Primary Election 2026 – County Board Looks to Stay Intact

Connor Forbes
Connor Forbes
7 Min Read
Ryder Lawrence, 18, a first time voter, picks up a ballot for the CA primary election, June 2nd, 2026. Lisa Zambrano

Bianco Bid for Governor Far Behind

The roster of the Riverside County Board of Supervisors appears likely to remain as is, as all three Supes up for reelection are heading toward victories with a majority of the vote. District 2 Supervisor Karen Spiegel and District 4 Supervisor Manuel Perez are leading their respective races with margins significantly above the required 50% needed to avoid a run-off in November.

In the Fifth District, Supervisor Yxstian Gutierrez easily won a second term in the primary, with no listed opponent, though there were nearly 500 votes cast for write-in candidates.

While performing as one of the top 2 candidates in Riverside County, Sheriff Chad Bianco trails far behind statewide to qualify for the November run-off in his bid to be the next Governor of California. Fellow Republican Steve Hilton and Democrats Javier Beccera and Tom Steyer have significant statewide leads over Bianco.

In the newly drawn congressional maps, it appears the most hotly contested race, CA Congressional District 40, which is engaging two incumbent Republicans may well continue into November.

The incumbent, Rep. Young Kim of Anaheim, is currently in second, behind the longest-serving CA Republican in Congress, Ken Calvert of Corona, who represents the current 41st district.

Photo by Lisa Zambrano

The bulk of the district’s metropolitan space is in Orange County. However, the eastern boundary juts into Riverside County, encompassing the Temescal Valley, most of Lake Elsinore, Canyon Lake and Menifee. 

Calvert’s prior stomping ground of northwest Riverside County, including Corona, Eastvale and Norco, was lumped into the 35th Congressional District, where Rep. Norma Torres, D-Ontario, was holding a formidable lead over Republican businessman Mike Cargile.

 Most of the 35th District is in San Bernardino County.

The local race with the highest number of candidates — and no incumbent — is in the newly established 48th Congressional District, which encompasses the Anza and Hemet valleys, the Southwest cities and some of the
mountain communities. There were 12 people listed on the ballot, only one of whom was an independent.

Returns show Republican Jim Desmond leading the field with 42%, as of Thursday at 8am followed distantly by Democrat Marni von Wilpert at 19.5%. Eight other Democrats cumulatively accounted for approximately 30% of the vote thus far.

The 39th Congressional District was adjusted only a little by California Proposition 50 and continues to include Riverside, Moreno Valley, Perris, some of the outlying communities just west of Perris, as well as Lake
Elsinore, and the freeway communities north of Moreno Valley.

Democrat Rep. Mark Takano, the incumbent, was solidly in the lead against challenger and former Lake Elsinore Mayor Steve Manos.

The districts were reshaped, and in most cases renumbered, for the election based on Prop 50, approved by a majority of voters in the November 2025 special election. It amended the state constitution to permit the
Legislature to redefine congressional districts’ boundaries, even though the independent California Citizens Redistricting Commission had already established them after the 2020 Census.

California’s 52 congressional districts were modified. In Riverside County, all of the districts changed shape.

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A voter drops their ballot into the ballot box during the CA primary election, June 2nd, 2026.
Credit: Lisa Zambrano
A voter drops their ballot into the ballot box during the CA primary election, June 2nd, 2026. Lisa Zambrano

Primary Election 2026 Results

GovernorCounty Votes%State Votes
Chad Bianco78,49127.52579,83911.3
Xavier Becerra69,55824.391,310,71025.5
Steve Hilton 60,86321.341,417,68927.6
Tom Steyer 44,31615.541,013,48819.7
Katie Porter9,7133.41236,7204.6
Matt Mahan5,7232.01209,1754.1
Antonio Villaraigosa4,06568,7891.3
US Representatives
33rd District
Pete Aguilar *D33,07751.60%
Stephanie M. Vargas R12,29319.20%
35th District 
Norma Torres *D38,60256.30%
Mike Cargile R29,94843.7
39th District 
Mark Takano *D34,79556.30%
Steve Manos R27,00543.7
40th District
Ken Calvert *R45,10336.10%
Young Kim *R26,90221.5
Esther Kim-Varet D19,52615.6
Lisa Ramirez D16,69913.4
State Assembly
58th District
Leticia Castillo *R20,19350.5
Clarissa Cervantes D19,79749.5
63rd District
Natasha Johnson R42,411100%
Member, Riverside County Board of Education, TA 1
Michael Martinez Scott17,24049.9
Maliha Williamson 9,87428.58
Oliver Unaka7,43821.53
County Supervisor 2nd Supervisorial
Karen Spiegel *34,89076.3
Sukhbir Singh Gill10,83723.7
US Representatives
23rd District 
Jay Obernolte * R49,01758.70%
Tessa Lynn Hodge D15,62618.7
Pat Wallis D11,89514.2
25th District 
Raul Ruiz *D49,29158.20%
Joe Males R17,04420.1
Ronald Huffman10,84412.8
Ceci Andrade Truman7,5398.9
39th District 
Mark Takano *D34,79556.30%
Steve Manos R27,00543.7
48th District 
Jim Desmond R44,64741.40%
Marni von Wilpert D21,01619.5
State Senate
32nd District 
Kelly Sayarto *R80,54860.50%
Tiffanie Tate D52,50139.5
State Assembly
36th District
Jeff Gonzalez *R20,26246.50%
Ida S. Obeso-Martinez D10,41623.9
Oscar Ortiz D8,97620.6
Tomas Oliva D 3,9099
47th District
Greg Wallis *R41,62949.40%
Leila Namvar D25,08529.7
Jason Byors D17,62320.9
71st District
Kate Sanchez *R49,60260.10%
JJ Galvez D32,96839.9
County Supervisor 4th Supervisorial 
V. Manuel Perez *36,98760.04
Steve Sanchez24,61239.96
County Supervisor 5th Supervisorial 
Yxstian Gutierrez35,18598.58
Measure B – City of Perris Public Safety, Streets, City Services
Yes2,56660.78
No1,65639.22

Votes tallies as of Thursday, 8 am.

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