hold

District 22

[edit]
2022 California's 22nd congressional district election

2024 →
 
Candidate David Valadao Rudy Salas
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 52,994 49,862
Percentage 51.5% 48.5%

Block Group results
Valadao:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%      90-100%
Salas:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%      90-100%
Tie:      50%
No results:      

U.S. Representative before election

David Valadao
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

David Valadao
Republican

Due to redistricting, the incumbent changed from Republican Connie Conway to fellow Republican David Valadao. Conway replaced Devin Nunes, who resigned in December 2021 to become CEO of Trump Media & Technology Group, in a 2022 special election.[63] Conway declined to run for reelection.[174] Valadao, who had represented the 21st district since 2021, was elected with 50.4% of the vote in 2020.[5] Valadao was running for re-election. He was one of two House Republicans who voted to impeach Donald Trump during Trump's second impeachment who survived the primary election, along with Dan Newhouse of Washington.

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Withdrew

[edit]

Declined

[edit]
  • TJ Cox (Democratic), former U.S. Representative (2019–2021) (endorsed Salas)[194]

Endorsements

[edit]
Bryan Osorio (D) (withdrew)
Rudy Salas (D)

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Tossup December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Tossup December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Lean R November 7, 2022
Politico[14] Tossup April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Tossup June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Tossup July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Lean R October 17, 2022
538[18] Lean R November 8, 2022
The Economist[19] Tossup September 7, 2022

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
David
Valadao (R)
Rudy
Salas (D)
Other Undecided
RMG Research[202] July 30 – August 5, 2022 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 34% 39% 13% 14%
David Binder Research (D)[203][F] July 13–15, 2022 600 (LV) ± 4.0% 35% 43% 22%

Results

[edit]
California's 22nd congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Rudy Salas 25,337 45.2
Republican David Valadao (incumbent) 14,331 25.6
Republican Chris Mathys 13,111 23.4
Republican Adam Medeiros 3,250 5.8
Total votes 56,029 100.0
General election
Republican David Valadao (incumbent) 52,994 51.5
Democratic Rudy Salas 49,862 48.5
Total votes 102,856 100.0
Republican hold

District 23

[edit]
2022 California's 23rd congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Jay Obernolte Derek Marshall
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 103,197 65,908
Percentage 61.0% 39.0%

U.S. Representative before election

Jay Obernolte
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Jay Obernolte
Republican

Due to redistricting, the incumbent changed from Republican Kevin McCarthy to fellow Republican Jay Obernolte. Obernolte, who had represented the 8th district since 2021, was elected with 56.1% of the vote in 2020.[5]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Derek Marshall (D)

Organizations

  • Progressive Democrats of America[207]

Individuals

Labor unions

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid R December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid R December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe R January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Likely R April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe R June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid R August 22, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid R July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid R June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe R September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 23rd congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Jay Obernolte (incumbent) 57,988 60.9
Democratic Derek Marshall 20,776 21.8
Democratic Bianca A. Gómez 16,516 17.3
Total votes 95,280 100.0
General election
Republican Jay Obernolte (incumbent) 103,197 61.0
Democratic Derek Marshall 65,908 39.0
Total votes 169,105 100.0
Republican hold

District 24

[edit]
2022 California's 24th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Salud Carbajal Brad Allen
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 159,019 103,533
Percentage 60.6% 39.4%

U.S. Representative before election

Salud Carbajal
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Salud Carbajal
Democratic

Democrat Salud Carbajal, who had represented the district since 2017, was re-elected with 58.7% of the vote in 2020.[5] Carbajal was running for re-election.

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Jeff Frankenfield (no party preference), global accounts manager[109]
  • Michele R. Weslander Quaid (no party preference), entrepreneur, coach, and educator[109]

Endorsements

[edit]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 24th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Salud Carbajal (incumbent) 111,199 60.0
Republican Brad Allen 57,532 31.0
No party preference Michele R. Weslander Quaid 13,880 7.5
No party preference Jeff Frankenfield 2,732 1.5
Total votes 185,343 100.0
General election
Democratic Salud Carbajal (incumbent) 159,019 60.6
Republican Brad Allen 103,533 39.4
Total votes 262,552 100.0
Democratic hold

District 25

[edit]
2022 California's 25th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Raul Ruiz Brian Hawkins
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 87,641 65,101
Percentage 57.4% 42.6%

U.S. Representative before election

Raul Ruiz
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Raul Ruiz
Democratic

Due to redistricting, the incumbent changed from Republican Mike Garcia to Democrat Raul Ruiz. Ruiz, who had represented the 36th district since 2013, was re-elected with 60.3% of the vote in 2020.[5]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • James Gibson (Republican), bank vice president[213][25]
  • Jonathan Reiss (Republican), multimedia consultant[214][25]
  • Burt Thakur (Republican), engineering project manager[215]
  • Ceci Truman (Republican), small business owner[109]
  • Brian Tyson (Republican), physician and business owner[109]

Declined

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Likely D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Likely D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Lean D October 30, 2022
Fox News[16] Likely D August 22, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D August 2, 2022
538[18] Solid D November 8, 2022
The Economist[19] Likely D October 4, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 25th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Raul Ruiz (incumbent) 55,315 56.4
Republican Brian Hawkins 16,085 16.4
Republican Brian Tyson 14,186 14.5
Republican James Francis Gibson 6,059 6.2
Republican Burt Thakur 2,982 3.0
Republican Ceci Truman 1,850 1.9
Republican Jonathan Reiss 1,609 1.6
Total votes 98,086 100.0
General election
Democratic Raul Ruiz (incumbent) 87,641 57.4
Republican Brian Hawkins 65,101 42.6
Total votes 152,742 100.0
Democratic hold

District 26

[edit]
2022 California's 26th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Julia Brownley Matt Jacobs
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 134,575 112,214
Percentage 54.5% 45.5%

U.S. Representative before election

Julia Brownley
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Julia Brownley
Democratic

Democrat Julia Brownley, who had represented the district since 2013, was re-elected with 60.6% of the vote in 2020.[5]

The boundaries of the district were redrawn during the 2020 redistricting cycle and became effective on March 27, 2022, for the 2022 primary and general elections.

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • David Goodman (no party preference), businessman[218]
  • Fadde Mikhail (Republican), professional sports agent[109]
  • Paul Taylor (Republican), businessman[109]

Withdrew

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Matt Jacobs (R)

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Lean D November 1, 2022
Inside Elections[12] Likely D November 3, 2022
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Likely D April 19, 2022
Politico[14] Lean D November 3, 2022
RCP[15] Lean D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Likely D August 22, 2022
DDHQ[17] Likely D October 16, 2022
538[18] Solid D September 29, 2022
The Economist[19] Likely D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 26th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Julia Brownley (incumbent) 91,535 54.3
Republican Matt Jacobs 64,835 38.4
Republican Paul Nathan Taylor 5,612 3.3
No party preference Dave Goodman 3,950 2.3
Republican Fadde Mikhail 2,775 1.6
Total votes 168,707 100.0
General election
Democratic Julia Brownley (incumbent) 134,575 54.5
Republican Matt Jacobs 112,214 45.5
Total votes 246,789 100.0
Democratic hold

District 27

[edit]
2022 California's 27th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Mike Garcia Christy Smith
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 104,624 91,892
Percentage 53.2% 46.8%

Block Group results
Garcia:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%      90-100%
Smith:      50-60%      60-70%
No results:      

U.S. Representative before election

Mike Garcia
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Mike Garcia
Republican

Due to redistricting, the incumbent changed from Democrat Judy Chu to Republican Mike Garcia. Garcia, who had represented the 25th district since 2020, was re-elected with 50.05% of the vote in 2020.[5]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Declined

[edit]
  • Chris Bellingham (Democratic), former combat medic and researcher[226]
  • Steve Hill (Democratic), appraiser, comedian, and U.S. Marine Corps veteran[227][25]
  • Rhoda Nazanin (Democratic), project manager[226]
  • Dara Stransky (Democratic), business owner [228]

Endorsements

[edit]
Ruth Luevanos (D)

Organizations

  • Progressive Democrats of America[207]

Individuals

Primary election

[edit]

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Mike
Garcia (R)
Quaye
Quartey (D)
Christy
Smith (D)
Undecided
Remington Research Group (R)[238] April 19–20, 2022 801 (LV) ± 3.3% 44% 10% 34% 12%

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Tossup December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Tilt R October 7, 2022
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Lean R October 26, 2022
Politico[14] Lean R October 26, 2022
RCP[15] Lean R October 16, 2022
Fox News[16] Lean R November 1, 2022
DDHQ[17] Tossup October 14, 2022
538[18] Lean R October 26, 2022
The Economist[19] Lean D (flip) October 16, 2022

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Mike
Garcia (R)
Christy
Smith (D)
Undecided
The Mellman Group (D)[239][G] October 3–6, 2022 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 41% 47% 12%
The Mellman Group (D)[239][G] August 25–30, 2022 600 (LV) ± 4.0% 42% 44% 14%
Remington Research Group (R)[238] April 19–20, 2022 801 (LV) ± 3.3% 47% 45% 8%
Hypothetical polling

Mike Garcia vs. Quaye Quartey

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Mike
Garcia (R)
Quaye
Quartey (D)
Undecided
Remington Research Group (R)[238] April 19–20, 2022 801 (LV) ± 3.3% 47% 41% 12%

Results

[edit]
California's 27th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Mike Garcia (incumbent) 57,469 47.1
Democratic Christy Smith 45,675 37.4
Democratic Quaye Quartey 8,303 6.8
Democratic Ruth Luevanos 6,668 5.5
Republican David Rudnick 2,648 2.2
Republican Mark Pierce 1,352 1.1
Total votes 122,115 100.0
General election
Republican Mike Garcia (incumbent) 104,624 53.2
Democratic Christy Smith 91,892 46.8
Total votes 196,516 100.0
Republican hold

District 28

[edit]
2022 California's 28th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Judy Chu Wes Hallman
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 150,062 76,495
Percentage 66.2% 33.8%

Block Group results
Chu:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%      90-100%
Hallman:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%      90-100%
No results:      

U.S. Representative before election

Judy Chu
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Judy Chu
Democratic

Due to redistricting, the incumbent changed from Democrat Adam Schiff to fellow Democrat Judy Chu. Chu, who had represented the 27th district since 2013, was re-elected with 69.8% of the vote in 2020.[5]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Dorothy Caronna (Democratic)[109]
  • Gio DePaolis (no party preference), media consultant[241][25]

Withdrew

[edit]
  • Fepbrina Estrelvia Keivaulqe Autiameineire (no party preference), community organizer[25]
  • Ali Jordan (no party preference)[242]
  • Daniel Bocic Martinez (Republican), attorney and talent scout[243][25]
  • Johnny Nalbandian (Republican)[244]
  • Crystal Prebola (Republican), podcast host[242][25]

Endorsements

[edit]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 28th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Judy Chu (incumbent) 90,395 63.0
Republican Wes Hallman 41,955 29.2
Democratic Dorothy Caronna 7,993 5.6
No party preference Giuliano Depaolis 3,100 2.2
Total votes 143,443 100.0
General election
Democratic Judy Chu (incumbent) 150,062 66.2
Republican Wes Hallman 76,495 33.8
Total votes 226,557 100.0
Democratic hold

District 29

[edit]
2022 California's 29th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Tony Cárdenas Angelica Dueñas
Party Democratic Democratic
Popular vote 69,915 49,520
Percentage 58.5% 41.5%

Block Group results
Cárdenas:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%
Dueñas:      50-60%

U.S. Representative before election

Tony Cárdenas
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Tony Cárdenas
Democratic

Democrat Tony Cárdenas, who had represented the district since 2013, was re-elected with 56.6% of the vote in 2020.[5]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Margarita Maria Carranza (Republican)
  • Rudy Melendez (Republican)[109]
  • Andy Miranda (Republican)[109]

Endorsements

[edit]
Angelica Dueñas (D)

Individuals

Organizations

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 29th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Tony Cárdenas (incumbent) 47,941 56.7
Democratic Angélica Dueñas 19,321 22.8
Republican Margarita Maria Carranza 7,079 8.4
Republican Andy Miranda 5,167 6.1
Republican Rudy Melendez 5,057 6.0
Total votes 84,565 100.0
General election
Democratic Tony Cárdenas (incumbent) 69,915 58.5
Democratic Angélica Dueñas 49,520 41.5
Total votes 119,435 100.0
Democratic hold

District 30

[edit]
2022 California's 30th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Adam Schiff Maebe A. Girl
Party Democratic Democratic
Popular vote 150,100 60,968
Percentage 71.1% 28.9%

Block Group results
Schiff:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%      90-100%
No results:      

U.S. Representative before election

Adam Schiff
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Adam Schiff
Democratic

Due to redistricting, the incumbent changed from Democrat Brad Sherman to fellow Democrat Adam Schiff. Schiff, who had represented the 28th district since 2013, was re-elected with 72.7% of the vote in 2020.[5] Schiff was running for re-election.

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Maebe A. Girl (D)

Individuals

Newspapers

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 30th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Adam Schiff (incumbent) 102,290 62.4
Democratic G "Maebe A. Girl" Pudlo 21,053 12.9
Republican Ronda Kennedy 13,953 8.5
Republican Patrick Lee Gipson 10,529 6.4
Republican Johnny J. Nalbandian 7,693 4.7
Republican Paloma Zuniga 2,614 1.6
Democratic Sal Genovese 2,612 1.6
Green William "Gunner" Meurer 1,598 1.0
American Independent Tony Rodriguez 1,460 0.9
Total votes 163,802 100.0
General election
Democratic Adam Schiff (incumbent) 150,100 71.1
Democratic G "Maebe A. Girl" Pudlo 60,968 28.9
Total votes 211,068 100.0
Democratic hold

District 31

[edit]
2022 California's 31st congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Grace Napolitano Daniel Martinez
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 91,472 62,153
Percentage 59.5% 40.5%

Block Group results
Napolitano:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%      90-100%
Martinez:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%
No results:      

U.S. Representative before election

Grace Napolitano
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Grace Napolitano
Democratic

Due to redistricting, the incumbent changed from Democrat Pete Aguilar to fellow Democrat Grace Napolitano. Napolitano, who had represented the 32nd district since 2013, was re-elected with 66.6% of the vote in 2020.[5]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Rocco De Luca (Democratic), construction project manager[254]
  • Erskine Levi (no party preference) (write-in)[109]

Endorsements

[edit]
Erskine Levi (I)

Political parties

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 31st congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Grace Napolitano (incumbent) 49,415 55.5
Republican Daniel Bocic Martinez 32,721 36.7
Democratic Rocco Anthony De Luca 6,948 7.8
No party preference Erskine Levi (write-in) 17 0.0
Total votes 89,101 100.0
General election
Democratic Grace Napolitano (incumbent) 91,472 59.5
Republican Daniel Bocic Martinez 62,153 40.5
Total votes 153,625 100.0
Democratic hold

District 32

[edit]
2022 California's 32nd congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Brad Sherman Lucie Volotzky
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 167,411 74,618
Percentage 69.2% 30.8%

Block Group results
Sherman:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%
No results:      

U.S. Representative before election

Brad Sherman
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Brad Sherman
Democratic

Due to redistricting, the incumbent changed from Democrat Grace Napolitano to fellow Democrat Brad Sherman. Sherman, who had represented the 30th district since 2013, was re-elected with 69.5% of the vote in 2020.[5]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Shervin Aazami (Democratic), public health professional[257]
  • Susan Murphy (Republican)[256]
  • Jason Potell (Democratic), business consultant and dance instructor[256][25]
  • Raji Rab (Democratic), pilot and perennial candidate[256][25]
  • Aarika Rhodes (Democratic), elementary school teacher[258][25]

Endorsements

[edit]
Shervin Aazami (D)

State legislators

Individuals

Organizations

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 32nd congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Brad Sherman (incumbent) 88,063 53.7
Republican Lucie Lapointe Volotzky 32,342 19.7
Democratic Shervin Aazami 15,036 9.2
Republican Melissa Toomim 13,926 8.5
Democratic Aarika Samone Rhodes 8,744 5.3
Democratic Jason Potell 2,943 1.8
Democratic Raji Rab 2,938 1.8
Total votes 163,992 100.0
General election
Democratic Brad Sherman (incumbent) 167,411 69.2
Republican Lucie Lapointe Volotzky 74,618 30.8
Total votes 242,029 100.0
Democratic hold

District 33

[edit]
2022 California's 33rd congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Pete Aguilar John Mark Porter
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 76,588 56,119
Percentage 57.7% 42.3%

Block Group results
Aguilar:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%
Porter:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      90-100%
No results:      

U.S. Representative before election

Pete Aguilar
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Pete Aguilar
Democratic

Due to redistricting, the incumbent changed from Democrat Ted Lieu to fellow Democrat Pete Aguilar. Aguilar, who had represented the 31st district since 2015, was re-elected with 61.3% of the vote in 2020.[5]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 33rd congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Pete Aguilar (incumbent) 41,046 59.8
Republican John Mark Porter 12,096 17.6
Republican Rex Gutierrez 10,587 15.4
Republican Ernest Richter 4,878 7.1
Total votes 68,607 100.0
General election
Democratic Pete Aguilar (incumbent) 76,588 57.7
Republican John Mark Porter 56,119 42.3
Total votes 132,707 100.0
Democratic hold

District 34

[edit]
2022 California's 34th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Jimmy Gomez David Kim
Party Democratic Democratic
Popular vote 62,244 59,223
Percentage 51.2% 48.8%

Municipality results
Gomez:      60-70%
Kim:      50-60%

U.S. Representative before election

Jimmy Gomez
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Jimmy Gomez
Democratic

Democrat Jimmy Gomez, who had represented the district since 2017, was re-elected with 53.0% of the vote in 2020.[5]

The boundaries of the district were redrawn during the 2020 redistricting cycle and became effective on March 27, 2022, for the 2022 primary and general elections.

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Clifton VonBuck (Republican), small business owner[109]

Endorsements

[edit]
David Kim (D)

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 34th congressional district, 2022[20]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Jimmy Gomez (incumbent) 45,376 50.7
Democratic David Kim 34,921 39.0
Republican Clifton VonBuck 9,150 10.2
Total votes 89,447 100.0
General election
Democratic Jimmy Gomez (incumbent) 62,244 51.2
Democratic David Kim 59,223 48.8
Total votes 121,467 100.0
Democratic hold

District 35

[edit]
2022 California's 35th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Norma Torres Mike Cargile
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 75,121 55,832
Percentage 57.4% 42.6%

Block Group results
Torres:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%
Cargile:      50-60%      60-70%
Tie:      50%
No results:      

U.S. Representative before election

Norma Torres
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Norma Torres
Democratic

Democrat Norma Torres, who had represented the district since 2015, was re-elected with 69.3% of the vote in 2020.[5]

The boundaries of the district were redrawn during the 2020 redistricting cycle and became effective on March 27, 2022, for the 2022 primary and general elections.

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Rafael Carcamo (Republican), physician and educator[109]
  • Bob Erbst (Republican), educator[109]
  • Lloyd Stevens (Democratic), systems analyst[109]

Endorsements

[edit]
Mike Cargile (R)

Individuals

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 35th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Norma Torres (incumbent) 37,554 54.3
Republican Mike Cargile 17,431 25.2
Republican Rafael Carcamo 7,619 11.0
Republican Bob Erbst 3,480 5.0
Democratic Lloyd Stevens 3,022 4.4
Total votes 69,106 100.0
General election
Democratic Norma Torres (incumbent) 75,121 57.4
Republican Mike Cargile 55,832 42.6
Total votes 130,953 100.0
Democratic hold

District 36

[edit]
2022 California's 36th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Ted Lieu Joe Collins III
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 194,299 84,264
Percentage 69.8% 30.2%

Block Group results
Lieu:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%      90-100%
Collins:      50-60%      60-70%
No results:      

U.S. Representative before election

Ted Lieu
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Ted Lieu
Democratic

Due to redistricting, the incumbent changed from Democrat Raul Ruiz to fellow Democrat Ted Lieu, who had represented the 33rd district since 2015, was re-elected with 67.6% of the vote in 2020.[5]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Derrick Gates (Republican), pastor and mortgage broker[276][25]
  • Ariana Hakami (Republican), financial advisor[109]
  • Matthew Jesuele (no party preference), software engineer[109]
  • Colin Obrien (Democratic), writer[109]
  • Claire Ragge (Republican), bar owner[109][25]
  • Steve Williams (no party preference), real estate broker[109]

Endorsements

[edit]
Joe Collins (R)

Organizations

  • Black America's Political Action Committee[277]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 36th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Ted Lieu (incumbent) 122,969 67.1
Republican Joe Collins III 24,553 13.4
Republican Derrick Gates 10,263 5.6
Republican Ariana Hakami 9,760 5.3
Republican Claire Ragge 7,351 4.0
Democratic Colin Obrien 6,221 3.4
No party preference Steve Williams 1,180 0.6
No party preference Matthew Jesuele 976 0.5
Total votes 183,273 100.0
General election
Democratic Ted Lieu (incumbent) 194,299 69.8
Republican Joe Collins III 84,264 30.2
Total votes 278,563 100.0
Democratic hold

District 37

[edit]
2022 California's 37th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Sydney Kamlager-Dove Jan Perry
Party Democratic Democratic
Popular vote 84,338 47,542
Percentage 64.0% 36.0%

Block Group results
Kamlager-Dove:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%
Perry:      50-60%
No results:      

U.S. Representative before election

Karen Bass
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Sydney Kamlager-Dove
Democratic

Democrat Karen Bass, who had represented the district since 2013, was re-elected with 85.9% of the vote in 2020.[5] Bass announced that she would be retiring to run for mayor of Los Angeles.[278]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Withdrew

[edit]

Declined

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Daniel Lee (D)

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Sydney
Kamlager-Dove (D)
Jan
Perry (D)
Michael
Shure (D)
Other Undecided
RMG Research[294] May 19–20, 2022 500 (LV) ± 4.5% 17% 5% 2% 16% 59%

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 37th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Sydney Kamlager-Dove 42,628 43.7
Democratic Jan Perry 17,993 18.5
Democratic Daniel Lee 17,414 17.9
Democratic Sandra Mendoza 8,017 8.2
Republican Chris Champion 5,469 5.6
Republican Baltazar Fedalizo 3,520 3.6
Democratic Michael Shure 2,469 2.5
Total votes 97,510 100.0
General election
Democratic Sydney Kamlager-Dove 84,338 64.0
Democratic Jan Perry 47,542 36.0
Total votes 131,880 100.0
Democratic hold

District 38

[edit]
2022 California's 38th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Linda Sánchez Eric Ching
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 101,260 73,051
Percentage 58.1% 41.9%

Block Group results
Sánchez:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%      90-100%
Ching:      50-60%      60-70%
No results:      

U.S. Representative before election

Linda Sánchez
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Linda Sánchez
Democratic

Democrat Linda Sánchez, who had represented the district since 2013, was re-elected with 74.3% of the vote in 2020.[5]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • John Sarega (Republican), pastor[109]

Endorsements

[edit]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 38th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Linda Sánchez (incumbent) 58,586 58.7
Republican Eric Ching 30,436 30.5
Republican John Sarega 10,768 10.8
Total votes 99,790 100.0
General election
Democratic Linda Sánchez (incumbent) 101,260 58.1
Republican Eric Ching 73,051 41.9
Total votes 174,311 100.0
Democratic hold

District 39

[edit]
2022 California's 39th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Mark Takano Aja Smith
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 75,896 55,701
Percentage 57.7% 42.3%

Block Group results
Takano:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%
Smith:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%
No results:      

U.S. Representative before election

Mark Takano
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Mark Takano
Democratic

Due to redistricting, the incumbent changed from Republican Young Kim to Democrat Mark Takano, who had represented the 41st district since 2013. Takano was re-elected with 64.0% of the vote in 2020.[5]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Mark Takano (D)

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 39th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Mark Takano (incumbent) 44,067 57.1
Republican Aja Smith 9,751 12.6
Republican Bill Spinney 7,421 9.6
Republican Tony Moreno 5,527 7.2
Republican Arthur Peterson 5,081 6.6
Republican John Minnella 3,662 4.7
Republican Emmanuel Suarez 1,600 2.1
Total votes 77,109 100.0
General election
Democratic Mark Takano (incumbent) 75,896 57.7
Republican Aja Smith 55,701 42.3
Total votes 131,597 100.0
Democratic hold

District 40

[edit]
2022 California's 40th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Young Kim Asif Mahmood
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 161,589 122,722
Percentage 56.8% 43.2%

Block Group results
Kim:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%
Mahmood:      50-60%      60-70%
Tie:      50%
No results:      

U.S. Representative before election

Young Kim
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Young Kim
Republican

Due to redistricting, the incumbent changed from Democrat Lucille Roybal-Allard to Republican Young Kim. Kim, who had represented the 39th district since 2021, was elected with 50.6% of the vote in 2020.[5] Kim was running for re-election. The New York Times reported that Mahmood aired ads undermining Kim by only mentioning her primary opponent Greg Raths, as part of a Democratic strategy to support further-right Republican primary candidates to make for an easier opponent in general elections in November.[299]

Candidates

[edit]

Declared

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Young Kim (R)

Executive branch officials

U.S. senators

U.S. representatives

Organizations

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Likely R June 28, 2022
Inside Elections[12] Likely R December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Likely R January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Likely R August 12, 2022
RCP[15] Likely R October 7, 2022
Fox News[16] Likely R November 1, 2022
DDHQ[17] Likely R July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid R June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Likely R September 7, 2022

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Young
Kim (R)
Asif
Mahmood (D)
Undecided
Public Opinion Strategies (R)[316][H] July 16–20, 2022 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 51% 35% 13%
Hypothetical polling

Generic Republican vs. generic Democrat

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Generic
Republican
Generic
Democrat
Undecided
Public Opinion Strategies (R)[316][H] July 16–20, 2022 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 45% 40% 13%

Results

[edit]
California's 40th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Asif Mahmood 74,607 40.9
Republican Young Kim (incumbent) 63,346 34.7
Republican Greg Raths 42,404 23.2
Republican Nick Taurus 2,193 1.2
Total votes 182,550 100.0
General election
Republican Young Kim (incumbent) 161,589 56.8
Democratic Asif Mahmood 122,722 43.2
Total votes 284,311 100.0
Republican hold

District 41

[edit]
2022 California's 41st congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Ken Calvert Will Rollins
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 123,869 112,769
Percentage 52.3% 47.7%

Block Group results
Calvert:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%      90-100%
Rollins:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%
No results:      

U.S. Representative before election

Ken Calvert
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Ken Calvert
Republican

Due to redistricting, the incumbent changed from Democrat Mark Takano to Republican Ken Calvert. Calvert, who had represented the 42nd district since 2013, was re-elected with 57.1% of the vote in 2020.[5]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]
  • Ken Calvert (Republican), incumbent U.S. Representative[317]
  • Will Rollins (Democratic), former federal prosecutor[318]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Shrina Kurani (Democratic), engineer and entrepreneur[319]
  • John Michael Lucio (Republican)
  • Anna Nevenic (no party preference)

Endorsements

[edit]
Ken Calvert (R)

Executive branch officials

Will Rollins (D)

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Lean R June 28, 2022
Inside Elections[12] Solid R August 25, 2022
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Likely R January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Lean R October 18, 2022
RCP[15] Lean R June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Likely R July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Likely R July 21, 2022
538[18] Solid R November 1, 2022
The Economist[19] Likely R September 7, 2022

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Ken
Calvert (R)
Will
Rollins (D)
Undecided
Tulchin Research (D)[324] September 28 – October 2, 2022 600 (LV) 47% 44% 9%
ApplecartUSA (D)[325][I] July 22–27, 2022 1,260 (RV) 47% 39% 14%
Tulchin Research (D)[326][I] February 25 – March 3, 2022 600 (LV) ± 4.0% 41% 42% 18%

Results

[edit]
California's 41st congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Ken Calvert (incumbent) 72,700 48.2
Democratic Will Rollins 45,923 30.4
Democratic Shrina Kurani 23,483 15.6
Republican John Michael Lucio 6,880 4.6
No party preference Anna Nevenic 1,862 1.2
Total votes 150,848 100.0
General election
Republican Ken Calvert (incumbent) 123,869 52.3
Democratic Will Rollins 112,769 47.7
Total votes 236,638 100.0
Republican hold

District 42

[edit]
2022 California's 42nd congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Robert Garcia John Briscoe
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 99,217 45,903
Percentage 68.4% 31.6%

Block Group results
Garcia:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%      90-100%
Briscoe:      50-60%
Tie:      50%
No results:      

U.S. Representative before election

Lucille Roybal-Allard (Democrat)
Alan Lowenthal (Democrat)

Elected U.S. Representative

Robert Garcia
Democratic

Due to redistricting, the incumbent changed from Republican Ken Calvert to Democrats Lucille Roybal-Allard and Alan Lowenthal, whose districts were combined. Roybal-Allard, who had represented the 40th district since 2013, was re-elected with 72.7% of the vote in 2020. Lowenthal, who had represented the 47th district since 2013, was re-elected with 63.3% of the vote in 2020.[5] Both Roybal-Allard and Lowenthal were retiring.

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Withdrew

[edit]
  • William Griffith (no party preference)[333]

Declined

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Cristina Garcia (D)
Robert Garcia (D)

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 42nd congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Robert Garcia 43,406 46.7
Republican John Briscoe 24,319 26.1
Democratic Cristina Garcia 11,685 12.6
Democratic Peter Mathews 3,415 3.7
Democratic Nicole López 3,164 3.4
Green Julio Flores 2,491 2.7
Democratic William Summerville 2,301 2.5
Democratic Joaquín Beltrán 2,254 2.4
Total votes 93,035 100.0
General election
Democratic Robert Garcia 99,217 68.4
Republican John Briscoe 45,903 31.6
Total votes 145,120 100.0
Democratic hold

District 43

[edit]
2022 California's 43rd congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Maxine Waters Omar Navarro
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 95,462 27,985
Percentage 77.3% 22.7%

Block Group results
Waters:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%      90-100%
Navarro:      50-60%
No results:      

U.S. Representative before election

Maxine Waters
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Maxine Waters
Democratic

Democrat Maxine Waters, who had represented the district since 2013, was re-elected with 71.7% of the vote in 2020.[5]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Jean Monestime (Democratic), laborer[109]
  • Allison Pratt (Republican), youth advocate[109]

Endorsements

[edit]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 43rd congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Maxine Waters (incumbent) 55,889 74.3
Republican Omar Navarro 8,927 11.9
Republican Allison Pratt 5,489 7.3
Democratic Jean Monestime 4,952 6.6
Total votes 75,257 100.0
General election
Democratic Maxine Waters (incumbent) 95,462 77.3
Republican Omar Navarro 27,985 22.7
Total votes 123,447 100.0
Democratic hold

District 44

[edit]
2022 California's 44th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Nanette Barragán Paul Jones
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 100,160 38,554
Percentage 72.2% 27.8%

Block Group results
Barragán:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%      90-100%
Jones:      50-60%
No results:      

U.S. Representative before election

Nanette Barragán
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Nanette Barragán
Democratic

Democrat Nanette Barragán, who had represented the district since 2017, was re-elected with 67.8% of the vote in 2020.[5]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Morris Griffin (Democratic), maintenance technician[109]

Endorsements

[edit]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 44th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Nanette Barragán (incumbent) 58,594 68.7
Republican Paul Jones 20,569 24.1
Democratic Morris Griffin 6,110 7.2
Total votes 85,273 100.0
General election
Democratic Nanette Barragán (incumbent) 100,160 72.2
Republican Paul Jones 38,554 27.8
Total votes 138,714 100.0
Democratic hold

District 45

[edit]
2022 California's 45th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Michelle Steel Jay Chen
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 113,960 103,466
Percentage 52.4% 47.6%

County results
Steel:      50-60%
Chen:      50-60%

U.S. Representative before election

Michelle Steel
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Michelle Steel
Republican

Due to redistricting, the incumbent changed from Democrat Katie Porter to Republican Michelle Steel. Steel, who had represented the 48th district since 2021, was elected with 51.1% of the vote in 2020.[5] Steel was running for re-election.

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Long Pham (Republican), nuclear engineer[109]

Endorsements

[edit]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Lean R June 28, 2022
Inside Elections[12] Lean R August 25, 2022
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Lean R June 22, 2022
Politico[14] Lean R October 3, 2022
RCP[15] Lean R June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Lean R August 22, 2022
DDHQ[17] Lean R July 20, 2022
538[18] Likely R October 20, 2022
The Economist[19] Tossup September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 45th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Michelle Steel (incumbent) 65,641 48.2
Democratic Jay Chen 58,721 43.1
Republican Long Pham 11,732 8.6
No party preference Hilaire Fuji Shioura (write-in) 6 0.0
Total votes 136,100 100.0
General election
Republican Michelle Steel (incumbent) 113,960 52.4
Democratic Jay Chen 103,466 47.6
Total votes 217,426 100.0
Republican hold

District 46

[edit]
2022 California's 46th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Lou Correa Christopher Gonzales
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 78,041 48,257
Percentage 61.8% 38.2%

Block Group results
Correa:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%
Gonzales:      50-60%      60-70%      90-100%
No results:      

U.S. Representative before election

Lou Correa
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Lou Correa
Democratic

Democrat Lou Correa, who had represented the district since 2017, was re-elected with 68.8% of the vote in 2020.[5]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]
  • Lou Correa (Democratic), incumbent U.S. Representative[296]
  • Christopher Gonzales (Republican), attorney[306]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Mike Nguyen (Republican), broker[109]
  • Michael Ortega (Democratic), engineer[347]
  • Felix Rocha (Republican), retired federal agent[109]
  • Ed Rushman (no party preference), IT project manager[296]

Endorsements

[edit]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 46th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Lou Correa (incumbent) 37,311 49.1
Republican Christopher Gonzales 11,823 15.6
Democratic Michael Ortega 9,311 12.3
Republican Mike Nguyen 9,162 12.1
Republican Felix Rocha 7,084 9.3
No party preference Ed Rushman 1,264 1.7
Total votes 75,955 100.0
General election
Democratic Lou Correa (incumbent) 78,041 61.8
Republican Christopher Gonzales 48,257 38.2
Total votes 126,298 100.0
Democratic hold

District 47

[edit]
2022 California's 47th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Katie Porter Scott Baugh
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 137,374 128,261
Percentage 51.7% 48.3%

2022 House Election in California's 47th Congressional District
Block Group results
Porter:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%      90-100%
Baugh:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%
No results:      

U.S. Representative before election

Katie Porter
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Katie Porter
Democratic

Due to redistricting, the incumbent changed from Democrat Alan Lowenthal to fellow Democrat Katie Porter. Porter, who had represented the 45th district since 2019, was re-elected with 53.5% of the vote in 2020.[5]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Withdrew

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Errol Weber (R)

Individuals

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Tossup November 1, 2022
Inside Elections[12] Tilt D November 3, 2022
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Lean D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Lean D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Tossup June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Tossup November 1, 2022
DDHQ[17] Likely D October 17, 2022
538[18] Likely D July 11, 2022
The Economist[19] Likely D September 28, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 47th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Katie Porter (incumbent) 86,742 51.7
Republican Scott Baugh 51,776 30.9
Republican Amy Phan West 13,949 8.3
Republican Brian Burley 11,952 7.1
Republican Errol Webber 3,342 2.0
Total votes 167,761 100.0
General election
Democratic Katie Porter (incumbent) 137,374 51.7
Republican Scott Baugh 128,261 48.3
Total votes 265,635 100.0
Democratic hold

District 48

[edit]
2022 California's 48th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Darrell Issa Stephen Houlahan
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 155,171 101,900
Percentage 60.4% 39.6%

Block Group results
Issa:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%      90-100%
Houlahan:      50-60%      60-70%      90-100%
Tie:      50%
No results:      

U.S. Representative before election

Darrell Issa
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Darrell Issa
Republican

Due to redistricting, the incumbent changed from Republican Michelle Steel to fellow Republican Darrell Issa, who had represented the 50th district since 2021, was elected with 54.0% of the vote in 2020.[5]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]
  • Stephen Houlahan (Democratic), registered nurse and former Santee city councilor[364]
  • Darrell Issa (Republican), incumbent U.S. Representative and technology entrepreneur[365]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Lucinda KWH Jahn (no party preference), entertainment industry technician[109]
  • Matthew G. Rascon (Democratic), community volunteer[109]

Withdrawn

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Stephen Houlahan (D)
Darrell Issa (R)
Joseph C. Rocha (D) (withdrawn)

U.S. representatives

State legislators

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid R December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid R December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe R January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid R April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe R June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid R July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid R July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid R June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe R September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 48th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Darrell Issa (incumbent) 101,280 61.5
Democratic Stephen Houlahan 45,740 27.8
Democratic Matthew Rascon 14,983 9.1
No party preference Lucinda Jahn 2,614 1.6
Total votes 164,617 100.0
General election
Republican Darrell Issa (incumbent) 155,171 60.4
Democratic Stephen Houlahan 101,900 39.6
Total votes 257,071 100.0
Republican hold

District 49

[edit]
2022 California's 49th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Mike Levin Brian Maryott
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 153,541 138,194
Percentage 52.6% 47.4%

Block Group results
Levin:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%
Mayrott:      50-60%      60-70%

U.S. Representative before election

Mike Levin
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Mike Levin
Democratic

Democrat Mike Levin, who had represented the district since 2019, was re-elected with 53.1% of the vote in 2020.[5] Levin was running for re-election.

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Withdrew

[edit]
  • Anne Elizabeth (Republican), talk show host[376]

Endorsements

[edit]
Brian Maryott (R)

State legislators

Organizations

Lisa Bartlett (R)

Individuals

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Lisa
Bartlett (R)
Brian
Maryott (R)
Mike
Levin (D)
Josiah
O'Neil (R)
Christopher
Rodriguez (R)
Nadia
Smalley (D)
Renee
Taylor (R)
Undecided
co/efficient (R)[380][J] May 12, 2022 – (LV) 9% 9% 42% 4% 13% 2% 1% 21%

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Tossup October 25, 2022
Inside Elections[12] Tilt D November 3, 2022
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Lean R (flip) November 7, 2022
Politico[14] Tossup October 26, 2022
RCP[15] Tossup June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Tossup October 18, 2022
DDHQ[17] Likely D July 20, 2022
538[18] Likely D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Lean D October 4, 2022

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Mike
Levin (D)
Brian
Maryott (R)
Undecided
SurveyUSA[381] October 27–31, 2022 568 (LV) ± 5.0% 49% 43% 8%
Hypothetical polling

Generic Democrat vs. generic Republican

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Generic
Democrat
Generic
Republican
Undecided
co/efficient (R)[380][J] May 12, 2022 – (LV) 48% 45% 7%

Results

[edit]
California's 49th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Mike Levin (incumbent) 92,211 48.9
Republican Brian Maryott 35,805 19.0
Republican Lisa Bartlett 20,163 10.7
Republican Christopher Rodriguez 18,248 9.7
Republican Josiah O'Neil 14,746 7.8
Democratic Nadia Smalley 4,804 2.5
Republican Renee Taylor 2,597 1.4
Total votes 188,574 100.0
General election
Democratic Mike Levin (incumbent) 153,541 52.6
Republican Brian Maryott 138,194 47.4
Total votes 291,735 100.0
Democratic hold

District 50

[edit]
2022 California's 50th congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Scott Peters Corey Gustafson
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 168,816 99,819
Percentage 62.8% 37.2%

Block Group results
Peters:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%      90-100%
Gustafson:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%

U.S. Representative before election

Scott Peters
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Scott Peters
Democratic

Due to redistricting, the incumbent changed from Republican Darrell Issa to Democrat Scott Peters. Peters, who had represented the 52nd district since 2013, was re-elected with 61.6% of the vote in 2020.[5]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • David Chiddick (Republican), coffee shop owner and U.S. Navy veteran[109]
  • Adam Schindler (no party preference), medical researcher and technical writer[383]
  • Kylie Taitano (Democratic), software engineer & tech non-profit CEO[383][384]

Endorsements

[edit]
Kylie Taitano (D)

Organizations

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 50th congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Scott Peters (incumbent) 89,894 52.3
Republican Corey Gustafson 51,312 29.9
Democratic Kylie Taitano 16,065 9.4
Republican David Chiddick 9,333 5.4
No party preference Adam Schindler 5,168 3.0
Total votes 171,772 100.0
General election
Democratic Scott Peters (incumbent) 168,816 62.8
Republican Corey Gustafson 99,819 37.2
Total votes 268,635 100.0
Democratic hold

District 51

[edit]
2022 California's 51st congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Sara Jacobs Stan Caplan
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 144,186 88,886
Percentage 61.9% 38.1%

Block Group results
Jacobs:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%      90-100%
Caplan:      50-60%      60-70%      90-100%
Tie:      50%
No results:      

U.S. Representative before election

Sara Jacobs
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Sara Jacobs
Democratic

Due to redistricting, the incumbent changed from Democrat Juan Vargas to fellow Democrat Sara Jacobs. Jacobs, who had represented the 53rd district since 2021, was elected with 59.5% of the vote in 2020.[5]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]
  • Stan Caplan (Republican), small business owner[109]
  • Sara Jacobs (Democratic), incumbent U.S. Representative[365]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Jose Cortes (PF)
Stan Caplan (R)

Individuals

Organizations

  • Deputy Sheriffs' Association of San Diego County[389]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 51st congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Sara Jacobs (incumbent) 91,329 60.5
Republican Stan Caplan 56,183 37.2
Peace and Freedom Jose Cortes 3,343 2.2
Democratic Barrett Holman Leak (write-in) 55 0.0
Total votes 150,910 100.0
General election
Democratic Sara Jacobs (incumbent) 144,186 61.9
Republican Stan Caplan 88,886 38.1
Total votes 233,072 100.0
Democratic hold

District 52

[edit]
2022 California's 52nd congressional district election

← 2020
2024 →
 
Candidate Juan Vargas Tyler Geffeney
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 100,686 50,330
Percentage 66.7% 33.3%

Block Group results
Vargas:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%
Geffeney:      50-60%
No results:      

U.S. Representative before election

Juan Vargas
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Juan Vargas
Democratic

Due to redistricting, the incumbent changed from Democrat Scott Peters to fellow Democrat Juan Vargas. Vargas, who had represented the 51st district since 2013, was re-elected with 68.3% of the vote in 2020.[5]

Candidates

[edit]

Advanced to general

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Joaquín Vázquez (D)

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[11] Solid D December 21, 2021
Inside Elections[12] Solid D December 28, 2021
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13] Safe D January 4, 2022
Politico[14] Solid D April 5, 2022
RCP[15] Safe D June 9, 2022
Fox News[16] Solid D July 11, 2022
DDHQ[17] Solid D July 20, 2022
538[18] Solid D June 30, 2022
The Economist[19] Safe D September 7, 2022

Results

[edit]
California's 52nd congressional district, 2022[20][21]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Juan Vargas (incumbent) 56,827 59.1
Republican Tyler Geffeney 29,348 30.5
Democratic Joaquín Vázquez 9,965 10.4
Total votes 96,140 100.0
General election
Democratic Juan Vargas (incumbent) 100,686 66.7
Republican Tyler Geffeney 50,330 33.3
Total votes 151,016 100.0
Democratic hold

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Key:
    A – all adults
    RV – registered voters
    LV – likely voters
    V – unclear
  2. ^ Archived May 15, 2022, at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Dueñas ran as a Green in 2018, but as a Democrat in 2020

Partisan clients

  1. ^ Poll sponsored by Kiley's campaign
  2. ^ a b Poll sponsored jointly by the National Republican Congressional Committee and Duarte's campaign committee
  3. ^ This poll was sponsored by the House Majority PAC.
  4. ^ Poll sponsored by Mullin's campaign
  5. ^ Poll sponsored by Canepa's campaign
  6. ^ Poll sponsored jointly by the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee and Salas's campaign committee
  7. ^ a b Poll sponsored by Smith's campaign
  8. ^ a b Poll sponsored jointly by the National Republican Congressional Committee and Kim's campaign committee
  9. ^ a b Poll sponsored by WelcomePAC, which supports Rollins
  10. ^ a b This poll was sponsored by Rodriguez's campaign.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Weber, Shirley. "Statement of Vote" (PDF).
  2. ^ Mason, Melanie; Mehta, Seema (April 26, 2021). "California to lose a congressional seat, according to new census data". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 26, 2021.
  3. ^ "Press Releases". We Draw The Lines.
  4. ^ "What New Districts Mean". We Draw The Lines.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba "John Garamendi, Mike Thompson switching areas in Solano County". Times-Herald. January 12, 2022. Retrieved March 23, 2022.
  6. ^ "Eastern Sierra unites post-redistricting". January 14, 2022.
  7. ^ Marinucci, Carla; White, Jeremy; Dadey, Camryn (July 7, 2021). "KILEY jumps in - PENTAGON nixes JEDI contract - ADAM MENDELSOHN in the spotlight - CAGOP endorsement tussle". Politico. Retrieved July 27, 2021.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Official Certified List of Candidates" (PDF). California Secretary of State. Retrieved April 5, 2022.
  9. ^ "Endorsement of Congressman Doug LaMalfa". June 5, 2022. Archived from the original on July 24, 2022. Retrieved July 24, 2022.
  10. ^ a b "Endorsements". California Republican Party. Archived from the original on November 9, 2022. Retrieved August 7, 2022.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az "2022 House Race Ratings". The Cook Political Report. Retrieved December 21, 2021.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az "House Ratings". The Rothenberg Political Report. Retrieved December 28, 2021.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az "2022 House Ratings". Sabato's Crystal Ball. Retrieved January 4, 2021.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az "2022 Election Forecast". Politico. April 5, 2022.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az "Battle for the House 2022". RCP. June 9, 2022.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az "2022 Election Forecast". Fox News. August 22, 2022. Retrieved August 22, 2022.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az "2022 Election Forecast". DDHQ. July 20, 2022. Retrieved July 20, 2022.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az "2022 Election Forecast". FiveThirtyEight. June 30, 2022. Retrieved June 30, 2022.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az "The Economist's 2022 Senate Election forecast". The Economist. Retrieved September 20, 2022.
  20. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az "June 7, 2022, Primary Election United States Representative" (PDF). California Secretary of State Shirley Weber. June 25, 2022.
  21. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax "General Election - Statement of the Vote, November 8, 2022 - United States Representative" (PDF). California Secretary of State. December 16, 2022. Retrieved December 26, 2022.
  22. ^ a b c Halstead, Richard (March 11, 2022). "More Marin candidates enter June primary election". Marin Independent Journal.
  23. ^ "More Marin candidates enter June primary election". March 12, 2022.
  24. ^ "Incumbent sheriff and district attorney to run for re-election unopposed after candidate filing deadline closes without challengers • the Mendocino Voice | Mendocino County, CA". March 14, 2022.
  25. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am Gunzburger, Ron. "Politics1 - Online Guide to California Elections, Candidates & Politics". politics1.com.
  26. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq Banerjee, Veda; Connon, Courtnee (March 24, 2022). "California Environmental Voters, LCV Action Fund Endorse Slate of U.S. House Incumbents in California". League of Conservation Voters. LCV Action Fund.
  27. ^ a b c d e f Turrentine, Jeff (March 8, 2022). "NRDC Action Fund Endorses These Candidates in the 2022 Elections". Natural Resources Defense Council. Retrieved March 15, 2022.
  28. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al "Planned Parenthood Action Fund Endorsed Candidates". www.plannedparenthoodaction.org. Retrieved December 22, 2021.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj "Sierra Club Voter Guide: Endorsements". Sierra Club #ClimateVoter Guide. March 19, 2021.
  30. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq "California - UAW Endorsements". United Auto Workers.
  31. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Endorsements".
  32. ^ Brassil, Gillian (September 8, 2021). "Democratic challenger is first to announce campaign against California Rep. Tom McClintock". The Sacramento Bee. Retrieved September 12, 2021.
  33. ^ "Doctor, lawyer, vet: If Kermit Jones can't beat California Rep. Tom McClintock, who can?". Sacramento Bee. December 11, 2021.
  34. ^ Hansen, B. J. (December 29, 2021). "Republican Assemblyman Kiley Running For Eastern Sierra Congressional Seat". mymotherlode.com. Retrieved January 5, 2022.
  35. ^ "Sacramento County Sheriff Scott Jones announces run for Congress in new district". KCRA. January 24, 2022. Retrieved January 24, 2022.
  36. ^ "California's 1st Congressional District election, 2022". Ballotpedia.
  37. ^ a b Taub, David. "Rep. McClintock Will Run in New Congressional District Eyed by Borgeas, Others". GV Wire. Retrieved January 5, 2022.
  38. ^ "314 ACTION FUND ENDORSES DOCTOR AND NAVY VETERAN DR. KERMIT JONES IN CA-04 RACE". www.314action.org. November 12, 2021. Retrieved December 29, 2021.
  39. ^ "Human Rights Campaign Endorses 22 Additional Pro-Equality Champions for U.S. House of Representatives". Human Rights Campaign. September 30, 2022. Retrieved November 29, 2022.
  40. ^ a b "LCV Action Fund Announces Slate of New Endorsements for Congress". www.lcv.org. July 5, 2022.
  41. ^ "Endorsement: Dr. Kermit Jones for Congress, California's 4th District". www.newpolitics.org. September 8, 2021. Retrieved November 28, 2021.
  42. ^ Public Opinion Strategies (R) Archived May 15, 2022, at the Wayback Machine
  43. ^ "McClintock for Congress". tommcclintock.com. Retrieved March 23, 2022.[permanent dead link]
  44. ^ "Vacaville resident Matt Brock running for Congress". March 25, 2022.
  45. ^ a b c "Thompson, who has never lost an election, is seeking 13th term in Congress". Sonoma Index-Tribune. December 23, 2021.
  46. ^ "Sustainability, unity are focus of Andrew Engdahl's congressional campaign". The Vacaville Reporter. March 22, 2022. Retrieved March 23, 2022.
  47. ^ Hansen, Todd R. (December 6, 2019). "Solano elections take shape with candidate filing deadline". Daily Republic. Retrieved December 22, 2019.
  48. ^ "FEC Statement of Candidacy - Scott Giblin". May 18, 2021. Retrieved November 26, 2021.
  49. ^ a b Hansen, Todd R. (April 1, 2022). "June ballot finalized; ballots go out to Solano voters on May 9". Daily Republic.
  50. ^ "Meet the CAGOP Endorsed Candidates". Archived from the original on November 9, 2022. Retrieved August 7, 2022.
  51. ^ "Endorsements by the HJTA PAC".
  52. ^ "Lake County GOP". Lake County Republican Party.
  53. ^ a b Sestanovich, Nick. "Solano County". Solano County.
  54. ^ "Sonoma GOP Voter Guide". Sonoma GOP.
  55. ^ a b "Yolo GOP". Yolo GOP.
  56. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Taub, David (December 8, 2021). "First Confirmed Candidate Emerges in GOP Bid to Hold Nunes' House Seat". www.gvwire.com. Retrieved December 8, 2021.
  57. ^ Adalian, Dave (February 5, 2021). "CD-22 race could see Nunes-Arballo rematch, if Nunes runs". Valley Voice. Retrieved February 5, 2021.
  58. ^ a b c d Brassil, Gillian (January 20, 2022). "Former Devin Nunes challenger announces new plan for 2022, targets open congressional seat". The Fresno Bee. Retrieved January 21, 2022.
  59. ^ a b Bowers, Wes (January 14, 2022). "San Joaquin County supes happy with new state district boundaries". lodinews.com.
  60. ^ Taub, David; Reporter, Senior (December 17, 2021). "Heng Enters House Race Even as the Lines Keep Changing".
  61. ^ Stone, Reid (February 28, 2022). "Vying for Nunes' seat, Elizabeth Heng rolls out her second act of 2022". sjvsun.com. San Joaquin Valley Sun. Retrieved March 3, 2022.
  62. ^ Drucker, David M. (July 14, 2021). "Devin Nunes raises $2.7 million in second quarter as he moves away from corporate PACs". Yahoo! News. Retrieved July 25, 2021.
  63. ^ a b c "California Rep. Devin Nunes leaving Congress to head Trump social media group". Los Angeles Times. December 6, 2021.
  64. ^ a b "Devin Nunes backs Tom McClintock for new California 5th Congressional District on eve of House exit". Washington Examiner. December 31, 2021.
  65. ^ Taub, David (January 6, 2022). "Borgeas Won't Run for Congress, Mulls State Senate Re-election Options".
  66. ^ a b c Taub, David (December 15, 2021). "Soria Considering Assembly Run. Tulare Sheriff Boudreaux for Congress?".
  67. ^ a b "Conway Runs for Nunes' Seat. Clue Points to State Senate Bid for Soria". January 14, 2022.
  68. ^ Taub, David (December 6, 2021). "After Nunes Bombshell, Who is Angling to Replace Congressman?".
  69. ^ Taub, David (January 10, 2022). "Why Newsom Picked the Last Date to Fill Nunes' Vacancy".
  70. ^ "Nunes Talks About His Trump CEO Job, Won't Endorse in Race for Successor". January 13, 2022.
  71. ^ Mehta, Seema; Haberkorn, Jennifer (December 6, 2021). "California Rep. Devin Nunes leaving Congress to head Trump social media group". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved December 8, 2021.
  72. ^ a b Taub, David (December 29, 2021). "Hurtado Will Run Against Caballero in Dem Battle Royale". GV Wire. Retrieved December 30, 2021.
  73. ^ Taub, David (December 22, 2021). "Borgeas' Choices: Run vs. Grove or McClintock?".
  74. ^ a b c d "With California's congressional maps set, candidates swoop in". Los Angeles Times. December 22, 2021.
  75. ^ Taub, David (December 21, 2021). "Costa Will Run for Re-election in New Fresno-Centric District". GV Wire. Retrieved December 26, 2021.
  76. ^ Gligich, Daniel (December 14, 2021). "Jim Patterson opts against Congressional bid, backs Magsig to replace Nunes". The San Joaquin Valley Sun. Retrieved December 15, 2021.
  77. ^ "Endorsement of Congressman Tom McClintock". June 5, 2022. Archived from the original on July 24, 2022. Retrieved July 24, 2022.
  78. ^ a b Kamal, Sameea (December 21, 2021). "California redistricting: What to know about the final maps". Calmatters – via calmatters.org.
  79. ^ a b Shane, Sam (April 14, 2021). "How One Republican Candidate Might Flip A Long-Time Democratic District". Retrieved April 21, 2021.
  80. ^ a b Brassil, Gillian. "Republican Tamika Hamiltion contests Ami Bera in Sacramento". www.sacbee.com. The Sacramento Bee. Retrieved December 22, 2021.
  81. ^ Fairley, Juliette (March 15, 2022). "Congressional candidate's lawsuit against Gov. Newsom set for trial". Southern California Record. Retrieved March 23, 2022.
  82. ^ "Chris Bish". Adobe Creative Cloud Express. Retrieved March 23, 2022.
  83. ^ "Citrus Heights councilman announces bid for U.S. Congress". Citrus Heights Sentinel. March 18, 2021. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  84. ^ a b c d "NARAL Pro-Choice America Endorses Slate of Reproductive Freedom Champions for the U.S. House and Senate". NARAL Pro-Choice America. July 13, 2021.
  85. ^ a b "MAGGIE'S LIST PROUDLY ENDORSES TAMIKA HAMILTON FOR CALIFORNIA'S 3RD CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT". www.maggieslist.org. April 27, 2021. Retrieved November 28, 2021.
  86. ^ Armstrong, Lance (March 2, 2022). "Ukraine-born House candidate 'shocked' by Russian invasion". The Galt Herald. Retrieved March 2, 2022.
  87. ^ Choi, Joseph (July 13, 2021). "Former Cummings staffer unveils congressional bid". The Hill. Retrieved October 6, 2021.
  88. ^ "Mathew Jedeikin for Congress". JedeikinForCongress.
  89. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q "2022 Feminist Majority PAC Endorsements". feministmajoritypac.org. Retrieved April 9, 2022.
  90. ^ Kamal, Sameea (November 18, 2021). "California Redistricting: Which Incumbents Are In Tough Spots?". Retrieved November 19, 2021.
  91. ^ "Solano Republican Assembly holding meeting in Vallejo". Times-Herald. September 13, 2021.
  92. ^ a b c Ramos, John (March 2, 2022). "New 8th Congressional District May Increase Clout Of Minority Communities In Contra Costa, Solano Counties". KPIX 5.
  93. ^ "FEC Statement of Candidacy - Jason Paletta". July 22, 2021. Retrieved November 26, 2021.
  94. ^ a b c d "EQUALITY CALIFORNIA ENDORSES 4 CONGRESSIONAL INCUMBENTS IN 2022 BATTLEGROUND DISTRICTS". www.eqca.org. March 24, 2021. Retrieved November 28, 2021.
  95. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae "2022 Elections". www.seiuca.org.
  96. ^ a b c d e Brassil, Gillian; Lightman, David (January 18, 2022). "California Democrat McNerney won't seek re-election, opening seat to Rep. Josh Harder". Merced Sun-Star.
  97. ^ Franco, Victoria (November 16, 2021). "County Supervisor Announces Candidacy For U.S. Congress Election". www.sfgate.com. San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved November 17, 2021.
  98. ^ "San Joaquin County Supervisor Announces Candidacy for Congress". www.sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com. KPIX-TV. November 16, 2021. Retrieved November 26, 2021.
  99. ^ "Karena Feng, Candidate, U.S. Congress District 9". December 10, 2021.
  100. ^ Stone, Reid (February 17, 2022). "Astronut Hernandez eyes challenge to Harder in north Valley Congressional seat". sjvsun.com. Retrieved March 3, 2022.
  101. ^ a b "AIPAC PAC Featured Candidates". AIPAC PAC.
  102. ^ a b c "End Citizens United - Candidates". End Citizens United. Retrieved January 28, 2022.
  103. ^ "Giffords Endorses Slate of Majority Makers Running for the US House". www.giffords.org. Giffords. April 21, 2022.
  104. ^ Connon, Courtnee (March 28, 2022). "LCV Action Fund Endorses Josh Harder for Congress". League of Conservation Voters. LCV Action Fund.
  105. ^ "NARAL Pro-Choice America Endorses Slate of Reproductive Freedom Leaders for Reelection to the U.S. House of Representatives". www.prochoiceamerica.org. November 16, 2021. Retrieved January 22, 2022.
  106. ^ "Editorial: Reelect Harder in Bay Area's only competitive House race". The Mercury News. August 9, 2022. Archived from the original on August 10, 2022. Retrieved August 10, 2022.
  107. ^ RMG Research
  108. ^ Degan, Ryan (April 18, 2021). "DeSaulnier confirms re-election bid in early announcement". Danville SanRamon. Retrieved April 19, 2021.
  109. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci cj ck cl cm cn "Certified List of Candidates for the June 7, 2022 Primary Election" (PDF). Retrieved May 13, 2022.
  110. ^ "John Dennis (California)". Ballotpedia.
  111. ^ a b "California's 12th Congressional District election, 2022". Ballotpedia.
  112. ^ "Pelosi will stay around to lead House Democrats through the next election -- and perhaps beyond". CNN.
  113. ^ "FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1471443". docquery.fec.gov.
  114. ^ "BIANCA VON KRIEG PLEDGES TO SUPPORT TERM LIMITS ON CONGRESS". May 17, 2021.
  115. ^ "FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1497974". docquery.fec.gov.
  116. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Marianne Williamson's Candidate Summit". Candidate Summit. Retrieved December 12, 2021.
  117. ^ a b c "Candidates". endcitizensunited.org. End Citizens United. Retrieved May 30, 2022.
  118. ^ "We're proud to endorse these reproductive freedom champions and leaders!". www.prochoiceamerica.org. Retrieved January 22, 2022.
  119. ^ a b c Deruy, Emily (November 16, 2021). "We asked every Bay Area Congress member if they plan to run for re-election in 2022. Here are their answers". The Mercury News. Retrieved November 17, 2021.
  120. ^ a b c d e f "ENDORSEMENTS". Progressive Democrats of America. February 21, 2021. Archived from the original on November 27, 2022. Retrieved June 25, 2022.
  121. ^ a b c d e "NWPC 2022 Endorsed Candidates". National Women's Political Caucus.
  122. ^ a b c Brassil, Gillian (January 18, 2022). "California Democrat Adam Gray to run for Congress in Merced-centered district". The Fresno Bee. Retrieved January 18, 2022.
  123. ^ Mehta, Seema (December 3, 2022). "In California's final congressional race, Republican John Duarte wins Central Valley seat". Los Angeles Times.
  124. ^ a b Taub, David (January 18, 2022). "McNerney Will Retire. What Does That Mean for Janz, Gray, Harder?". GV Wire. Retrieved January 18, 2022.
  125. ^ Taub, David; Reporter, Senior (December 23, 2021). "Harder to Run in an Easier Dem District, Extending Into Fresno County". GV Wire - Explore. Explain. Expose. Retrieved January 13, 2022.
  126. ^ a b c Stone, Reid (February 28, 2022). "Vying for Nunes' seat, Elizabeth Heng rolls out her second act of 2022". sjvsun.com. Retrieved March 3, 2022.
  127. ^ a b c Valine, Kevin (July 14, 2021). "As Harder's contributions hit milestone, Congressman's opponents begin to emerge". The Modesto Bee. Retrieved July 25, 2021.
  128. ^ a b Brassil, Gillian (September 19, 2021). "California's 7 tightest House of Representatives elections to watch in 2022". The Sacramento Bee. Archived from the original on September 23, 2021. Retrieved September 19, 2021.
  129. ^ Kumar, Arun (November 18, 2021). "Indian American Ricky Gill running for Congress in California". American BAzzar. Retrieved November 20, 2021.
  130. ^ a b Martin, Angelina (August 4, 2021). "Turlock Republicans among challengers to Harder in District 10". www.turlockjournal.com. Turlock Journal. Retrieved August 4, 2021.
  131. ^ Martin, Angelina (December 23, 2021). "Harder announces campaign for new CD-13 seat". www.turlockjournal.com.
  132. ^ "California's 10th Congressional District election, 2022". Ballotpedia.
  133. ^ Martin, Angelina (November 9, 2021). "Turlockers past and present announce Congressional candidacy". www.turlockjournal.com. Turlock Journal. Retrieved November 10, 2021.
  134. ^ White, Jeremy (January 18, 2022). "McNerney to retire, Harder shifts to his seat". Politico. Retrieved January 18, 2022.
  135. ^ a b Ferris, Sarah (April 6, 2022). "Dem moderates get choosy in midterm recruits as GOP headwinds grow". Politico.
  136. ^ a b c d e Ackley, Kate; McIntire, Mary; Akin, Stephanie (August 18, 2022). "At the Races: A first in the Last Frontier". Roll Call. Retrieved August 19, 2022.
  137. ^ Korte, Lara; White, Jeremy; Doshi, Juhi (May 26, 2022). "Newsom is ready to sign the gun bills". www.politico.com. Politico. Retrieved May 28, 2022.
  138. ^ a b c d "Current Endorsements". California Environmental Voters.
  139. ^ a b c "Phil Arballo, Salud Carbajal, Jimmy Panetta Earn LCV Action Fund Endorsements for Congress Representing California". www.lcv.org. League of Conservation Voters. June 3, 2022. Retrieved June 7, 2022.
  140. ^ "Duarte and Gray face off in live, public Modesto Bee debate". www.modbee.com. September 11, 2022. Retrieved October 15, 2022.
  141. ^ YouTube
  142. ^ a b Moore Information Group (R)
  143. ^ RMG Research
  144. ^ Public Policy Polling (D)
  145. ^ Walsh, Jeremy (December 9, 2019). "Election 2020: Candidate list for March primary solidified". Danville San Ramon. Retrieved December 22, 2019.
  146. ^ "California's 15th Congressional District election, 2022". Ballotpedia.
  147. ^ a b c d e f g h i Deruy, Emily (November 23, 2021). "Bay Area Congress race: Assemblymember Kevin Mullin joins growing field vying for Rep. Jackie Speier's seat". www.mercurynews.com. The Mercury News. Retrieved November 26, 2021.
  148. ^ Greenwood, Max (November 16, 2021). "Jackie Speier will not run for reelection to Congress in 2022". The Hill. Retrieved November 16, 2021.
  149. ^ "San Mateo Co. supervisor to launch campaign for Rep. Speier's Congressional seat". KTVU. November 19, 2021. Retrieved November 20, 2021.
  150. ^ He, Eric (November 23, 2021). "Two More Names Join Race For Rep. Jackie Speier's Seat". patch.com. Patch. Retrieved November 23, 2021.
  151. ^ Simon, Mark (November 19, 2021). "Who will run for Speier's seat?". The Daily Journal. Retrieved November 20, 2021.
  152. ^ a b "Rep. Speier endorses Mullin, her former aide". Palo Alto Daily Post. December 6, 2021.
  153. ^ a b c d e f g Mibach, Emily (November 18, 2021). "A list of people who might try to replace Jackie Speier in Congress". Palo Alto Daily Post.
  154. ^ "FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1553410".
  155. ^ "Redwood City's new mayor, Giselle Hale, announces priorities". climaterwc.com. December 8, 2021.
  156. ^ a b Lempert, Sue. "A rising political star". San Mateo Daily Journal.
  157. ^ "California Rep. Jackie Speier, survivor of Jonestown massacre, to retire from Congress". Los Angeles Times. November 16, 2021.
  158. ^ a b Marzorati, Guy. "Rep. Jackie Speier Endorses Kevin Mullin to Succeed Her in Congress". www.kqed.org. KQED-FM. Retrieved December 7, 2021.
  159. ^ a b "Our Candidates". www.newpolitics.org. New Politics. Retrieved May 31, 2022.
  160. ^ a b c d e f Bajko, Matthew (December 6, 2021). "Political Notes: Out colleagues back Mullin for SF-area House seat". Bay Area Reporter. Retrieved December 6, 2021.
  161. ^ a b "Equality California Endorses Pro-Equality Champions Kevin Mullin and Jay Chen for Congress". www.eqca.org. March 2, 2022.
  162. ^ a b "NARAL Pro-Choice America Endorses in Key U.S. House Races in California and Ohio". www.prochoiceamerica.org. NARAL Pro-Choice America. June 3, 2022.
  163. ^ RMG Research
  164. ^ FM3 Research (D)
  165. ^ Tulchin Research (D)
  166. ^ "Rishi Kumar Recruits Student Interns for 2022 Election Campaign". India Currents. April 8, 2021. Retrieved April 11, 2021.
  167. ^ a b Browning, Corey (December 23, 2021). "Congressional maps split San Mateo County". San Mateo Daily Journal.
  168. ^ Sheyner, Gennady (January 7, 2021). "Fresh off reelection to City Council, Greg Tanaka sets sights on Congress". Palo Alto Online. Retrieved April 11, 2021.
  169. ^ "Endorsements". forwardparty.com. Retrieved April 5, 2022.
  170. ^ "Candidates - Justice Democrats". Justice Democrats.
  171. ^ "Jimmy Panetta announces run for re-election". Paso Robles Daily News. December 28, 2021. Retrieved January 13, 2022.
  172. ^ "California's 20th Congressional District election, 2022". Ballotpedia.
  173. ^ "Unofficial Election Results - Congressional District 22". California Secretary of State. Retrieved June 10, 2022.
  174. ^ a b Wang, Jackie; Ackley, Kate (June 8, 2022). "House special election winner Conway OK with being short-timer". Roll Call. Retrieved June 29, 2022.
  175. ^ Morgen, Sam (May 13, 2021). "Bakersfield teacher Marisa Wood announces bid to take on Kevin McCarthy". Bakersfield.com.
  176. ^ Belcher, Phyllis (February 13, 2022). "Democratic Club meets candidates". www.tehachapinews.com. Tehachapi News. Retrieved February 16, 2022.
  177. ^ Wallace, Eytan (February 4, 2021). "ELECTION 2022: Democrat Bruno Amato announces candidacy for 23rd Congressional District". KGET 17. Retrieved February 5, 2021.
  178. ^ Gannon, Maddie (February 13, 2022). "Kevin McCarthy is down to only two opponents after Bruno Amato drops out of race". www.kget.com. KGET-TV. Retrieved February 16, 2022.
  179. ^ Morgen, Sam (October 21, 2021). "Springville native to challenge McCarthy". Porterville Recorder. Retrieved October 24, 2021.
  180. ^ "Gill withdraws from Congressional race, to run for Kern County supervisor". www.recorderonline.com. Porterville Recorder. January 7, 2022. Retrieved January 7, 2022.
  181. ^ Balekian, Alexan (February 6, 2022). "Former Trump appointee looking to fill Nunes' congressional seat will not seek reelection if successful in CA-22 special election". Your Central Valley. Retrieved June 7, 2022.
  182. ^ Fortinsky, Sarah; Duster, Chandelis (June 5, 2022). "Donald Trump endorses Kevin McCarthy for another term in Congress". CNN. Retrieved January 13, 2023.
  183. ^ a b "Citizens for Responsible Energy Solutions Announces Second Round of Congressional Endorsements for the 2022 Election Cycle". cresenergy.com. Citizens for Responsible Energy Solutions. May 4, 2022. Archived from the original on August 21, 2022. Retrieved June 7, 2022.
  184. ^ Calix, Brianna. "Fresno congressman Jim Costa plans to run again. Here's where he plans to campaign in 2022".
  185. ^ Taub, David (December 23, 2021). "Harder to Run in an Easier Dem District, Extending Into Fresno County".
  186. ^ The Trafalgar Group (R)
  187. ^ Tavlian, Alex (August 19, 2021). "Sources: Rudy Salas set to join field against Valadao in 2022". The San Joaquin Valley Sun. Archived from the original on August 19, 2021. Retrieved August 21, 2021.
  188. ^ Ward, James (January 12, 2022). "David Valadao will run for newly drawn 22nd Congressional District". www.visaliatimesdelta.com. Visalia Times Delta. Retrieved January 12, 2022.
  189. ^ Bradner, Eric (January 28, 2021). "House Republicans who voted to impeach face backlash at home in test of Trump's staying power". Archived from the original on January 29, 2021. Retrieved January 29, 2021.
  190. ^ Stone, Reid (November 4, 2021). "Lara, young Democrat, drops bid against Valadao". sjvsun.com.
  191. ^ "Delano Mayor Bryan Osorio files candidacy for 21st Congressional District". KGET. May 12, 2021. Retrieved May 13, 2021.
  192. ^ "Delano Mayor Bryan Osorio switches candidacy to state Senate".
  193. ^ Wallace, Eytan (December 20, 2020). "ELECTION 2022: Former Assemblymember Nicole Parra announces candidacy for 21st Congressional District". KGET 17. Retrieved December 24, 2020.
  194. ^ a b Calix, Brianna. "TJ Cox endorses challenger for his former congressional race seat". www.fresnobee.com. The Fresno Bee. Retrieved November 17, 2021.
  195. ^ Marinucci, Carla; Bloom, Isabella (October 18, 2021). "Salas to vie for Valadao's vulnerable Valley seat". www.politico.com. Politico. Retrieved November 27, 2021.
  196. ^ a b Bernal, Rafael (February 24, 2022). "Hispanic Democrats roll out trio of House endorsements". The Hill.
  197. ^ a b "Endorsed Candidates – NewDem Action Fund". newdemactionfund.com. Retrieved May 30, 2022.
  198. ^ Zanona, Melanie (March 24, 2022). "McCarthy calls endorsement of Cheney's primary foe a 'special case'". CNN.
  199. ^ a b c Ackley, Kate (November 16, 2021). "Sen. Tim Scott endorses in 9 House races". Roll Call.
  200. ^ a b c Kassel, Matthew (November 29, 2021). "Pro-Israel America announces new slate of House endorsements". www.jewishinsider.com. Jewish Insider. Retrieved November 29, 2021.
  201. ^ Steinhauser, Paul (March 16, 2022). "Sen. Ron Johnson tops list of Republicans endorsed by top Jewish GOP organization". www.foxnews.com. Fox News. Retrieved March 22, 2022.
  202. ^ RMG Research
  203. ^ David Binder Research (D)
  204. ^ Horseman, Jeff (January 5, 2022). "What Southern California House Republicans say about Jan. 6 riot one year later". Press-Enterprise.
  205. ^ "Obernolte announces plans to seek second term in Congress". Redlands News (Press release). December 30, 2021.
  206. ^ "Blanca Gomez Running for Congress on Behalf of Voters". CISION Pr Newswire. November 4, 2020. Retrieved October 6, 2021.
  207. ^ a b c d "ELECTION 2022PDA House Challenger Endorsements". April 7, 2022. Archived from the original on November 27, 2022. Retrieved April 7, 2022.
  208. ^ "Endorsement of Congressman Jay Obernolte". June 5, 2022. Archived from the original on July 24, 2022. Retrieved July 24, 2022.
  209. ^ "FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1498126". docquery.fec.gov.
  210. ^ "California's 24th Congressional District election, 2022". Ballotpedia.
  211. ^ Horseman, Jeff (March 22, 2021). "San Jacinto City Councilman Brian Hawkins to run for Congress". The Post Enterprise. Retrieved April 8, 2021.
  212. ^ a b Team, KESQ News (December 16, 2021). "Rep. Ruiz planning run in new congressional district to encompass eastern Riverside County".
  213. ^ "California's 36th Congressional District election, 2022". Ballotpedia.
  214. ^ Coulter, Tom (October 14, 2021). "Palm Desert gun store owner says he will challenge Rep. Raul Ruiz in 2022". The Desert Sun. Retrieved October 14, 2021.
  215. ^ "Burt Thakur running for election to the U.S. House".
  216. ^ Coulter, Tom (March 12, 2022). "After mullling Cogressional bid, Eduardo Garcia seeks re-election to Assembly". www.desertsun.com. The Desert Sun.
  217. ^ a b c Wilson, Mike Harris and Kathleen. "Ventura, Ojai cut from Congresswoman Brownley's 26th District under redistricting". Ventura County Star.
  218. ^ "FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1554164". docquery.fec.gov.
  219. ^ "Campaign Announcement". Daniel for Assembly.
  220. ^ Curto, Christian (March 17, 2021). "John Bolton Endorses and Makes PAC Contribution to Matt Jacobs for Congress". John Bolton PAC | BoltonPAC.com. Retrieved September 8, 2023.
  221. ^ "Rep. Mike Garcia's voting record: Will it be an obstacle to reelection?". Los Angeles Times. July 5, 2021.
  222. ^ Metha, Seema (March 31, 2021). "In congressional rematch, Democrat Christy Smith hopes GOP Rep. Mike Garcia's voting record gives her an edge". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved March 31, 2021.
  223. ^ Mehta, Seema (April 5, 2021). "Rep. Mike Garcia faces another Democratic challenger — Simi Valley Council Member Ruth Luevanos". Los Angeles Times.
  224. ^ Marinucci, Carla; White, Jeremy B.; Tzul, Richard (June 3, 2021). "'EUPHORIC' economic comeback — Veteran challenges MIKE GARCIA — FREE BEER for vaccinations? — SoCAL home prices jumping '$1 every two minutes'". Politico. Retrieved June 11, 2021.
  225. ^ "About David - David Rudnick for Congress". September 18, 2019. Retrieved May 18, 2022.
  226. ^ a b Kurdoghlian, Kev (April 16, 2021). "25th Congressional District candidates report fundraising". The Santa Clarita Valley Signal.
  227. ^ "FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1523010". docquery.fec.gov.
  228. ^ Kurdoghlian, Kev (July 8, 2021). "Lancaster mom joins 25th District race". Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  229. ^ a b c "New House Endorsees". Republican Jewish Coalition.
  230. ^ "ELECTION ALERT: Tea Party Express Endorses Mike Garcia in California's 27th Congressional District". Tea Party Express. July 12, 2022. Retrieved August 23, 2022.
  231. ^ "314 ACTION FUND ENDORSES ENGINEER AND INTELLIGENCE OFFICER QUAYE QUARTEY IN CA-25 RACE". www.314action.org. September 27, 2021. Retrieved November 28, 2021.
  232. ^ "Endorsement: Quaye Quartey for Congress (CA-25)". www.newpolitics.org. September 20, 2021. Retrieved November 28, 2021.
  233. ^ "VoteVets PAC Endorses Quaye Quartey for Congress". www.votevets.org. June 29, 2021. Retrieved November 28, 2021.
  234. ^ "Endorsement: Christy Smith for Congress". Los Angeles Times. May 16, 2022. Retrieved May 17, 2022.
  235. ^ "Equality California Endorses Christy Smith for Congress in CA-27". February 28, 2022.
  236. ^ a b c "LCV Action Fund Endorses Christy Smith, Dr. Asif Mahmood and Robert Garcia for Congress in California". August 5, 2022. Retrieved August 8, 2022.
  237. ^ a b c d e "Endorsements". www.stonewalldems.org. Stonewall Democrats. Retrieved March 7, 2022.
  238. ^ a b c Remington Research Group (R)
  239. ^ a b The Mellman Group (D)
  240. ^ "Remapping Changes LCF's Representation – Outlook Newspapers". Archived from the original on February 9, 2022. Retrieved February 9, 2022.
  241. ^ "Gio DePaolis Pledges to Support Term Limits on Congress". March 15, 2021.
  242. ^ a b "California's 27th Congressional District election, 2022". Ballotpedia.
  243. ^ "FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1553342". docquery.fec.gov.
  244. ^ "FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1508664". docquery.fec.gov.
  245. ^ "FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1486686". docquery.fec.gov.
  246. ^ "Students rally to diversify hiring of CSUN professors". May 11, 2021.
  247. ^ a b c "Meet The Candidates".
  248. ^ "There She Goes Again. . . Maebe Announces 2nd Run for Congress". Los Feliz Ledger. February 2, 2021.
  249. ^ McGreevy, Patrick (March 27, 2021). "California attorney general-designee Rob Bonta is already gearing up for the 2022 election". Los Angeles Times.
  250. ^ Folley, Aris (November 29, 2020). "Voters elected a record number of Black women to Congress this year — none were Republican". The Hill. Retrieved April 21, 2021.
  251. ^ Whitnall, Becca (February 18, 2022). "County GOP endorsement leads to party shakeup". The Camarillo Acorn. Retrieved February 18, 2022.
  252. ^ What I’m rooting for on #ElectionDay2022 ! Archived November 10, 2022, at the Wayback Machine Twitter
  253. ^ Kyle, Sharon (November 7, 2022). "LA Progressive Voter Guide November 2022". LA Progressive. Retrieved April 6, 2023.
  254. ^ a b c Sprague, Mike (May 10, 2022). "What candidates for the 31st Congressional District say on the issues". Whittier Daily News.
  255. ^ "American Solidarity Party of California". Facebook. Retrieved May 27, 2022.
  256. ^ a b c d e "California's 30th Congressional District election, 2022". Ballotpedia.
  257. ^ Petersen, Carl J. (March 8, 2021). "Can This Candidate Turn CA30 Progressive?". Patch.
  258. ^ Draughorne, Kenan (March 24, 2021). "The Valley Of Change To Host March Cleanup In Tamir Rice' Honor". Patch.
  259. ^ Johnson, A. Bryan (February 11, 2022). "Nina Turner Is Still Mad As Hell, and Running for Congress (Again)". The Nation. Retrieved February 11, 2022.
  260. ^ "Center Action Fund Endorses Shervin Aazami for California's 32nd Congressional District". centeractionfund.org.
  261. ^ "Candidate Endorsements". foeaction.org. August 25, 2017.
  262. ^ "IAPAC PROUDLY ENDORSES SHERVIN AAZAMI FOR CONGRESS". paaia.org. April 14, 2022.
  263. ^ "JVP ACTION PAC ANNOUNCES FIRST ENDORSEMENTS FOR 2022 MIDTERMS". jvpaction.org. March 15, 2022.
  264. ^ "ANNOUNCING OUR FIRST ROUND OF 2022 ENDORSEMENTS". niacactionpac.org.
  265. ^ "ELECTION 2022 PDA House Challenger Endorsements". pdamerica.org. February 21, 2021.
  266. ^ "RootsAction: Connect. Act. Grow". act.rootsaction.org.
  267. ^ "WE ARE SO PROUD TO BE ENDORSED BY". shervinforcongress.com.
  268. ^ a b c d e f "Endorsed Candidates". proisraelamerica.org.
  269. ^ Aguilar, U. S. Rep Pete (December 23, 2021). "Aguilar announces plans to run for fifth term". Redlands News.
  270. ^ a b c "Election Day is June 7; county says a 'clerical issue' has been fixed". June 2022.
  271. ^ "Caltrans housing | Biogas plant | Political moves". The Eastsider LA. December 6, 2021.
  272. ^ Cargile for Congress (April 6, 2021). "Congressional Candidate Launches 2022 Campaign With Public Support of El Salvadorian President, Nayib Bukele". Yahoo! Finance. Retrieved April 21, 2021.
  273. ^ "Redistricting process has concluded; Fontana will still be represented by two members in the House". Fontana Herald News. December 28, 2021.
  274. ^ Jiménez, Soudi (November 10, 2022). "La Congresista Californiana, Norma Torres, Acusa al Presidente de El Salvador de Interferencia Electoral" [California Congresswoman, Norma Torres, Accuses the President of El Salvador of Electoral Interference]. Los Angeles Times (in Spanish). Retrieved November 10, 2022.
  275. ^ Joe Collins wins a step in libel suit against Maxine Waters. 790 KABC. February 25, 2021. Retrieved March 3, 2021.
  276. ^ "California's 33rd Congressional District election, 2022". Ballotpedia.
  277. ^ "Our Candidates (2021-2022)". BAMPAC. Retrieved January 29, 2022.
  278. ^ Sullivan, Sean; Pager, Tyler (September 24, 2021). "Rep. Karen Bass plans to announce run for mayor of Los Angeles". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Archived from the original on September 24, 2021. Retrieved September 25, 2021.
  279. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "Senator Sydney Kamlager officially announces campaign to succeed Karen Bass in Congress". Los Angeles Sentinel. January 12, 2022. Retrieved January 13, 2022.
  280. ^ "The Trailer: "Money in peoples' hands": The Democrats who've learned to love crypto". The Washington Post. January 13, 2022. Retrieved February 16, 2022.
  281. ^ a b Annika Kim Constantino (February 19, 2022). "House retirements sock California in the run-up to midterm elections". Cnbc.com. Retrieved May 11, 2022.
  282. ^ Marinucci, Carla; Bloom, Isabella; Massara, Graph (October 13, 2021). "Is the next Gascón recall a 'bipartisan fig leaf'?". POLITICO.
  283. ^ a b "Black Caucus Endorses Sen. Kamlager to Replace U.S. Rep. Karen Bass". Post News Group. January 23, 2022.
  284. ^ "Michael Shure - Candidate for US Congress". YouTube.
  285. ^ "Political Notebook: Gulledge aims to be first gay Black CA state senator".
  286. ^ "Karen Bass brings star power to crowded L.A. mayoral race". Capitol Weekly. November 19, 2021.
  287. ^ Schnell, Mychael (May 11, 2022). "Jayapal endorses six progressive House candidates". Politico. Retrieved May 11, 2022.
  288. ^ a b c "Our Candidates". democracyforamerica.com. Democracy for America.
  289. ^ "EMILY's List Endorses Sydney Kamlager for Congress".
  290. ^ "NEWS: Equality California Endorses Pro-Equality Champion Sydney Kamlager for Congress". February 17, 2022.
  291. ^ a b "Giffords PAC Endorses Slate of Gun Safety House Challengers". Giffords. August 12, 2022. Retrieved August 19, 2022.
  292. ^ "Sydney Kamlager Earns LCV Action Fund Endorsement to Continue Legacy of Climate Action in Congress". League of Conservation Voters. LCV Action Fund. October 7, 2022.
  293. ^ a b McIntire, Mary; Akin, Stephanie; Ackley, Kate (March 24, 2022). "At the Races: KBJ OK TBD". rollcall.com. Roll Call. Retrieved March 30, 2022.
  294. ^ RMG Research
  295. ^ Staggs, Brooke (July 19, 2021). "New fundraising numbers suggest Orange County House races will be hot again next year". The Orange County Register. Retrieved November 26, 2021.
  296. ^ a b c d e Staggs, Brooke (January 8, 2022). "2022 elections: Roundup of who's running in Orange County's new House, state Senate and Assembly districts". The Orange County Register.
  297. ^ Bajko, Matthew S. (December 17, 2021). "Gay Long Beach mayor Garcia seeks open House seat". The Bay Area Reporter / B.A.R. Inc.
  298. ^ Pyers, Rob [@rpyers] (March 20, 2022). "UPDATE: He qualified for the ballot and has filed FEC paperwork for his attempt to become the US House of Representative's first nonagenarian freshman member. #CA39" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  299. ^ Weisman, Jonathan (June 16, 2022). "Democrats' Risky Bet: Aid G.O.P. Extremists in Spring, Hoping to Beat Them in Fall". The New York Times. Archived from the original on September 5, 2022.
  300. ^ Staggs, Brooke (February 3, 2021). "Who's already running for Congress in Orange County in 2022?". The Orange County Register. Retrieved March 1, 2021.
  301. ^ a b "9 takeaways from the California governor recall election". Roll Call. September 15, 2021.
  302. ^ a b c d e "Congresswoman Young Kim announces reelection bid in new CA-40". December 23, 2021.
  303. ^ a b Staggs, Brooke (January 20, 2022). "Democrat Asif Mahmood, physician, challenging Rep. Young Kim in CA-40 race". Orange County Register. Retrieved January 20, 2022.
  304. ^ a b c d e f g Zilbermints, Regina (January 20, 2022). "Southern California Democrats throw their weight behind Young Kim challenger". The Hill.
  305. ^ a b c Staggs, Brooke (December 22, 2021). "GOP Reps. Young Kim, Michelle Steel target new districts in 2022 elections". OCT Register. Retrieved December 23, 2021.
  306. ^ a b c d Staggs, Brooke (July 20, 2021). "New fundraising numbers suggest Orange County House races will be hot again next year". The Orange County Register. Retrieved July 27, 2021.
  307. ^ D'Urso, William (January 11, 2022). "Rep. Young Kim earns endorsement as game plan for new district develops". www.spectrumnews.com. Spectrum News. Retrieved January 12, 2022.
  308. ^ a b "2022 Candidates". www.maggieslist.org. Retrieved January 2, 2021.
  309. ^ Haider, Nasim (July 29, 2022). "Hillary Clinton endorses Pakistani-American Dr Asif for Congress election". Geo News.
  310. ^ McIntire, Mary; Akin, Stephanie; Ackley, Kate (April 21, 2022). "At the Races: No recess for campaign money". rollcall.com. Roll Call. Retrieved April 22, 2022.
  311. ^ Akin, Stephanie; Ackley, Kate; McIntire, Mary (March 10, 2022). "At the Races: Retreat rerouted". rollcall.com. Roll Call. Retrieved March 12, 2022.
  312. ^ "AAPI Victory Fund Endorses Dr. Asif Mahmood for California's 40th Congressional District". AAPI Victory Fund. August 12, 2022. Archived from the original on December 30, 2022. Retrieved December 30, 2022.
  313. ^ a b "2022 Endorsed Candidates - ASPIRE PAC". aspirepac.org. Retrieved April 26, 2022.
  314. ^ Ackley, Kate; McIntire, Mary; Akin, Stephanie (September 8, 2022). "At the Races: Ads nausem". Roll Call. Retrieved December 31, 2022.
  315. ^ "Endorsement: Asif Mahmood for Congress". Los Angeles Times. October 5, 2022. Retrieved December 23, 2022.
  316. ^ a b Public Opinion Strategies (R)
  317. ^ Coulter, Tom (December 27, 2021). "GOP Rep. Ken Calvert will seek re-election in new district that includes Palm Springs". www.desertsun.com. The Desert Sun. Retrieved December 27, 2021.
  318. ^ Horseman, Jeff (October 27, 2021). "Ex-prosecutor hopes to unseat Inland Rep. Ken Calvert". The Press-Enterprise. Retrieved October 27, 2021.
  319. ^ Horseman, Jeff (July 22, 2021). "Another Democrat plans to run against Inland Rep. Ken Calvert". The Press-Enterprise. Retrieved July 25, 2021.
  320. ^ Coulter, Tom (March 30, 2022). "Donald Trump endorses GOP Rep. Ken Calvert in re-election bid in new district". www.desertsun.com. The Desert Sun. Retrieved May 31, 2022.
  321. ^ "Endorsement District 41: In the U.S. House, Will Rollins would be the best rep for valley". The Desert Sun. October 16, 2022. Retrieved October 17, 2022.
  322. ^ a b c "Human Rights Campaign Endorses 14 Pro-Equality Champions for U.S. House of Representatives". Human Rights Campaign. July 6, 2022. Retrieved July 7, 2022.
  323. ^ Victory Fund Staff (January 26, 2022). "LGBTQ Victory Fund Endorses 52 Candidates for 2022 Elections". www.victoryfund.org. Retrieved January 29, 2022.
  324. ^ Tulchin Research (D)
  325. ^ ApplecartUSA (D)
  326. ^ Tulchin Research (D)
  327. ^ a b c "Filing season makes political races real in Long Beach, statewide". February 21, 2022.
  328. ^ a b c White, Jeremy (December 17, 2021). "Long Beach Mayor Robert Garcia to run for retiring Lowenthal's seat". Politico.
  329. ^ a b Haire, Chris (December 24, 2021). "Bell Gardens Assemblywoman Cristina Garcia will face Long Beach Mayor Robert Garcia for Congress". Press-Telegram.
  330. ^ Gomez, Guisell (July 28, 2021). "Nicole Lopez Fights for Equality and Inclusion, 'Con Ganas y Sin Miedo'". BELatina.
  331. ^ Newsource, C. N. N. (December 21, 2021). "California Democrat announces she will not seek reelection to Congress".
  332. ^ Bement, Brice (September 24, 2021). "From homeless to running for Congress". WCIA.
  333. ^ Staggs, Brooke (February 3, 2021). "Who's already running for Congress in Orange County in 2022?". The Orange County Register.
  334. ^ Veronica Stracqualursi (December 16, 2021). "Democratic Rep. Alan Lowenthal announces he will not seek reelection in 2022". CNN.
  335. ^ "FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1485486". docquery.fec.gov.
  336. ^ Byrnes, Jesse (December 20, 2021). "Powerful House Democratic appropriator not seeking reelection". The Hill.
  337. ^ Wells, Dylan (April 8, 2022). "Dem Rep Jayapal endorses midterm slate as progressives try to advance". www.usatoday.com. USA Today. Retrieved April 9, 2022.
  338. ^ a b c d e f g h "Political Notebook: Endorsements pour in for Garcia's House bid". The Bay Area Reporter / B.A.R. Inc.
  339. ^ "NARAL Pro-Choice America Endorses Eight Candidates for Election to the U.S. House". NARAL Pro-Choice America. September 7, 2022. Retrieved December 31, 2022.
  340. ^ "Jay Chen Announces Run for Congress in Young Kim's District". Rafu Shimpo. February 4, 2021. Retrieved February 5, 2021.
  341. ^ a b c d Staggs, Brooke (April 19, 2021). "Katie Porter raises more in first quarter than all other Orange County reps combined". The Orange County Register. Retrieved April 29, 2021.
  342. ^ a b c d e f g "Rep. Michelle Steel to Run in California's New 45th Congressional District". Orange County Breeze. December 23, 2021. Archived from the original on January 4, 2022. Retrieved December 25, 2021.
  343. ^ "Endorsement: Jay Chen for Congress (CA-39)". www.newpolitics.org. September 27, 2021. Retrieved November 28, 2021.
  344. ^ "VoteVets Endorses Jay Chen for Congress". www.votevets.org. November 4, 2021. Retrieved November 27, 2021.
  345. ^ D'Urso, William (June 23, 2021). "Former ambassador to the U.N. Nikki Haley endorses Rep. Michelle Steel". www.spectrumnews.com. Spectrum News. Retrieved November 26, 2021.
  346. ^ "Endorsement: Michelle Steel for 45th congressional district". The Orange County Register. September 29, 2022. Retrieved January 3, 2023.
  347. ^ Staggs, Brooke (December 10, 2021). "2022 Election: Socialist Mike Ortega challenges Rep. Lou Correa from the left". www.ocregister.com. The Orange County Register. Retrieved December 10, 2021.
  348. ^ a b c d "Mike Ortega Endorsements". ortegaforcongress.com.
  349. ^ Schnell, Mychael (December 21, 2021). "Rep. Katie Porter running for reelection in newly drawn California district". The Hill.
  350. ^ Staggs, Brooke (April 19, 2021). "Katie Porter raises more in first quarter than all other Orange County reps combined". Orange County Register.
  351. ^ a b c "These are California's tightest US House races in 2022. Here's who is vulnerable". Sacramento Bee. January 17, 2022.
  352. ^ Mason, Melanie (January 3, 2022). "Harley Rouda opts out of battle with fellow Democrat Katie Porter for Orange County seat". Los Angeles Times.
  353. ^ "Club for Growth PAC Endorsed Candidates". www.clubforgrowth.org. Club for Growth. Retrieved April 30, 2022.
  354. ^ "ELECTION ALERT: Tea Party Express Endorses Scott Baugh in California's 47th Congressional District". Tea Party Express. May 31, 2022. Retrieved August 7, 2022.
  355. ^ "Endorsement: Scott Baugh for the 47th Congressional District". The Orange County Register. September 23, 2022. Retrieved October 27, 2022.
  356. ^ Staggs, Brooke (April 21, 2022). "Elections 2022: Get to know Rep. Katie Porter, four more candidates in 47th District race". The Orange County Register.
  357. ^ "DFA endorses 6 progressive House members for reelection". www.democracyforamerica.com. August 11, 2021. Retrieved November 28, 2021.
  358. ^ "EMILY's List Endorses 17 Congresswomen for Reelection". www.emilyslist.org. EMILY's List. March 26, 2021. Archived from the original on April 24, 2021.
  359. ^ a b "Giffords Endorses Slate of Gun Safety Champions". www.giffords.org. Giffords. March 23, 2022.
  360. ^ "NARAL Pro-Choice America Endorses Slate of Reproductive Freedom Leaders for the U.S. House of Representatives". www.prochoiceamerica.org. July 20, 2021. Retrieved January 22, 2022.
  361. ^ "2022 Recommended Candidates". niacactionpac.org.
  362. ^ a b "Our Recommended Candidates". educationvotes.nea.org. National Education Association.
  363. ^ "NNU National Endorsements". nationalnursesunited.org. National Nurses United. March 9, 2018.
  364. ^ a b Bajko, Matthew (July 8, 2021). "Political Notes: Gay veteran Rocha seeks San Diego area congressional seat". The Bay Area Reporter. Retrieved July 27, 2021.
  365. ^ a b Jennewein, Chris; Stone, Ken (December 22, 2021). "Reps. Jacobs, Issa to Seek Re-Election in New 51st, 48th Congress Districts in 2022". Times of San Diego.
  366. ^ a b Manchester, Julia (August 2, 2021). "Darrell Issa gets Democratic challenger ahead of 2022". The Hill. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  367. ^ Sullivan Brennan, Deborah (July 7, 2021). "Former military prosecutor to challenge Darrell Issa for Congress". The San Diego Union-Tribune. Retrieved July 25, 2021.
  368. ^ Jennewein, Chris (January 5, 2022). "Redistricting Forces Democrat Joseph Rocha to End Challenge to Rep. Issa". Times of San Diego. Archived from the original on January 5, 2022. Retrieved January 20, 2022.
  369. ^ a b c d e "Endorsement: Our recommendations for House seats in the San Diego area and for the U.S. Senate". The San Diego Union-Tribune. May 19, 2022. Retrieved May 20, 2022.
  370. ^ "Endorsement of Congressman Darrell Issa". June 5, 2022. Archived from the original on July 24, 2022. Retrieved July 24, 2022.
  371. ^ a b c Bajko, Matthew S. (November 1, 2021). "Political Notes: Out CA candidates rack up support for their historic 2022 bids". www.ebar.com. Bay Area Reporter. Retrieved November 27, 2021.
  372. ^ Greenberg, Breeana (December 31, 2021). "California Selects New Congressional Map". San Clemente Times.
  373. ^ "Maryott Announces 2022 Run for Congress, Setting Up Rematch with Levin". Dana Point Times. May 6, 2021. Retrieved May 7, 2021.
  374. ^ Staggs, Brooke (December 30, 2021). "Supervisor Lisa Bartlett enters CA-49 race against Rep. Mike Levin, GOP challengers". OC Register.
  375. ^ Nelson, Samantha (June 1, 2021). "Oceanside council member Rodriguez announces run for Congress". The Coast News Group. Retrieved June 2, 2021.
  376. ^ "Conservative Talk Show Host ANNE ELIZABETH announces she is running for U.S. Congress from California - EIN Presswire". Einnews.com. January 26, 2022. Retrieved February 16, 2022.
  377. ^ "President Biden set to visit San Diego for campaign stops". CBS 8. Associated Press. November 2, 2022. Retrieved December 18, 2022.
  378. ^ "House Candidates". Council for a Livable World.
  379. ^ a b c d e Wyer, Stephen (January 20, 2022). "Endorsements trickling in for North County candidates". thecoastnews.com. The Coast News. Retrieved January 21, 2022.
  380. ^ a b co/efficient (R)
  381. ^ SurveyUSA
  382. ^ Jennewein, Chris (December 23, 2021). "Rep. Peters Confirms Reelection Bid in New 50th District in Coastal San Diego". Times of San Diego.
  383. ^ a b Brennan, Deborah Sullivan (January 23, 2022). "San Diego representatives prepare for primary challenges in new districts". San Diego Union-Tribune.
  384. ^ "Code With Her". codewithher.org. Retrieved April 3, 2022.
  385. ^ Connon, Courtnee (April 11, 2022). "LCV Action Fund Endorses Scott Peters for Congress". League of Conservation Voters. LCV Action Fund.
  386. ^ "PDA Endorses Kylie Taitano for Congress in CA-50 - Progressive Democrats of America". April 7, 2022. Retrieved April 7, 2022.
  387. ^ Meyer, Matt (May 19, 2022). "Meet the congressional candidates running to represent San Diego County". FOX 5 San Diego. Retrieved May 23, 2022.
  388. ^ a b Brambila, Aldo; Farber, Zach (January 15, 2022). "Socialist Jose Cortes announces run in new Calif. 51st Congressional District". Liberation News.
  389. ^ a b c d "Endorsements". Archived from the original on September 22, 2022. Retrieved September 22, 2022.
  390. ^ Jennewein, Chris (December 25, 2021). "Rep. Vargas Will Seek Reelection in New 52nd District in South San Diego County". Times of San Diego.
  391. ^ Sklar, Debbie L. (January 30, 2022). "Community Organizer Joaquín Vázquez Challenges Rep. Vargas in New 52nd District". Times of San Diego. Retrieved January 30, 2022.
[edit]