Here are where the key races stand as of Friday afternoon with 96% of ballots counted in San Diego County and 100% of precincts statewide reporting partial results. Scroll down in the chart above to see all San Diego County results.

President — Donald Trump won the election, but San Diego County backed Kamala Harris by 57.0% to Trump’s 40.0%.

U.S. Senate — Adam Schiff has declared victory, with 59.1% of the vote to Steve Garvey’s 40.9%.

Congress — Incumbents were victorious across the board, with Mike Levin at 52.3% to Matt Gunderson’s 47.7% in the closest race, and higher margins in the four others. Darrell Issa received 59.3%, Sara Jacobs 60.7%, Scott Peters 64.1% and Juan Vargas 66.4%.

State Senate — Akilah Weber won with 63.1% of the vote to Bob Divine’s 36.9%.

State Assembly — In the bitterly contested race for the 75th District, Carl DeMaio beat Andrew Hayes 57.2% to 42.8%. In the 76th District, Darshana Patel declared victory over Kristie Bruce-Lane with 53.9% to 46.1%. And in the 79th District, LaShae Sharp-Collins defeated Colin Parent by 54.0% to 46.0%. Incumbents Tasha Boerner in the 77th and David Alvarez in the 80th won with over 60% of the vote in their races, while incumbent Laurie Davies in the 74th edged ahead of Chris Duncan with 50.7% to 49.3%. Chris Ward in the 78th was unopposed.

County Supervisor — In the District 3 race, which was expected to be close, incumbent Terra Lawson-Remer defeated Kevin Faulconer by 56.85% to 43.15%, while incumbents Joel Anderson and Nora Vargas were reelected with 60.0% and 62.6% respectively.

San Diego Mayor — Incumbent Todd Gloria declared victory over Larry Turner with a margin of 55.4% to 44.6%.

San Diego City Attorney — Heather Ferbert defeated Brian Maienschein with 56.7% to 43.3%.

San Diego City Council — Incumbents Sean Elo-Rivera and Stephen Whitburn were both reelected with leads of 60.9% and 58.1% respectively.

Chula Vista City Council — In District 3, Michael Inzunza beat Leticia Munguia 68.8% to 31.2%. And in District 4, Cesar Fernandez won with 60.5% to Rudy Ramirez’s 39.5%.

Measure E — The one-cent sales tax for infrastructure improvements in the city of San Diego was defeated with 50.8% no to 49.2% yes.

Measure G — The half-cent county sales tax for transportation improvements lost with 51.0% no to 49.0% yes.

Proposition 32 — A higher state minimum wage was rejected by 50.9% no to 49.1% yes

Proposition 33 — Statewide rent control lost 60.3% no to 39.7% yes.

Proposition 36 — Stricter sentencing for drug and retail crimes was approved at 68.6% yes to 31.4% no.

The results of other state propositions can be viewed in this table from the Secretary of State’s office:

Updated at 8:10 a.m., Nov. 16, 2024

Chris Jennewein is founder and senior editor of Times of San Diego.