Yavapai County election results

Unofficial election results are in from Yavapai County and Coconino County. Below are the results from local and contested races.

Yavapai County Board Of Supervisors – District 3, Republican
Randall “Randy” Garrison, 2,147, 61.40 percent
Diane Joens, 1,344, 38.43 percent

There were no other candidates from other parties nor independents in this race. Garrison is de facto supervisor-elect.

Cottonwood Mayor
Tim Elinski, 756, 45.05 percent
Holly Grigaitis, 486, 28.96 percent
Terence Pratt, 436, 25.98 percent

Cottonwood City Council
Three open seats
Ruben Jauregui, 850, 22.75 percent
Deb Althouse, 747, 19.99 percent
Albert Hilberger, 713, 19.08 percent
Jackie Nairn, 711, 19.03 percent
Henry Tosca, 706, 18.89 percent

Camp Verde Mayor
Charlie German 839, 55.34 percent
David Boily, 672, 44.33 percent

Camp Verde Town Council
Three open seats
Jessie Murdock, 934, 23.13 percent
Buck Buchanan, 849, 21.03 percent
Dee Jenkins, 774, 19.17 percent
Carol German, 757, 18.75 percent
Bruce George, 707, 17.51 percent

Verde Valley Constable, Republican
Jody Fanning, 3,398, 55.70 percent
Carlos Godina, 1,442, 23.64 percent
Monte Reimer, 1,247, 20.44 percent

There were no other candidates from other parties nor independents in this race. Fanning is de facto constable-elect.

Yavapai County Assessor, Republican
Pam Pearsall, 13,577, 47.72 percent
Judd Simmons, 14,856, 52.21 percent

There were no other candidates from other parties nor independents in this race. Simmons is de facto assessor-elect.

U.S. Senate, Democratic
Ann Kirkpatrick, 9,329, 97.37 percent in Yavapai County, 8,435, 98.55 percent in Coconino County

U.S. Senate, Republican
Yavapai County
John McCain, incumbent, 12,233, 49.35 percent
Alex Meluskey, 1,712, 6.91 percent
Clair Van Steenwyk, 859, 3.47 percent
Kelli Ward, 9,930, 40.06 percent

Coconino County
John McCain, incumbent, 3,230, 50.18 percent
Alex Meluskey, 304, 4.72 percent
Clair Van Steenwyk, 170, 2.64 percent
Kelli Ward, 9,930, 40.06 percent

Statewide:
John McCain currently has 51.64 percent
Kelli Ward at 39.21 percent
Alex Melusky, who dropped out this summer at 5.51 percent
Clair Van Steenwyk at 3.63 percent.

U.S. House, District 1, Democratic
Yavapai County
Tom O’Halleran, 1,277, 73.31 percent
Miguel Olivas, 455, 26.12 percent

Coconino County
Tom O’Halleran, 5,704, 68.32 percent
Miguel Olivas, 2,600, 31.14 percent

U.S. House, District 1, Republican
Yavapai County
Paul Babeu, 774, 32.70 percent
Ken Bennett, 460, 19.43 percent
David Gowan, 75, 3.17 percent
Gary Kiehne, 376, 15.89 percent
Shawn Redd, 52, 2.2 percent
Wendy Rogers, 622, 26.28 percent

Coconino County
Paul Babeu, 1,610, 26.03 percent
Ken Bennett, 1,413, 22.85 percent
David Gowan, 239, 3.86 percent
Gary Kiehne, 900, 14.55 percent
Shawn Redd, 214, 3.46 percent
Wendy Rogers, 1,785, 28.86 percent

Statewide:
Statewide:
Paul Babeu, 31.54 percent
Gary Kiehne, 23.30 percent
Wendy Rogers, 22.29 percent
Ken Bennett, 16.06 percent
David Gowan, 3.52 percent, current speaker of the Arizona House of Representatives who dropped out the race in July and faced numerous allegations of corruption, including having to repay the state for illegal use of travel funds, and attacked transparancy and public notices.
Shawn Redd, 3.29 percent

U.S. House, District 4, Republican
Paul Gosar, incumbent, 15,593
Ray Strauss, 5,880

Arizona State House, District 1, Republican
Two seats:
Noel Campbell, 14,512, 39.13 percent
Arlo G. “Chip” Davis, 11,357, 30.62 percent
David Stringer, 11,134, 30.02 percent

Statewide (Yavapai and Maricopa counties)
Noel Campbell, 18,181, 38.61 percent
David Stringer, 14,469, 30.73 percent
Arlo G. “Chip” Davis, 14,441, 30.67 percent

This district does not include the Verde Valley, but Chip Davis is Yavapai County’s current District 3 supervisor, who appears to be in a tough fight against David Stringer for the second seat in the district.

Arizona Corporation Commission
Three seats
Robert Bob Burns, 14,046, 22.84 percent
Andy Tobin, 17,977, 29.24 percent
Rick Gray, 10,143, 16.50 percent
Boyd Dunn, 10,010, 16.28 percent
Al Melvin, 8,823, 14.35 percent

Statewide
Robert Bob Burns, 230,336, 23.77 percent
Andy Tobin, 224,617, 23.18 percent
Boyd Dunn, 183,976, 18.99 percent
Rick Gray, 175,950, 18.16 percent
Al Melvin, 154,002, 15.89 percent

Total Ballots

Of the 130,335 registered voters in Yavapai County 36,128 cast ballots, for a voter turnout of 27.72 percent.

Non-Partisan, 207
Democratic Party, 10,351
Green Party, 127
Libertarian Party, 100
Republican Party, 25,343

Of the 72,709 registered voters in Yavapai County 15,854 cast ballots, for a voter turnout of 21.80 percent. Coconino County does not tally votes by party.

Christopher Fox Graham

Christopher Fox Graham is the managing editor of the Sedona Rock Rocks News, The Camp Verde Journal and the Cottonwood Journal Extra. Hired by Larson Newspapers as a copy editor in 2004, he became assistant manager editor in October 2009 and managing editor in August 2013. Graham has won awards for editorials, investigative news reporting, headline writing, page design and community service from the Arizona Newspapers Association. Graham has also been featured in Editor & Publisher magazine. He lectures on journalism and First Amendment law and is a nationally recognized performance aka slam poet. Retired U.S. Army Col. John Mills, former director of Cybersecurity Policy, Strategy, and International Affairs referred to him as "Mr. Slam Poet."

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Christopher Fox Graham is the managing editor of the Sedona Rock Rocks News, The Camp Verde Journal and the Cottonwood Journal Extra. Hired by Larson Newspapers as a copy editor in 2004, he became assistant manager editor in October 2009 and managing editor in August 2013. Graham has won awards for editorials, investigative news reporting, headline writing, page design and community service from the Arizona Newspapers Association. Graham has also been featured in Editor & Publisher magazine. He lectures on journalism and First Amendment law and is a nationally recognized performance aka slam poet. Retired U.S. Army Col. John Mills, former director of Cybersecurity Policy, Strategy, and International Affairs referred to him as "Mr. Slam Poet."
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