Smart Voter June 2, 1998 Primary

Santa Clara County Ballot

Combined ballot for all addresses

Categories shown below:
State | US Legislative | CA Legislative | School | Judicial | District | County | City | County Committee | State Propositions | Local Measures
Races for all precincts in Santa Clara County, CA combined are shown below

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State

Governor

  • Gray Davis, Democratic
    1,934,216 votes 34.8% (57.6% in party)
  • Dan Lungren, Republican
    1,877,789 votes 33.8% (93.4% in party)
  • Al Checchi, Democratic
    701,648 votes 12.7% (20.9% in party)
  • Jane Harman, Democratic
    682,241 votes 12.3% (20.3% in party)
  • Dan Hamburg, Green
    84,411 votes 1.6% (100.0% in party)
  • Dennis Peron, Republican
    66,737 votes 1.2% (3.4% in party)
  • Steve W. Kubby, Libertarian
    43,691 votes 0.8% (100.0% in party)
  • James D. Crawford, Republican
    27,087 votes 0.5% (1.3% in party)
  • Charles "Chuck" Pineda, Jr., Democratic
    22,064 votes 0.3% (0.6% in party)
  • Eduardo M. Rivera, Republican
    20,913 votes 0.3% (1.0% in party)
  • Gloria Estela La Riva, Peace and Freedom
    20,058 votes 0.3% (58.1% in party)
  • Jeff Williams, Republican
    18,314 votes 0.3% (0.9% in party)
  • Nathan E. Johnson, American Independent
    18,155 votes 0.3% (100.0% in party)
  • Marsha Feinland, Peace and Freedom
    14,491 votes 0.2% (41.9% in party)
  • Harold H. Bloomfield, Natural Law
    11,539 votes 0.2% (100.0% in party)
  • Pia Jensen, Democratic
    11,492 votes 0.2% (0.3% in party)
  • Michael Palitz, Democratic
    11,283 votes 0.2% (0.3% in party)

Lieutenant Governor

  • Cruz M. Bustamante, Democratic
    1,768,012 votes 34.1% (73.2% in party)
  • Tim Leslie, Republican
    831,346 votes 16.1% (35.7% in party)
  • Noel Irwin Hentschel, Republican
    672,807 votes 13.0% (28.9% in party)
  • Richard "Dick" Mountjoy, Republican
    607,949 votes 11.8% (26.1% in party)
  • Tony Miller, Democratic
    438,098 votes 8.5% (18.1% in party)
  • Ingrid Lundberg, Republican
    217,382 votes 4.2% (9.3% in party)
  • Larry K. Reed, Democratic
    210,434 votes 4.0% (8.7% in party)
  • Sara Amir, Green
    138,635 votes 2.6% (100.0% in party)
  • Thomas M. Tryon, Libertarian
    99,015 votes 1.9% (100.0% in party)
  • Jaime Luis Gomez, Peace and Freedom
    71,494 votes 1.3% (54.1% in party)
  • Regina Lark, Peace and Freedom
    60,688 votes 1.1% (45.9% in party)
  • James J. Mangia, Reform
    39,472 votes 0.7% (100.0% in party)
  • George M. McCoy, American Independent
    38,045 votes 0.7% (100.0% in party)

Secretary of State

  • Bill Jones, Republican
    2,423,602 votes 50.1% (100.0% in party)
  • Michela Alioto, Democratic
    1,896,245 votes 39.2% (100.0% in party)
  • Gail K. Lightfoot, Libertarian
    171,344 votes 3.6% (100.0% in party)
  • Jane Ann Bialosky, Natural Law
    96,560 votes 2.0% (100.0% in party)
  • Carolyn Rae Short, American Independent
    76,813 votes 1.5% (100.0% in party)
  • Valli Sharpe-Geisler, Reform
    61,999 votes 1.2% (100.0% in party)
  • Israel Feuer, Peace and Freedom
    59,641 votes 1.2% (50.3% in party)
  • Marisa Helene Palyvos-Story, Peace and Freedom
    59,124 votes 1.2% (49.7% in party)

Controller

  • Kathleen Connell, Democratic
    3,076,000 votes 59.5% (100.0% in party)
  • Ruben Barrales, Republican
    1,690,653 votes 32.7% (100.0% in party)
  • Pamela J. Pescosolido, Libertarian
    108,431 votes 2.1% (100.0% in party)
  • Alfred L. "Al" Burgess, American Independent
    86,009 votes 1.7% (100.0% in party)
  • Denise L. Jackson, Reform
    82,638 votes 1.6% (100.0% in party)
  • C. T. Weber, Peace and Freedom
    70,201 votes 1.4% (100.0% in party)
  • Iris Adam, Natural Law
    56,456 votes 1.0% (100.0% in party)

Treasurer

  • Curt Pringle, Republican
    1,392,604 votes 27.9% (62.1% in party)
  • Phil Angelides, Democratic
    1,269,428 votes 25.4% (52.7% in party)
  • Albert Robles, Democratic
    891,055 votes 17.9% (37.0% in party)
  • Jan Goldsmith, Republican
    851,524 votes 17.1% (37.9% in party)
  • Mervin Evans, Democratic
    248,476 votes 4.9% (10.3% in party)
  • Jon Petersen, Libertarian
    119,112 votes 2.3% (100.0% in party)
  • Jan B. Tucker, Peace and Freedom
    91,914 votes 1.8% (100.0% in party)
  • Carlos Aguirre, Natural Law
    88,372 votes 1.7% (100.0% in party)
  • Edmon V. Kaiser, American Independent
    50,792 votes 1.0% (100.0% in party)

Attorney General

  • Dave Stirling, Republican
    1,497,336 votes 29.5% (66.6% in party)
  • Bill Lockyer, Democratic
    1,198,119 votes 23.6% (47.1% in party)
  • Mike Capizzi, Republican
    752,732 votes 14.9% (33.4% in party)
  • Lynn Schenk, Democratic
    637,942 votes 12.6% (25.1% in party)
  • Charles M. Calderon, Democratic
    605,767 votes 12.0% (23.7% in party)
  • Michael K. Schmier, Democratic
    106,549 votes 2.1% (4.1% in party)
  • Joseph S. Farina, Libertarian
    80,871 votes 1.5% (100.0% in party)
  • Diane Beall Templin, American Independent
    72,579 votes 1.4% (100.0% in party)
  • Robert J. Evans, Peace and Freedom
    68,656 votes 1.3% (53.8% in party)
  • Gary P. Kast, Peace and Freedom
    58,983 votes 1.1% (46.2% in party)

Insurance Commissioner

  • Chuck Quackenbush, Republican
    2,397,555 votes 47.8% (100.0% in party)
  • Diane Martinez, Democratic
    1,251,999 votes 25.0% (57.5% in party)
  • Hal Brown, Democratic
    926,213 votes 18.5% (42.5% in party)
  • Dale F. Ogden, Libertarian
    122,615 votes 2.4% (100.0% in party)
  • Barbara Bourdette, Natural Law
    105,976 votes 2.1% (100.0% in party)
  • Gary R. Ramos, Peace and Freedom
    81,496 votes 1.6% (55.0% in party)
  • Merton D. Short, American Independent
    68,029 votes 1.3% (100.0% in party)
  • Tom Condit, Peace and Freedom
    66,870 votes 1.3% (45.0% in party)

Member, State Board of Equalization; District 1

  • Johan Klehs, Democratic
    875,562 votes 77.5% (100.0% in party)
  • Kennita Watson, Libertarian
    254,528 votes 22.5% (100.0% in party)

US Legislative

United States Senator

  • Barbara Boxer, Democratic
    2,389,595 votes 44.0% (92.1% in party)
  • Matt Fong, Republican
    1,195,894 votes 22.0% (45.2% in party)
  • Darrell Issa, Republican
    1,062,244 votes 19.6% (40.2% in party)
  • Frank D. Riggs, Republican
    274,474 votes 5.1% (10.4% in party)
  • John Pinkerton, Democratic
    205,371 votes 3.8% (7.9% in party)
  • Ted Brown, Libertarian
    62,751 votes 1.2% (100.0% in party)
  • Ophie C. Beltran, Peace and Freedom
    49,056 votes 0.9% (100.0% in party)
  • John M. Brown, Republican
    46,246 votes 0.8% (1.7% in party)
  • Timothy R. Erich, Reform
    42,458 votes 0.7% (100.0% in party)
  • Mark Raus, Republican
    42,348 votes 0.7% (1.5% in party)
  • Linh Dao, Republican
    26,661 votes 0.4% (1.0% in party)
  • H. Joseph Perrin, Sr., American Independent
    22,581 votes 0.4% (100.0% in party)
  • Brian M. Rees, Natural Law
    22,237 votes 0.4% (100.0% in party)

United States Representative; District 13

  • Fortney Pete Stark, Democratic
    63,938 votes 68.7% (100.0% in party)
  • James R. Goetz, Republican
    26,516 votes 28.5% (100.0% in party)
  • Karnig Beylikjian, Natural Law
    2,701 votes 2.8% (100.0% in party)

United States Representative; District 14

  • Anna G. Eshoo, Democratic
    77,273 votes 65.9% (93.9% in party)
  • John C. "Chris" Haugen, Republican
    16,191 votes 13.8% (53.0% in party)
  • Henry E. "Bud" Manzler, Republican
    14,394 votes 12.3% (47.0% in party)
  • George Kiehle, Democratic
    5,049 votes 4.3% (6.1% in party)
  • Joseph W. Dehn, III, Libertarian
    2,626 votes 2.2% (100.0% in party)
  • Anna Currivan, Natural Law
    1,827 votes 1.5% (100.0% in party)

United States Representative; District 15

  • Tom Campbell, Republican
    77,613 votes 65.8% (100.0% in party)
  • Dick Lane, Democratic
    30,619 votes 26.0% (80.0% in party)
  • Connor Vlakancic, Democratic
    7,663 votes 6.4% (20.0% in party)
  • Frank Strutner, Natural Law
    2,202 votes 1.8% (100.0% in party)

United States Representative; District 16

  • Zoe Lofgren, Democratic
    53,906 votes 72.3% (100.0% in party)
  • Horace Eugene Thayn, Republican
    16,785 votes 22.4% (100.0% in party)
  • John H. Black, Natural Law
    3,957 votes 5.3% (100.0% in party)

CA Legislative

State Senator; District 10

  • Liz Figueroa, Democratic
    49,831 votes 40.5% (52.3% in party)
  • Michael Sweeney, Democratic
    38,048 votes 30.9% (39.9% in party)
  • Bob Gough, Republican
    27,828 votes 22.5% (100.0% in party)
  • Lindy G. Batara, Democratic
    7,526 votes 6.1% (7.8% in party)

Member of the State Assembly; District 20

  • John Dutra, Democratic
    21,654 votes 38.4% (64.7% in party)
  • Jonelle Joan Zager, Republican
    13,686 votes 24.3% (59.5% in party)
  • Linda Vargas Widmar, Republican
    9,322 votes 16.5% (40.5% in party)
  • John Weed, Democratic
    6,490 votes 11.4% (19.4% in party)
  • Val Bettencourt, Democratic
    5,326 votes 9.4% (15.9% in party)

Member of the State Assembly; District 21

  • Ted Lempert, Democratic
    53,272 votes 68.6% (100.0% in party)
  • Laverne F. Atherly, Republican
    21,538 votes 27.7% (100.0% in party)
  • Marilyn M. Bryant, Natural Law
    2,949 votes 3.7% (100.0% in party)
  • Jack Hickey, Libertarian (Write-In)

Member of the State Assembly; District 22

  • Elaine White Alquist, Democratic
    38,260 votes 61.0% (100.0% in party)
  • Stan Kawczynski, Republican
    20,382 votes 32.5% (100.0% in party)
  • Paul Rako, Libertarian
    3,051 votes 4.8% (100.0% in party)
  • Rick Dunstan, Natural Law
    1,080 votes 1.7% (100.0% in party)

Member of the State Assembly; District 23

  • Mike Honda, Democratic
    22,514 votes 55.6% (70.0% in party)
  • Patricia Martinez-Roach, Democratic
    9,679 votes 23.9% (30.0% in party)
  • Patrick Du Long, Republican
    8,337 votes 20.5% (100.0% in party)

Member of the State Assembly; District 24

  • Jim Cunneen, Republican
    38,059 votes 48.7% (74.7% in party)
  • Phil Stokes, Democratic
    24,614 votes 31.5% (100.0% in party)
  • Donna Courtright, Republican
    9,614 votes 12.3% (18.9% in party)
  • David Prince, Republican
    3,310 votes 4.3% (6.4% in party)
  • Ray Strong, Libertarian
    2,577 votes 3.2% (100.0% in party)

Member of the State Assembly; District 28

  • Peter Frusetta, Republican
    35,436 votes 56.3% (100.0% in party)
  • Alan D. Styles, Democratic
    24,815 votes 39.3% (100.0% in party)
  • Kate Woods, Libertarian
    2,784 votes 4.4% (100.0% in party)

School

State Superintendent of Public Instruction

Judicial

Judge of the Superior Court; Office 3

Judge of the Superior Court; Office 12

District

Director; Santa Clara Valley Water District; 1st District

  • Rosemary Kamei
    35,339 votes 100.0%

Director; Santa Clara Valley Water District; 4th District

County

Assessor

  • Larry Stone
    154,928 votes 73.6%
  • Virgil Atencio
    36,392 votes 17.3%
  • William J. Garbett
    19,075 votes 9.1%

District Attorney

Sheriff

  • Laurie R. Smith
    57,540 votes 24.7%
  • Ruben Diaz
    51,426 votes 22.1%
  • Tom Sing
    47,987 votes 20.6%
  • Jose L. Salcido
    39,639 votes 17.0%
  • Brian Beck
    36,418 votes 15.6%

Supervisor; 1st District

  • Don Gage
    39,029 votes 77.4%
  • Ted Scarlett
    11,366 votes 22.6%

Supervisor; 4th District

  • Jim Beall
    38,796 votes 100.0%

City

Mayor; City of San Jose, Municipal Election

Member, City Council; City of San Jose, Municipal Election; District 1

  • Linda J. Lezotte
    4,740 votes 41.0%
  • Charles Phillip Gillingham
    4,686 votes 40.5%
  • Jason Buzi
    1,292 votes 11.2%
  • Ross Signorino
    845 votes 7.3%

Member, City Council; City of San Jose, Municipal Election; District 3

  • Cindy Chavez
    3,420 votes 46.1%
  • Tony West
    3,054 votes 41.2%
  • Refugio "Ray" Moreno
    418 votes 5.6%
  • Phil Reynolds, Jr.
    262 votes 3.5%
  • David S. Wall
    257 votes 3.5%

Member, City Council; City of San Jose, Municipal Election; District 5

  • Manny Diaz
    4,256 votes 73.3%
  • Felix Alvarez
    1,547 votes 26.7%

Member, City Council; City of San Jose, Municipal Election; District 7

  • George M. Shirakawa, Jr.
    4,955 votes 72.7%
  • Andrew Diaz
    1,075 votes 15.8%
  • Roy Franklin Que-Heath
    781 votes 11.5%

Member, City Council; City of San Jose, Municipal Election; District 9

  • John Diquisto
    7,927 votes 100.0%

County Committee

Member, County Council; Green Party

  • Ann Marie Lucchesi
    839 votes 21.0%
  • Michael Stanley-Jones
    824 votes 20.7%
  • Bill Tucker
    786 votes 19.7%
  • Eric A. Meece
    774 votes 19.4%
  • Warner S. Bloomberg, III
    767 votes 19.2%

Member of Natural Law Party Central Committee

  • Anna Currivan
    102 votes 18.6%
  • John H. Black
    99 votes 18.1%
  • Marilyn M. Bryant
    97 votes 17.7%
  • Rick Dunstan
    89 votes 16.2%
  • Karnig Beylikjian
    81 votes 14.8%
  • Frank Strutner
    80 votes 14.6%

Members of County Central Committee; Democratic Party; 22nd Assembly District

  • Andrea Leiderman
    15,952 votes 15.9%
  • Rod Diridon, Jr.
    15,736 votes 15.7%
  • Aldyth Parle
    15,129 votes 15.0%
  • Margie Baker
    13,812 votes 13.7%
  • Chris Stampolis
    13,619 votes 13.5%
  • H. Engstrom
    13,423 votes 13.4%
  • Alyson L. Abramowitz
    12,862 votes 12.8%

Members of County Central Committee; Republican Party; 1st Supervisorial District

  • Suzanne E. Jackson
    9,409 votes 11.4%
  • Bob Booth
    7,933 votes 9.7%
  • Martin F. Jeffries, Jr.
    7,703 votes 9.4%
  • Judy Purrington
    7,645 votes 9.3%
  • Egon Jensen
    7,179 votes 8.7%
  • Ben Gilmore
    6,098 votes 7.4%
  • Bonnie Cohen
    6,050 votes 7.4%
  • Kim S. Sparacio
    5,565 votes 6.8%
  • Mark F. Glines
    5,458 votes 6.6%
  • C. P. "Pat" Morrissey
    5,106 votes 6.2%
  • Louis Calder
    4,682 votes 5.7%
  • Donna Courtright
    4,250 votes 5.2%
  • Norma L. Schilling
    2,722 votes 3.3%
  • David Dona
    2,396 votes 2.9%

Members of County Central Committee; Republican Party; 2nd Supervisorial District

  • Joyce Rabourn
    2,470 votes 23.9%
  • Lyle J. Smith
    2,437 votes 23.5%
  • Mark S. Patrosso
    1,568 votes 15.2%
  • Ronald H. Kelley
    1,559 votes 15.1%
  • Robert D. Dona
    1,011 votes 9.8%
  • Keith C. De Filippis
    710 votes 6.9%
  • Tom Askeland
    594 votes 5.7%

Members of County Central Committee; Republican Party; 3rd Supervisorial District

  • Dan Terry
    6,054 votes 14.7%
  • Lu Ryden
    5,633 votes 13.7%
  • Marcia Maloney
    5,237 votes 12.7%
  • D. Jo-Ann Barr
    4,629 votes 11.3%
  • Stephen Sutton
    4,256 votes 10.3%
  • William P. Hughes
    4,111 votes 10.0%
  • Yuric A. Hannart
    3,382 votes 8.2%
  • Lynn Hofland
    2,871 votes 7.0%
  • Lisa M. Sutton
    2,754 votes 6.7%
  • Toni M. Wojslaw
    2,200 votes 5.3%

Members of County Central Committee; Republican Party; 4th Supervisorial District

  • Betty Quick
    6,756 votes 11.7%
  • John Longwell
    6,015 votes 10.4%
  • Bill Gissler
    5,882 votes 10.2%
  • Gordon G. Abbott
    5,219 votes 9.1%
  • Liz Simms
    5,016 votes 8.7%
  • Randy Petersen
    4,945 votes 8.6%
  • Mindy Reeves
    3,836 votes 6.7%
  • Robert "Bob" Becklund
    3,249 votes 5.6%
  • Mark Trout
    2,688 votes 4.7%
  • Steven Woodward Ulett
    2,398 votes 4.2%
  • Dan Lopez
    2,396 votes 4.2%
  • Michael Erickson
    2,280 votes 4.0%
  • Bill Carlson
    2,222 votes 3.9%
  • Perry Whitfield
    2,204 votes 3.8%
  • Ed Rowen
    1,883 votes 3.3%
  • Ron Ruscigno
    596 votes 1.0%

Members of County Central Committee; Republican Party; 5th Supervisorial District

  • Virginia G. Oaks
    8,980 votes 9.9%
  • Bob Burnett
    8,379 votes 9.3%
  • Pat Millar
    8,129 votes 9.0%
  • Donald J. Prolo
    7,754 votes 8.6%
  • Stanley Dickinson
    7,527 votes 8.3%
  • Roger Riffenburgh
    7,122 votes 7.9%
  • Ron Knecht
    6,620 votes 7.3%
  • Karyn Morton
    4,611 votes 5.1%
  • Barry Chang
    4,446 votes 4.9%
  • Lou Thorpe
    4,192 votes 4.6%
  • Willem A. Kohler
    3,851 votes 4.3%
  • Elizabeth Boewer-Ambra
    3,130 votes 3.5%
  • Richard Bray
    3,103 votes 3.4%
  • Ed Vincent
    2,541 votes 2.8%
  • Karl Peterson
    2,466 votes 2.7%
  • Anne Nichols
    2,249 votes 2.5%
  • David K. Schumann
    2,028 votes 2.2%
  • Richard L. "Dick" Blanding
    1,750 votes 1.9%
  • Omega "Maggie" Grantham
    1,673 votes 1.8%

Member of Reform Party Central Committee; 1st Supervisorial District

  • Wilma M. Ferrario
    116 votes 52.0%
  • Robert J. Ferrario
    107 votes 48.0%

Member of Reform Party Central Committee; 2nd Supervisorial District

Member of Reform Party Central Committee; 3rd Supervisorial District

  • Marlene Hayes
    132 votes 100.0%

Member of Reform Party Central Committee; 4th Supervisorial District

  • Valli Sharpe-Geisler
    174 votes 33.7%
  • Laura M. Tsakonas
    172 votes 33.3%
  • Brad Sharpe-Geisler
    171 votes 33.1%

Member of Reform Party Central Committee; 5th Supervisorial District

  • Barbara Sharpe
    201 votes 53.2%
  • Nikki Love
    177 votes 46.8%

Members of Libertarian Party Central Committees; 1st Supervisorial District

  • Jon Petersen
    232 votes 52.3%
  • Ray Strong
    212 votes 47.7%

Members of Libertarian Party Central Committees; 2nd Supervisorial District

Members of Libertarian Party Central Committees; 3rd Supervisorial District

  • Paul Rako
    183 votes 50.1%
  • Kennita Watson
    182 votes 49.9%

Members of Libertarian Party Central Committees; 4th Supervisorial District

Members of Libertarian Party Central Committees; 5th Supervisorial District

  • Joseph W. Dehn, III
    354 votes 100.0%

Member of Peace and Freedom Party Central Committee; 1st Supervisorial District

Member of Peace and Freedom Party Central Committee; 2nd Supervisorial District

Member of Peace and Freedom Party Central Committee; 3rd Supervisorial District

Member of Peace and Freedom Party Central Committee; 4th Supervisorial District

Member of Peace and Freedom Party Central Committee; 5th Supervisorial District

State Propositions

Proposition 219 Ballot Measures. Application.
3,265,978 / 67.0% Yes votes ...... 1,610,331 / 33.0% No votes
Requires statewide/local ballot measure to apply in all parts of jurisdiction, regardless of how parts of jurisdiction voted. Prohibits alternative versions of a measure from becoming law based upon specified vote percentage. Fiscal Impact: The number of measures this proposition would affect in the future, and the resulting fiscal impact, cannot be estimated.

Proposition 220 Courts. Superior and Municipal Court Consolidation.
3,213,798 / 64.4% Yes votes ...... 1,783,071 / 35.6% No votes
Provides for consolidation of superior and municipal courts in county upon approval by majority of county's superior and municipal court judges. Makes related changes to court system. Fiscal Impact: Potential annual net savings to the state, in the range of millions to tens of millions of dollars in the long term, to the extent that most superior and municipal courts consolidate.

Proposition 221 Subordinate Judicial Officers. Discipline.
3,958,652 / 80.8% Yes votes ...... 943,326 / 19.2% No votes
This measure grants Commission on Judicial Performance discretionary authority to discipline subordinate judicial officers according to same standards as judges, as specified, subject to review by California Supreme Court. Fiscal Impact: Probably minor, if any, costs to the state.

Proposition 222 Murder. Peace Officer Victim. Sentence Credits.
3,978,287 / 77.1% Yes votes ...... 1,188,113 / 22.9% No votes
Provides second degree murder of peace officer on duty is punishable by life in prison without parole where aggravating factors are present. Eliminates duplicative provision. Disallows person convicted of murder from earning credits to reduce the prison sentence. Fiscal Impact: Probably minor additional state costs.

Proposition 223 Schools Spending Limits on Administration.
2,393,361 / 45.6% Yes votes ...... 2,848,248 / 54.4% No votes
Prohibits school districts from spending more than five percent of funds from all sources for administrative costs. Authorizes fines for failure to comply. Fiscal Impact: Requires school districts to reduce administrative costs (as defined by the measure) by up to $700 million. To comply with this requirement, districts could more accurately account for administrative costs, move operations from central locations to school sites, and reduce administrative spending.

Proposition 224 State-Funded Design and Engineering Services.
1,936,722 / 38.1% Yes votes ...... 3,134,749 / 61.9% No votes
Imposes restrictions on state-funded design and engineering contracts. Requires cost comparison between private contractors and public employees performing work. Provides defined competitive bidding requirement. Fiscal Impact: Unknown impact on state and local government costs to obtain construction-related services. Impact would depend largely on factors included in required cost analyses.

Proposition 225 Limiting Congressional Terms.
2,689,045 / 52.9% Yes votes ...... 2,395,338 / 47.1% No votes
Establishes as California's official position that state and federal legislators support U.S. Constitutional amendment establishing Congressional term limits and requires them to use their powers to enact Congressional term limits. Fiscal Impact: Relatively minor costs to the state and to counties.

Proposition 226 Political Contributions By Employees, Union Members, Foreign Entities.
2,510,579 / 46.5% Yes votes ...... 2,880,855 / 53.5% No votes
Requires employee's or union member's permission to withhold wages or union dues for political contributions. Prohibits foreign contributions to state and local candidates. Fiscal Impact: Unknown, probably not major, state enforcement costs. Additional state costs (up to $2 million annually, one-time costs of $2 million to $5 million), offset by fees, and unknown local government costs for administrative activities, probably offset by fees.

Proposition 227 English Language In Public Schools.
3,345,481 / 61.0% Yes votes ...... 2,143,087 / 39.0% No votes
Requires all public school instruction be in English, unless parents request otherwise and show certain circumstances. Provides short-term English immersion programs for children learning English. Funds community English instruction. Fiscal Impact: Impacts on individual school districts would depend on how schools, parents, and the state respond to the proposition's changes. These impacts could vary significantly by district. Total state spending on education, however, probably would not change.

Local Measures

Measure A County Charter Amendments -- County of Santa Clara
118,722 / 62.4% Yes votes ...... 71,462 / 37.6% No votes
Shall the County of Santa Clara amend the following sections of the County Charter: Article III, Section 301, paragraph (b), and Article VII,Section 701, paragraph (a), lines #4 and #5; Article II, Section 203; Article II, Section 206; Article VII, Section 705, Article II, Section 202; Article III, Section 301, Article V, Section 507, Article VIII, Section 803, Article V, Section 503, Article VI, Section 601, and Article VII, Sections 701, 704 and 709?

Measure B School Bonds -- Los Gatos-Saratoga Joint Union High School District
10,958 / 80.6% Yes votes ...... 2,644 / 19.4% No votes
To improve health and safety conditions of Los Gatos and Saratoga High Schools; replace inadequate or unsafe electrical and heating systems; repair deteriorated roofs, plumbing and sewer systems; reduce dangers from earthquakes with seismic upgrades; upgrade class-rooms and restrooms; acquire, construct, repair and modernize school facilities; relieve overcrowding and comply with health and safety codes, shall the Los Gatos-Saratoga Joint Union High School District issue $79 million of bonds at interest rates within the legal limit?

Measure C Redevelopment Plan -- City of Morgan Hill
4,079 / 70.9% Yes votes ...... 1,673 / 29.1% No votes
ADVISORY VOTE ONLY. THIS MEASURE DOES NOT INCREASE TAXES. Shall the Morgan Hill Redevelopment Plan be extended to accomplish, without bonded indebtedness, the following:
  • minimize flooding
  • build a new library and community center
  • build a new senior center
  • build an aquatics center
  • purchase land for a soccer complex
  • develop a sports complex
  • improve water, sewer, and street systems
  • reduce sewer and water debt charges
  • promote economic development
The plan amendment shall be for no more than $147 million.

Measure D Real Estate Development Agreement -- City of Santa Clara (Put on the ballot by referendum petition.)
10,720 / 64.0% Yes votes ...... 6,040 / 36.0% No votes
Shall Ordinance No. 1706 approving a development agreement etween the City of Santa Clara and Sun Microsystems Corporatio for approximately 82 acres of State of California owned real property located at the northeast corner of Montague Expressway and Lafayette Street be adopted?

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Data Created: June 17, 1998 11:15
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