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2012 United States Senate election in California

The 2012 United States Senate election in California took place on November 6, 2012, concurrently with the 2012 U.S. presidential election as well as other elections to the United States Senate and House of Representatives and various state and local elections.

2012 United States Senate election in California

← 2006 November 6, 2012 2018 →
Turnout55.2% (voting eligible)[1]
 
Nominee Dianne Feinstein Elizabeth Emken
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 7,864,624 4,713,887
Percentage 62.52% 37.48%

Feinstein:      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%      >90%
Emken:      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%

U.S. senator before election

Dianne Feinstein
Democratic

Elected U.S. Senator

Dianne Feinstein
Democratic

The primary election on June 5 took place under California's new blanket primary law, where all candidates appear on the same ballot, regardless of party. In the primary, voters voted for any candidate listed, or write-in any other candidate. The top two finishers—regardless of party—advanced to the general election in November, even if a candidate managed to receive a majority of the votes cast in the June primary. In the primary, less than 15% of the total 2010 census population voted. Incumbent Democratic U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein announced her intention to run for a fourth full term in April 2011[2] and finished first in the blanket primary with 49.5% of the vote. The second-place finisher was Republican candidate and autism activist Elizabeth Emken, who won 12.7% of the vote.

Feinstein ultimately defeated Emken in the general election on November 6, winning 62.5% of the vote to Emken's 37.5%. Feinstein's total of 7.86 million popular votes is the most ever received by a candidate for U.S. Senate in American history.[3] For a full decade, Emken was the only Republican candidate to have advanced to a general U.S. Senate election in California, as only Democratic candidates advanced to the general election in 2016 and 2018; however, this streak was broken in 2022.

Primary edit

Candidates edit

Democratic Party edit

  • Dianne Feinstein, incumbent U.S. senator[4]
  • Colleen Shea Fernald
  • David Levitt, computer scientist and engineer[5]
  • Nak Shah, environmental health consultant
  • Diane Stewart, businesswoman
  • Mike Strimling, attorney and former U.S. Peace Corps legal adviser

Republican Party edit

Libertarian edit

  • Gail Lightfoot, retired nurse

Peace and Freedom edit

American Independent edit

  • Don J. Grundmann, chiropractor

Despite Don J. Grundmann running, the American Independent Party gave their party endorsement to Republican Robert Lauten.[14]

Polling edit

Open Primary
Survey USA poll of 1,314 likely voters, March 29–April 2, 2012. MoE: ±2.8%
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Dianne Feinstein (incumbent) 51
Republican Dan Hughes 2
Republican Elizabeth Emken 2
Democratic Diane Stewart 1
Republican John Boruff 1
Republican Rick Williams 1
Republican Al Ramirez 1
Republican Robert Lauten 1
Republican Orly Taitz 1
Libertarian Gail Lightfoot 1
Democratic David Alex Levitt 1
Republican Greg Conlon 1
Republican Dennis Jackson 1
Republican Donald Krampe 1
American Independent Don J. Grundmann 1
Republican Oscar Alejandro Braun 0
Republican Dirk Allen Konopik 0
Democratic Mike Strimling 0
Democratic Nak Shah 0
Democratic Colleen Shea Fernald 0
Peace and Freedom Marsha Feinland 0
Republican Rogelio T. Gloria 0
Peace and Freedom Kabiruddin Karim Ali 0
Republican Nachum Shifren 0
n/a Undecided 30
Total votes
Survey USA poll of 1,232 likely voters, May 27–29, 2012. MoE: ±2.8%
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Dianne Feinstein (incumbent) 42
Republican Elizabeth Emken 4
Republican Dan Hughes 4
Republican Rick Williams 3
Republican Al Ramirez 3
Republican Donald Krampe 2
Democratic Diane Stewart 2
Democratic David Alex Levitt 2
Libertarian Gail Lightfoot 2
Republican Orly Taitz 1
Republican Greg Conlon 1
Republican Robert Lauten 1
Republican Nachum Shifren 1
Republican Dennis Jackson 1
Republican John Boruff 1
Republican Dirk Allen Konopik 1
Democratic Colleen Shea Fernald 1
Democratic Mike Strimling 1
Peace and Freedom Marsha Feinland 1
American Independent Don J. Grundmann 1
Republican Oscar Alejandro Braun 0
Peace and Freedom Kabiruddin Karim Ali 0
Democratic Nak Shah 0
Republican Rogelio T. Gloria 0
n/a Undecided 24
Total votes

Results edit

 
Primary results by county:
  Feinstein >= 20%
  Feinstein >= 30%
  Feinstein >= 40%
  Feinstein >= 50%
  Feinstein >= 60%
  Feinstein >= 70%
United States Senate primary election in California, 2012[15]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Dianne Feinstein (incumbent) 2,392,822 49.3%
Republican Elizabeth Emken 613,613 12.6%
Republican Dan Hughes 323,840 6.7%
Republican Rick Williams 157,946 3.3%
Republican Orly Taitz 154,781 3.2%
Republican Dennis Jackson 137,120 2.8%
Republican Greg Conlon 135,421 2.8%
Republican Al Ramirez 109,399 2.3%
Libertarian Gail Lightfoot 101,648 2.1%
Democratic Diane Stewart 97,782 2.0%
Democratic Mike Strimling 97,024 2.0%
Democratic David Levitt 76,482 1.6%
Republican Oscar Braun 75,842 1.6%
Republican Robert Lauten 57,720 1.2%
Peace and Freedom Marsha Feinland 54,129 1.2%
Democratic Colleen Shea Fernald 51,623 1.1%
Republican Donald Krampe 39,035 0.8%
American Independent Don J. Grundmann 33,037 0.7%
Republican Dirk Allen Konopik 29,997 0.6%
Republican John Boruff 29,357 0.6%
Democratic Nak Shah 27,203 0.6%
Republican Rogelio T. Gloria 22,529 0.5%
Republican Nachum Shifren 21,762 0.4%
Peace and Freedom Kabiruddin Karim Ali 12,269 0.3%
Republican Linda R. Price (write-in) 25 0.0%
Total votes 4,852,406 100.0%

Election contest edit

In July 2012, Taitz sued to block the certification of the primary election results, alleging "rampant election fraud", but her suit was denied.[16][17]

General election edit

Fundraising edit

Candidate (party) Receipts Disbursements Cash on hand Debt
Dianne Feinstein (D) $12,673,306 $12,105,960 $865,541 $373,734
Elizabeth Emken (R) $1,114,350 $1,110,209 $4,140 $4,479
Source: Federal Election Commission[18][19]

Top contributors edit

Dianne Feinstein Contribution Elizabeth Emken Contribution
Pacific Gas and Electric Company $120,700 Thomas H. Lee Partners $10,000
JStreetPAC $82,171 DevicePharm, Inc. $7,500
General Atomics $56,750 Troy Group $7,500
Edison International $54,250 Jelly Belly $5,500
General Dynamics $43,500 Autism Advocate $5,000
BAE Systems $40,000 Geier Group $5,000
Diamond Foods $31,599 Generations Healthcare $5,000
Northrop Grumman $30,800 Gingery Development $4,000
International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees $30,000 MIR3, Inc. $3,000
Wells Fargo $27,250 Northrop Grumman $2,800
Source: OpenSecrets[20]

Top industries edit

Dianne Feinstein Contribution Elizabeth Emken Contribution
Lawyers/Law Firms $565,129 Retired $63,849
Retired $463,058 Republican/Conservative $35,800
Agribusiness $367,132 Financial Institutions $26,100
Real Estate $334,321 Real Estate $19,200
Lobbyists $324,196 Business Services $16,000
Financial Institutions $321,744 Misc Finance $12,750
Electric Utilities $313,450 Printing & Publishing $8,000
Entertainment Industry $300,321 Food & Beverage $6,000
Women's Issues $207,449 Petroleum Industry $6,000
High-Tech Industry $205,789 Lawyers/Law Firms $5,458
Source: OpenSecrets[21]

Candidates edit

  • Dianne Feinstein (D), incumbent U.S. Senator
  • Elizabeth Emken (R), former Vice President of Autism Speaks[22]

Debates edit

No debates were scheduled. Senator Feinstein decided to focus on her own campaign rather than debate her challenger.[23][24]

Predictions edit

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[25] Solid D November 1, 2012
Sabato's Crystal Ball[26] Safe D November 5, 2012
Rothenberg Political Report[27] Safe D November 2, 2012
Real Clear Politics[28] Safe D November 5, 2012

Polling edit

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Dianne
Feinstein (D)
Elizabeth
Emken (R)
Other Undecided
SurveyUSA May 27–29, 2012 1,575 ±2.5% 50% 34% 15%
June 21 – July 2, 2012 848 ±3.5% 51% 32% 17%
CBRT Pepperdine July 30 – August 1, 2012 873 ±3.3% 46% 34% 21%
SurveyUSA September 9–11, 2012 524 ±4.2% 55% 37% 9%
September 6–18, 2012 902 ±3.4% 57% 31% 12%
SurveyUSA October 7–9, 2012 539 ±4.3% 54% 35% 10%
Reason-Rupe October 11–15, 2012 508 ±5.1% 60% 34% 2% 5%
LA Times/USC[permanent dead link] October 15–21, 2012 1,440 ±n/a 55% 38% 1% 6%
October 17–24, 2012 815 ±3.6% 56% 32% 12%
October 25–30, 2012 751 ±3.6% 54% 33% 13%

Results edit

United States Senate election in California, 2012[29]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Dianne Feinstein (incumbent) 7,864,624 62.52% +3.09%
Republican Elizabeth Emken 4,713,887 37.48% +2.46%
Total votes 12,578,511 100.00% N/A
Democratic hold

Results by county edit

Dianne Feinstein Elizabeth Emken
County Votes % Votes %
Alameda 468,456 81.9% 103,313 18.1%
Alpine 409 64.1% 229 35.9%
Amador 7,051 40.8% 10,232 59.2%
Butte 43,681 49.3% 44,981 50.7%
Calaveras 8,878 41.6% 12,479 58.4%
Colusa 2,482 43.3% 3,253 56.7%
Contra Costa 300,194 70.1% 128,310 29.9%
Del Norte 4,065 47.4% 4,502 52.6%
El Dorado 35,776 41.3% 50,820 58.7%
Fresno 129,267 51.1% 123,499 48.9%
Glenn 3,520 39.0% 5,515 61.0%
Humboldt 36,162 65.0% 19,437 35.0%
Imperial 25,342 67.2% 12,346 32.8%
Inyo 3,333 42.6% 4,494 57.4%
Kern 92,252 42.3% 125,906 57.7%
Kings 13,304 42.6% 17,916 57.4%
Lake 13,543 59.0% 9,424 41.0%
Lassen 3,150 29.9% 7,390 70.1%
Los Angeles 2,183,654 71.5% 868,924 28.5%
Madera 15,997 41.1% 22,942 58.9%
Marin 105,153 80.1% 26,105 19.9%
Mariposa 3,551 40.3% 5,268 59.7%
Mendocino 24,254 70.3% 10,224 29.7%
Merced 32,955 55.0% 27,000 45.0%
Modoc 1,188 30.1% 2,761 69.9%
Mono 2,600 52.0% 2,404 48.0%
Monterey 84,585 69.6% 36,930 30.4%
Napa 37,122 66.5% 18,682 33.5%
Nevada 25,495 50.4% 25,078 49.6%
Orange 515,902 47.5% 570,574 52.5%
Placer 68,599 41.4% 97,139 58.6%
Plumas 4,162 42.8% 5,560 57.2%
Riverside 327,698 51.9% 303,651 48.1%
Sacramento 302,078 60.7% 195,412 39.3%
San Benito 11,389 61.1% 7,255 38.9%
San Bernardino 298,067 54.0% 253,433 46.0%
San Diego 622,781 54.4% 521,884 45.6%
San Francisco 305,126 88.5% 39,589 11.5%
San Joaquin 113,706 57.0% 85,787 43.0%
San Luis Obispo 62,216 50.8% 60,262 49.2%
San Mateo 213,503 77.2% 62,979 22.8%
Santa Barbara 93,921 59.6% 63,599 40.4%
Santa Clara 454,647 72.9% 168,722 27.1%
Santa Cruz 91,109 78.2% 25,463 21.8%
Shasta 27,155 36.5% 47,184 63.5%
Sierra 677 38.6% 1,078 61.4%
Siskiyou 8,196 42.0% 11,334 58.0%
Solano 98,251 66.0% 50,634 34.0%
Sonoma 154,892 73.7% 55,256 26.3%
Stanislaus 78,470 51.8% 73,060 48.2%
Sutter 12,395 41.2% 17,715 58.8%
Tehama 8,349 37.0% 14,241 63.0%
Trinity 2,658 47.5% 2,943 52.5%
Tulare 42,395 42.9% 56,499 57.1%
Tuolumne 10,336 42.8% 13,823 57.2%
Ventura 171,483 54.4% 143,603 45.6%
Yolo 49,148 67.7% 23,468 32.3%
Yuba 7,896 41.0% 11,376 59.0%
Totals 7,864,624 62.52% 4,713,887 37.48%
 
 

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican edit

By congressional district edit

Feinstein won 41 of the 53 congressional districts, including three held by Republicans.[30]

District Emken Feinstein Representative
1st 57.54% 42.46% Doug LaMalfa
2nd 26.57% 73.43% Jared Huffman
3rd 43.53% 56.47% John Garamendi
4th 58.51% 41.49% Tom McClintock
5th 27.52% 72.48% Mike Thompson
6th 28.74% 71.26% Doris Matsui
7th 46.52% 53.48% Ami Bera
8th 56.52% 43.48% Paul Cook
9th 40.39% 59.61% Jerry McNerney
10th 47.93% 52.07% Jeff Denham
11th 28.5% 71.5% George Miller
12th 11.19% 88.81% Nancy Pelosi
13th 9.14% 90.86% Barbara Lee
14th 20.65% 79.35% Jackie Speier
15th 29.32% 70.68% Eric Swalwell
16th 40.69% 59.31% Jim Costa
17th 25.22% 74.78% Mike Honda
18th 28.45% 71.55% Anna Eshoo
19th 26.49% 73.51% Zoe Lofgren
20th 26.87% 73.13% Sam Farr
21st 44.36% 55.64% David Valadao
22nd 56.76% 43.24% Devin Nunes
23rd 61.99% 38.01% Kevin McCarthy
24th 44.1% 55.9% Lois Capps
25th 50.8% 49.2% Buck McKeon
26th 43.8% 56.2% Julia Brownley
27th 34.85% 65.15% Judy Chu
28th 26.59% 73.41% Adam Schiff
29th 22.21% 77.79% Tony Cárdenas
30th 31.44% 68.56% Brad Sherman
31st 41.33% 58.67% Gary Miller
32nd 33.33% 66.67% Grace Napolitano
33rd 35.5% 64.5% Henry Waxman
34th 15.4% 84.6% Xavier Becerra
35th 31.96% 68.04% Gloria Negrete McLeod
36th 46.35% 53.65% Raul Ruiz
37th 13.92% 86.08% Karen Bass
38th 33.43% 66.57% Linda Sánchez
39th 50.82% 49.18% Ed Royce
40th 18.76% 81.24% Lucille Roybal-Allard
41st 37.03% 62.97% Mark Takano
42nd 56.82% 43.18% Ken Calvert
43rd 21.7% 78.3% Maxine Waters
44th 15.29% 84.71% Janice Hahn
45th 55.57% 44.43% John B. T. Campbell III
46th 36.98% 63.02% Loretta Sánchez
47th 38.56% 61.44% Alan Lowenthal
48th 55.06% 44.94% Dana Rohrabacher
49th 53.31% 46.69% Darrell Issa
50th 60.48% 39.52% Duncan Hunter
51st 29.92% 70.08% Juan Vargas
52nd 45.51% 54.49% Scott Peters
53rd 36.67% 63.33% Susan Davis

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Dr. Michael McDonald (February 9, 2013). . George Mason University. Archived from the original on April 24, 2013. Retrieved April 3, 2013.
  2. ^ Marinucci, Carla (April 30, 2011). "US Sen. Dianne Feinstein on nuclear energy and her 2012 re-election: "My plan is to run"". San Francisco Chronicle Politics Blog. Archived from the original on January 22, 2012.
  3. ^ Mahtesian, Charles (November 26, 2012). "Feinstein's record: 7.3 million votes". POLITICO. Retrieved February 12, 2020.
  4. ^ Reston, Maeve (October 25, 2010). "Feinstein hints she'll run again in 2012". Los Angeles Times. from the original on January 13, 2011. Retrieved January 3, 2011.
  5. ^ Milhalcik, Carrie. . Current TV. Archived from the original on March 20, 2012. Retrieved March 22, 2012.
  6. ^ Walker, Mark (December 1, 2011). "REGION: Ramona man running against Feinstein in 2012". North County Times. Archived from the original on September 7, 2012. Retrieved February 12, 2012.
  7. ^ Van Oot, Torey (November 28, 2011). . The Sacramento Bee. Archived from the original on November 30, 2011. Retrieved November 28, 2011.
  8. ^ a b Richman, Josh (November 29, 2011). "Danville woman seeks GOP nod to take on Feinstein". Oakland Tribune. Contra Costa Times. from the original on December 31, 2011. Retrieved February 12, 2012.
  9. ^ Merl, Jean (February 6, 2012). "GOP businessman joins field challenging Sen. Dianne Feinstein". Los Angeles Times. from the original on February 13, 2012. Retrieved February 12, 2012.
  10. ^ Archibald, Ashley (January 28, 2012). "Santa Monican hopes to unseat Feinstein". Santa Monica Daily Press. Retrieved February 12, 2012.[permanent dead link]
  11. ^ Surowski, Peter (May 18, 2011). . Temecula Patch. Archived from the original on May 22, 2012. Retrieved February 12, 2012.
  12. ^ "Orly Taitz Senate Campaign: 'Birther Queen' Running As GOP Candidate For U.S. Senate Seat In California". The Huffington Post. November 4, 2011. from the original on November 7, 2011. Retrieved November 7, 2011.
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on March 9, 2012. Retrieved March 13, 2012.
  14. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on October 28, 2015. Retrieved December 30, 2022.
  15. ^ "Statement of Vote (June 5, 2012, Presidential Primary Election)" (PDF). California Secretary of State. (PDF) from the original on May 7, 2017. Retrieved December 1, 2017.
  16. ^ Wisckol, Martin (July 12, 2012). . The Orange County Register. Archived from the original on July 17, 2012.
  17. ^ Wisckol, Martin (July 13, 2012). . The Orange County Register. Archived from the original on July 17, 2012.
  18. ^ Federal Election Commission. "2012 House and Senate Campaign Finance for California FEINSTEIN, DIANNE". fec.gov. from the original on July 21, 2013.
  19. ^ Federal Election Commission. "2012 House and Senate Campaign Finance for California EMKEN, ELIZABETH". fec.gov. from the original on July 21, 2013.
  20. ^ "Top Contributors 2012 Race: California Senate". OpenSecrets. from the original on April 7, 2014.
  21. ^ "Top Industries 2012 Race: California Senate". OpenSecrets. from the original on April 7, 2014.
  22. ^ "Elizabeth Emken". ElizabethEmken.com. from the original on October 18, 2016. Retrieved November 2, 2016.
  23. ^ PaoloPhotoFilms (September 8, 2012). ""Feinstein Walks Out On Reporter", California US Senate debate". from the original on January 12, 2018 – via YouTube.
  24. ^ "Sen. Feinstein explains decision not to debate". ocregister.com. November 1, 2012. from the original on December 9, 2012.
  25. ^ "2012 Senate Race Ratings for November 1, 2012". The Cook Political Report. Retrieved September 20, 2018.
  26. ^ "2012 Senate". Sabato's Crystal Ball. Retrieved September 20, 2018.
  27. ^ "2012 Senate Ratings". Senate Ratings. The Rothenberg Political Report. Retrieved September 20, 2018.
  28. ^ "2012 Elections Map - Battle for the Senate 2012". Real Clear Politics. Retrieved September 20, 2018.
  29. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on December 24, 2016. Retrieved January 15, 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  30. ^ "Daily Kos Elections' statewide election results by congressional and legislative districts". Daily Kos. Retrieved August 11, 2020.

External links edit

Official campaign sites (Archived)

2012, united, states, senate, election, california, related, races, 2012, united, states, senate, elections, took, place, november, 2012, concurrently, with, 2012, presidential, election, well, other, elections, united, states, senate, house, representatives, . For related races see 2012 United States Senate elections The 2012 United States Senate election in California took place on November 6 2012 concurrently with the 2012 U S presidential election as well as other elections to the United States Senate and House of Representatives and various state and local elections 2012 United States Senate election in California 2006 November 6 2012 2018 Turnout55 2 voting eligible 1 Nominee Dianne Feinstein Elizabeth Emken Party Democratic Republican Popular vote 7 864 624 4 713 887 Percentage 62 52 37 48 County resultsCongressional District resultsFeinstein 50 60 60 70 70 80 80 90 gt 90 Emken 50 60 60 70 70 80 U S senator before election Dianne Feinstein Democratic Elected U S Senator Dianne Feinstein Democratic The primary election on June 5 took place under California s new blanket primary law where all candidates appear on the same ballot regardless of party In the primary voters voted for any candidate listed or write in any other candidate The top two finishers regardless of party advanced to the general election in November even if a candidate managed to receive a majority of the votes cast in the June primary In the primary less than 15 of the total 2010 census population voted Incumbent Democratic U S Senator Dianne Feinstein announced her intention to run for a fourth full term in April 2011 2 and finished first in the blanket primary with 49 5 of the vote The second place finisher was Republican candidate and autism activist Elizabeth Emken who won 12 7 of the vote Feinstein ultimately defeated Emken in the general election on November 6 winning 62 5 of the vote to Emken s 37 5 Feinstein s total of 7 86 million popular votes is the most ever received by a candidate for U S Senate in American history 3 For a full decade Emken was the only Republican candidate to have advanced to a general U S Senate election in California as only Democratic candidates advanced to the general election in 2016 and 2018 however this streak was broken in 2022 Contents 1 Primary 1 1 Candidates 1 1 1 Democratic Party 1 1 2 Republican Party 1 1 3 Libertarian 1 1 4 Peace and Freedom 1 1 5 American Independent 1 2 Polling 1 3 Results 1 4 Election contest 2 General election 2 1 Fundraising 2 1 1 Top contributors 2 1 2 Top industries 2 2 Candidates 2 3 Debates 2 4 Predictions 2 5 Polling 2 6 Results 2 7 Results by county 2 7 1 Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican 2 8 By congressional district 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksPrimary editCandidates edit Democratic Party edit Dianne Feinstein incumbent U S senator 4 Colleen Shea Fernald David Levitt computer scientist and engineer 5 Nak Shah environmental health consultant Diane Stewart businesswoman Mike Strimling attorney and former U S Peace Corps legal adviser Republican Party edit John Boruff businessman 6 Oscar Alejandro Braun businessman and rancher Greg Conlon businessman and CPA Elizabeth Emken candidate for the 11th congressional district in 2010 7 8 Rogelio Gloria U S Naval Officer Dan Hughes businessman 9 Dennis Jackson Dirk Konopik former congressional aide 8 Donald Krampe Robert Lauten Al Ramirez businessman 10 Nachum Shifren rabbi and state senate candidate in 2010 11 Orly Taitz dentist Birther movement activist and candidate for California Secretary of State in 2010 12 Rick Williams business attorney 13 Libertarian edit Gail Lightfoot retired nurse Peace and Freedom edit Kabiruddin Karim Ali businessman Marsha Feinland retired teacher American Independent edit Don J Grundmann chiropractor Despite Don J Grundmann running the American Independent Party gave their party endorsement to Republican Robert Lauten 14 Polling edit Open PrimarySurvey USA poll of 1 314 likely voters March 29 April 2 2012 MoE 2 8 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Dianne Feinstein incumbent 51 Republican Dan Hughes 2 Republican Elizabeth Emken 2 Democratic Diane Stewart 1 Republican John Boruff 1 Republican Rick Williams 1 Republican Al Ramirez 1 Republican Robert Lauten 1 Republican Orly Taitz 1 Libertarian Gail Lightfoot 1 Democratic David Alex Levitt 1 Republican Greg Conlon 1 Republican Dennis Jackson 1 Republican Donald Krampe 1 American Independent Don J Grundmann 1 Republican Oscar Alejandro Braun 0 Republican Dirk Allen Konopik 0 Democratic Mike Strimling 0 Democratic Nak Shah 0 Democratic Colleen Shea Fernald 0 Peace and Freedom Marsha Feinland 0 Republican Rogelio T Gloria 0 Peace and Freedom Kabiruddin Karim Ali 0 Republican Nachum Shifren 0 n a Undecided 30 Total votes Survey USA poll of 1 232 likely voters May 27 29 2012 MoE 2 8 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Dianne Feinstein incumbent 42 Republican Elizabeth Emken 4 Republican Dan Hughes 4 Republican Rick Williams 3 Republican Al Ramirez 3 Republican Donald Krampe 2 Democratic Diane Stewart 2 Democratic David Alex Levitt 2 Libertarian Gail Lightfoot 2 Republican Orly Taitz 1 Republican Greg Conlon 1 Republican Robert Lauten 1 Republican Nachum Shifren 1 Republican Dennis Jackson 1 Republican John Boruff 1 Republican Dirk Allen Konopik 1 Democratic Colleen Shea Fernald 1 Democratic Mike Strimling 1 Peace and Freedom Marsha Feinland 1 American Independent Don J Grundmann 1 Republican Oscar Alejandro Braun 0 Peace and Freedom Kabiruddin Karim Ali 0 Democratic Nak Shah 0 Republican Rogelio T Gloria 0 n a Undecided 24 Total votes Results edit nbsp Primary results by county Feinstein gt 20 Feinstein gt 30 Feinstein gt 40 Feinstein gt 50 Feinstein gt 60 Feinstein gt 70 United States Senate primary election in California 2012 15 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Dianne Feinstein incumbent 2 392 822 49 3 Republican Elizabeth Emken 613 613 12 6 Republican Dan Hughes 323 840 6 7 Republican Rick Williams 157 946 3 3 Republican Orly Taitz 154 781 3 2 Republican Dennis Jackson 137 120 2 8 Republican Greg Conlon 135 421 2 8 Republican Al Ramirez 109 399 2 3 Libertarian Gail Lightfoot 101 648 2 1 Democratic Diane Stewart 97 782 2 0 Democratic Mike Strimling 97 024 2 0 Democratic David Levitt 76 482 1 6 Republican Oscar Braun 75 842 1 6 Republican Robert Lauten 57 720 1 2 Peace and Freedom Marsha Feinland 54 129 1 2 Democratic Colleen Shea Fernald 51 623 1 1 Republican Donald Krampe 39 035 0 8 American Independent Don J Grundmann 33 037 0 7 Republican Dirk Allen Konopik 29 997 0 6 Republican John Boruff 29 357 0 6 Democratic Nak Shah 27 203 0 6 Republican Rogelio T Gloria 22 529 0 5 Republican Nachum Shifren 21 762 0 4 Peace and Freedom Kabiruddin Karim Ali 12 269 0 3 Republican Linda R Price write in 25 0 0 Total votes 4 852 406 100 0 Election contest edit In July 2012 Taitz sued to block the certification of the primary election results alleging rampant election fraud but her suit was denied 16 17 General election editFundraising edit Candidate party Receipts Disbursements Cash on hand Debt Dianne Feinstein D 12 673 306 12 105 960 865 541 373 734 Elizabeth Emken R 1 114 350 1 110 209 4 140 4 479 Source Federal Election Commission 18 19 Top contributors edit Dianne Feinstein Contribution Elizabeth Emken Contribution Pacific Gas and Electric Company 120 700 Thomas H Lee Partners 10 000 JStreetPAC 82 171 DevicePharm Inc 7 500 General Atomics 56 750 Troy Group 7 500 Edison International 54 250 Jelly Belly 5 500 General Dynamics 43 500 Autism Advocate 5 000 BAE Systems 40 000 Geier Group 5 000 Diamond Foods 31 599 Generations Healthcare 5 000 Northrop Grumman 30 800 Gingery Development 4 000 International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees 30 000 MIR3 Inc 3 000 Wells Fargo 27 250 Northrop Grumman 2 800 Source OpenSecrets 20 Top industries edit Dianne Feinstein Contribution Elizabeth Emken Contribution Lawyers Law Firms 565 129 Retired 63 849 Retired 463 058 Republican Conservative 35 800 Agribusiness 367 132 Financial Institutions 26 100 Real Estate 334 321 Real Estate 19 200 Lobbyists 324 196 Business Services 16 000 Financial Institutions 321 744 Misc Finance 12 750 Electric Utilities 313 450 Printing amp Publishing 8 000 Entertainment Industry 300 321 Food amp Beverage 6 000 Women s Issues 207 449 Petroleum Industry 6 000 High Tech Industry 205 789 Lawyers Law Firms 5 458 Source OpenSecrets 21 Candidates edit Dianne Feinstein D incumbent U S Senator Elizabeth Emken R former Vice President of Autism Speaks 22 Debates edit No debates were scheduled Senator Feinstein decided to focus on her own campaign rather than debate her challenger 23 24 Predictions edit Source Ranking As of The Cook Political Report 25 Solid D November 1 2012 Sabato s Crystal Ball 26 Safe D November 5 2012 Rothenberg Political Report 27 Safe D November 2 2012 Real Clear Politics 28 Safe D November 5 2012 Polling edit Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror DianneFeinstein D ElizabethEmken R Other Undecided SurveyUSA May 27 29 2012 1 575 2 5 50 34 15 The Field Poll June 21 July 2 2012 848 3 5 51 32 17 CBRT Pepperdine July 30 August 1 2012 873 3 3 46 34 21 SurveyUSA September 9 11 2012 524 4 2 55 37 9 The Field Poll September 6 18 2012 902 3 4 57 31 12 SurveyUSA October 7 9 2012 539 4 3 54 35 10 Reason Rupe October 11 15 2012 508 5 1 60 34 2 5 LA Times USC permanent dead link October 15 21 2012 1 440 n a 55 38 1 6 The Field Poll October 17 24 2012 815 3 6 56 32 12 The Field Poll October 25 30 2012 751 3 6 54 33 13 Results edit United States Senate election in California 2012 29 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Dianne Feinstein incumbent 7 864 624 62 52 3 09 Republican Elizabeth Emken 4 713 887 37 48 2 46 Total votes 12 578 511 100 00 N A Democratic hold Results by county edit Dianne Feinstein Elizabeth Emken County Votes Votes Alameda 468 456 81 9 103 313 18 1 Alpine 409 64 1 229 35 9 Amador 7 051 40 8 10 232 59 2 Butte 43 681 49 3 44 981 50 7 Calaveras 8 878 41 6 12 479 58 4 Colusa 2 482 43 3 3 253 56 7 Contra Costa 300 194 70 1 128 310 29 9 Del Norte 4 065 47 4 4 502 52 6 El Dorado 35 776 41 3 50 820 58 7 Fresno 129 267 51 1 123 499 48 9 Glenn 3 520 39 0 5 515 61 0 Humboldt 36 162 65 0 19 437 35 0 Imperial 25 342 67 2 12 346 32 8 Inyo 3 333 42 6 4 494 57 4 Kern 92 252 42 3 125 906 57 7 Kings 13 304 42 6 17 916 57 4 Lake 13 543 59 0 9 424 41 0 Lassen 3 150 29 9 7 390 70 1 Los Angeles 2 183 654 71 5 868 924 28 5 Madera 15 997 41 1 22 942 58 9 Marin 105 153 80 1 26 105 19 9 Mariposa 3 551 40 3 5 268 59 7 Mendocino 24 254 70 3 10 224 29 7 Merced 32 955 55 0 27 000 45 0 Modoc 1 188 30 1 2 761 69 9 Mono 2 600 52 0 2 404 48 0 Monterey 84 585 69 6 36 930 30 4 Napa 37 122 66 5 18 682 33 5 Nevada 25 495 50 4 25 078 49 6 Orange 515 902 47 5 570 574 52 5 Placer 68 599 41 4 97 139 58 6 Plumas 4 162 42 8 5 560 57 2 Riverside 327 698 51 9 303 651 48 1 Sacramento 302 078 60 7 195 412 39 3 San Benito 11 389 61 1 7 255 38 9 San Bernardino 298 067 54 0 253 433 46 0 San Diego 622 781 54 4 521 884 45 6 San Francisco 305 126 88 5 39 589 11 5 San Joaquin 113 706 57 0 85 787 43 0 San Luis Obispo 62 216 50 8 60 262 49 2 San Mateo 213 503 77 2 62 979 22 8 Santa Barbara 93 921 59 6 63 599 40 4 Santa Clara 454 647 72 9 168 722 27 1 Santa Cruz 91 109 78 2 25 463 21 8 Shasta 27 155 36 5 47 184 63 5 Sierra 677 38 6 1 078 61 4 Siskiyou 8 196 42 0 11 334 58 0 Solano 98 251 66 0 50 634 34 0 Sonoma 154 892 73 7 55 256 26 3 Stanislaus 78 470 51 8 73 060 48 2 Sutter 12 395 41 2 17 715 58 8 Tehama 8 349 37 0 14 241 63 0 Trinity 2 658 47 5 2 943 52 5 Tulare 42 395 42 9 56 499 57 1 Tuolumne 10 336 42 8 13 823 57 2 Ventura 171 483 54 4 143 603 45 6 Yolo 49 148 67 7 23 468 32 3 Yuba 7 896 41 0 11 376 59 0 Totals 7 864 624 62 52 4 713 887 37 48 nbsp Shift by county nbsp Trend by county Legend Republican gt 15 Republican 12 5 15 Republican 10 12 5 Republican 7 5 10 Republican 5 7 5 Republican 2 5 5 Republican 0 2 5 Democratic 0 2 5 Democratic 2 5 5 Democratic 5 7 5 Democratic 7 5 10 Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican edit Butte largest city Chico Del Norte largest community Crescent City Trinity largest community Weaverville By congressional district edit Feinstein won 41 of the 53 congressional districts including three held by Republicans 30 District Emken Feinstein Representative 1st 57 54 42 46 Doug LaMalfa 2nd 26 57 73 43 Jared Huffman 3rd 43 53 56 47 John Garamendi 4th 58 51 41 49 Tom McClintock 5th 27 52 72 48 Mike Thompson 6th 28 74 71 26 Doris Matsui 7th 46 52 53 48 Ami Bera 8th 56 52 43 48 Paul Cook 9th 40 39 59 61 Jerry McNerney 10th 47 93 52 07 Jeff Denham 11th 28 5 71 5 George Miller 12th 11 19 88 81 Nancy Pelosi 13th 9 14 90 86 Barbara Lee 14th 20 65 79 35 Jackie Speier 15th 29 32 70 68 Eric Swalwell 16th 40 69 59 31 Jim Costa 17th 25 22 74 78 Mike Honda 18th 28 45 71 55 Anna Eshoo 19th 26 49 73 51 Zoe Lofgren 20th 26 87 73 13 Sam Farr 21st 44 36 55 64 David Valadao 22nd 56 76 43 24 Devin Nunes 23rd 61 99 38 01 Kevin McCarthy 24th 44 1 55 9 Lois Capps 25th 50 8 49 2 Buck McKeon 26th 43 8 56 2 Julia Brownley 27th 34 85 65 15 Judy Chu 28th 26 59 73 41 Adam Schiff 29th 22 21 77 79 Tony Cardenas 30th 31 44 68 56 Brad Sherman 31st 41 33 58 67 Gary Miller 32nd 33 33 66 67 Grace Napolitano 33rd 35 5 64 5 Henry Waxman 34th 15 4 84 6 Xavier Becerra 35th 31 96 68 04 Gloria Negrete McLeod 36th 46 35 53 65 Raul Ruiz 37th 13 92 86 08 Karen Bass 38th 33 43 66 57 Linda Sanchez 39th 50 82 49 18 Ed Royce 40th 18 76 81 24 Lucille Roybal Allard 41st 37 03 62 97 Mark Takano 42nd 56 82 43 18 Ken Calvert 43rd 21 7 78 3 Maxine Waters 44th 15 29 84 71 Janice Hahn 45th 55 57 44 43 John B T Campbell III 46th 36 98 63 02 Loretta Sanchez 47th 38 56 61 44 Alan Lowenthal 48th 55 06 44 94 Dana Rohrabacher 49th 53 31 46 69 Darrell Issa 50th 60 48 39 52 Duncan Hunter 51st 29 92 70 08 Juan Vargas 52nd 45 51 54 49 Scott Peters 53rd 36 67 63 33 Susan DavisSee also edit2012 United States Senate elections 2012 United States House of Representatives elections in CaliforniaReferences edit Dr Michael McDonald February 9 2013 2012 General Election Turnout Rates George Mason University Archived from the original on April 24 2013 Retrieved April 3 2013 Marinucci Carla April 30 2011 US Sen Dianne Feinstein on nuclear energy and her 2012 re election My plan is to run San Francisco Chronicle Politics Blog Archived from the original on January 22 2012 Mahtesian Charles November 26 2012 Feinstein s record 7 3 million votes POLITICO Retrieved February 12 2020 Reston Maeve October 25 2010 Feinstein hints she ll run again in 2012 Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on January 13 2011 Retrieved January 3 2011 Milhalcik Carrie Citizen candidate to challenge Dianne Feinstein in Senate race Current TV Archived from the original on March 20 2012 Retrieved March 22 2012 Walker Mark December 1 2011 REGION Ramona man running against Feinstein in 2012 North County Times Archived from the original on September 7 2012 Retrieved February 12 2012 Van Oot Torey November 28 2011 Republican Elizabeth Emken to run against Sen Dianne Feinstein The Sacramento Bee Archived from the original on November 30 2011 Retrieved November 28 2011 a b Richman Josh November 29 2011 Danville woman seeks GOP nod to take on Feinstein Oakland Tribune Contra Costa Times Archived from the original on December 31 2011 Retrieved February 12 2012 Merl Jean February 6 2012 GOP businessman joins field challenging Sen Dianne Feinstein Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on February 13 2012 Retrieved February 12 2012 Archibald Ashley January 28 2012 Santa Monican hopes to unseat Feinstein Santa Monica Daily Press Retrieved February 12 2012 permanent dead link Surowski Peter May 18 2011 Rabbi Who Denounced Temecula Mosque Runs for Senate Temecula Patch Archived from the original on May 22 2012 Retrieved February 12 2012 Orly Taitz Senate Campaign Birther Queen Running As GOP Candidate For U S Senate Seat In California The Huffington Post November 4 2011 Archived from the original on November 7 2011 Retrieved November 7 2011 Rick Williams for Senate Archived from the original on March 9 2012 Retrieved March 13 2012 Voter Information Guide PDF Archived from the original PDF on October 28 2015 Retrieved December 30 2022 Statement of Vote June 5 2012 Presidential Primary Election PDF California Secretary of State Archived PDF from the original on May 7 2017 Retrieved December 1 2017 Wisckol Martin July 12 2012 O C birther sues to block primary election results The Orange County Register Archived from the original on July 17 2012 Wisckol Martin July 13 2012 O C birther suit to block election results denied The Orange County Register Archived from the original on July 17 2012 Federal Election Commission 2012 House and Senate Campaign Finance for California FEINSTEIN DIANNE fec gov Archived from the original on July 21 2013 Federal Election Commission 2012 House and Senate Campaign Finance for California EMKEN ELIZABETH fec gov Archived from the original on July 21 2013 Top Contributors 2012 Race California Senate OpenSecrets Archived from the original on April 7 2014 Top Industries 2012 Race California Senate OpenSecrets Archived from the original on April 7 2014 Elizabeth Emken ElizabethEmken com Archived from the original on October 18 2016 Retrieved November 2 2016 PaoloPhotoFilms September 8 2012 Feinstein Walks Out On Reporter California US Senate debate Archived from the original on January 12 2018 via YouTube Sen Feinstein explains decision not to debate ocregister com November 1 2012 Archived from the original on December 9 2012 2012 Senate Race Ratings for November 1 2012 The Cook Political Report Retrieved September 20 2018 2012 Senate Sabato s Crystal Ball Retrieved September 20 2018 2012 Senate Ratings Senate Ratings The Rothenberg Political Report Retrieved September 20 2018 2012 Elections Map Battle for the Senate 2012 Real Clear Politics Retrieved September 20 2018 Archived copy PDF Archived PDF from the original on December 24 2016 Retrieved January 15 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Daily Kos Elections statewide election results by congressional and legislative districts Daily Kos Retrieved August 11 2020 External links editElections at Secretary of State of California Campaign contributions at OpenSecrets org Outside spending at the Sunlight Foundation Candidate issue positions at On the Issues Official campaign sites Archived Elizabeth Emken for Senate Dianne Feinstein for Senate Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2012 United States Senate election in California amp oldid 1214775641, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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