Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
2006 Oregon elections
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Oregon's 2006 statewide election included a May 16 primary election and a November 7 general election.
Ten statewide ballot measures were on the November ballot.
The following offices were up for election: Governor, Supreme Court Position 6 (to succeed Wallace P. Carson, Jr.), and numerous seats in the state legislature (House of Representatives and Senate), the state Circuit Courts, and the District Attorney's offices.
Offices that were uncontested, or local to various towns, counties, or regions, were also on Oregon ballots. Such races are not listed on this page.
Remove ads
Election process
Summarize
Perspective
Both partisan and non-partisan offices were at stake in the 2006 election cycle. Oregon conducts partisan and non-partisan elections differently:
- For partisan offices (such as the state legislature and governor's races), major parties (Democratic and Republican) run candidates in the Primary to select their nominee for the General Election. (The state takes on the administrative and financial burden of primaries for the two major parties, while other parties determine their candidate according to whatever nominating process they choose.) A plurality (that is, more votes than any opponent) is sufficient for a major party candidate to win nomination; candidates need not get more than 50% of the vote to advance to the General Election.
- Non-partisan offices (such as judges, district attorneys, and superintendent) may be filled in the Primary, if any candidate wins a majority of the vote. If no candidate wins over 50% of the vote, however, the top two vote-winners will face each other in a runoff in the November General Election.
County governments conduct the elections. Immediately after an election, their web sites[1] are the best place to find accurate election results. The Secretary of State's office posts official results 30 days after an election.
Remove ads
Voter statistics and turnout
According to the Annual Oregon Population Report for 2005,[2] the total estimated population of Oregon as of July 1, 2005 was 3,631,440, of which 2,765,827 were of voting age. Of these, 69,146 were ineligible to vote due to legal impediments, leaving an estimated 2,696,681 Oregonians eligible to vote. 1,976,669 voters were in fact registered for the 2006 election, 73.3% of those estimated eligible, and 70.8% of these registered voters or 1,399,650 voters actually did cast their ballots.
Remove ads
Key: abbreviations of Oregon political parties
- (I) Independent Party of Oregon
- (C) Constitution Party of Oregon
- (D) Democratic Party of Oregon
- (G) Pacific Green Party of Oregon
- (L) Libertarian Party of Oregon
- (R) Republican Party of Oregon
- (N) non-affiliated (no party affiliation)
Candidates (Legislative)
Summarize
Perspective
U.S. Congress
All five of Oregon's federal congressional districts in the U.S. House of Representatives were up for election in 2006. All incumbents (four Democrats, one Republican) won re-election.
Neither of Oregon's US Senate seats was up for election in 2006.
Current US Senators for Oregon:
- Gordon Smith (R)
- Ron Wyden (D)
State Legislature
In the bicameral Oregon Legislative Assembly, each of the 30 Senate districts is composed of exactly two House districts. Detailed district boundaries may be found at the Secretary of State's web site.[3][4]
- State Senate districts
- Portland Senate districts
- Willamette valley Senate districts
Oregon's state house in its entirety comes up for election in even-numbered years. All 60 biennially elected seats in the House were up for election. Each seat has a 2-year term with no term limits. The Democrats won in 31 of 60 districts, gaining four seats and control of Oregon's state house for the first time since 1990.
House party balance | 2004 | 2006 | +/- | |
Democrat-held | 27 | 31 | +4 | |
Republican-held | 33 | 29 | -4 | |
Total | 60 |
Oregon State Senators serve four-year terms without term limits. Their terms are staggered so that only half of the Senators are up for re-election every two even-numbered years.
The Republicans lost one seat in the state senate, because Senator Westlund, although not up for election, switched first to non-partisan Independent to challenge for the governor's seat, then withdrew from that race and re-registered as a Democrat, gaining the Democrats one seat. The Democrats, however, also lost Senator Gordly, who was not up for election either, but she re-registered as a non-partisan Independent. Outside the party changes by these two individual Senators, no other seats in the Senate shifted party as a result of the election, although three incumbents declined to run for various reasons and another lost his primary.
Senate party balance | 2004 | 2006 | +/- | |
Democrat-held | 18 | 18 | net 0 | |
Republican-held | 12 | 11 | -1 | |
Independent-held | 0 | 1 | +1 | |
Total | 30 |
Most races were not strongly contested in the general election. In 60% of the legislative races, the "underdog" candidate raised less than 25% of the funds his or her opponent raised. Also, in 85% of the 75 legislative races, the winner was the candidate who raised more money.[5]
Candidates for the Oregon Senate[6] and House[7] are listed in the chart below. House districts are listed next to the Senate district to which they belong (rather than listing the Senate and House in separate charts.) The counties covered by each Senate district are listed in italics, with (parentheses) if the county extends into other districts. Box colors indicate party affiliation for both incumbents and general election winners (light blue for Democrats, light red for Republicans). Names and statistics of general election winners are also boldfaced.
For primary candidates, see Oregon primary election, 2006.
Remove ads
Results
Summarize
Perspective
Remove ads
Candidates (Executive)
Oregon Blue Book, list of elected executive officials[239]
Governor
Incumbent Governor Ted Kulongoski (D) won the election.
Democratic Party
winner in primary:
- Ted Kulongoski (incumbent)
losers in primary:
Republican Party
winner in primary:
losers in primary:
- Jason A. Atkinson,[243] Kevin Mannix,[244] W. Ames Curtright, David W. Beem, William E. Spidal, Gordon Leitch, Bob Leonard Forthan
Pacific Green Party
Constitution Party
Libertarian Party
- Richard Morley
Independent
- Ben Westlund gathered enough signatures to appear on the ballot, but withdrew from the race[245] August 10.
Labor Commissioner
Commissioner of the Bureau of Labor and Industries winner in primary:
Superintendent of Schools
Superintendent of Public Instruction winner in primary:
loser in primary:
- Deborah L. Andrews
Remove ads
Candidates (Judicial)
Many judicial positions are not contested. Incumbents are rarely opposed, and when they resign, it is often timed such that the Governor chooses their replacement.[248]
If a judicial position becomes vacant and the governor declines to make an appointment, it must be filled at the next general election. If it is not too late to file for a primary election, candidates will appear on that ballot in the first round of a runoff election. If there is no primary before the next general election, all candidates appear on the general election ballot, and a plurality vote may determine the winner.
Remove ads
Oregon Supreme Court
Summarize
Perspective
Position 2
Incumbent Judge Paul De Muniz sought reelection and was the only candidate to file. He won easily in the primary election against only write-in candidate opposition.
Position 3
Incumbent Judge Robert D. (Skip) Durham sought reelection and was the only candidate to file. He won easily in the primary election against only write-in candidate opposition.
Position 6
Incumbent Judge Wallace P. Carson, Jr. of Oregon Supreme Court, Position 6, decided to retire after 34 years on the bench. Three candidates entered the race to succeed him:
- Virginia Linder, who had since 1997 been an Oregon Court of Appeals judge (winner)
- Jack Roberts, former Oregon Commissioner of Labor and Industries
- W. Eugene (Gene) Hallman, Pendleton attorney
No candidate received a majority in the primary election, and Linder and Roberts advanced to the general election. Linder won by 51.75 percent of the vote.
Remove ads
Oregon Court of Appeals
Circuit Court
Summarize
Perspective
Judge of the Circuit Court, 1st District, Position 5 (Jackson County)
- Raymond B. White - 21,070
- Other - 240
Judge of the Circuit Court, 1st District, Position 9 (Jackson County)
Primary:
- Ron Grensky - 15,197
- Lisa C. Greif - 11,651
- Joe Charter - 4,762
- Paul L. Henderson III - 1,602
- Other - 49
Runoff:
- Ron Grensky - 39,954
- Lisa C. Greif - 29,291
- Other - 130
Judge of the Circuit Court, 2nd District, Position 1 (Lane County)
- Karsten H. Rasmussen - 39,897
- Other - 307
Judge of the Circuit Court, 2nd District, Position 3 (Lane County)
- Lyle C. Velure - 38,112
- Other - 594
Judge of the Circuit Court, 2nd District, Position 9 (Lane County)
- Gregory G. Foote - 40,765
- Other - 367
Judge of the Circuit Court, 2nd District, Position 14 (Lane County)
- Debra Vogt - 64,209
- Alan Leiman - 49,156
- Other - 470
Judge of the Circuit Court, 4th District, Position 4 (Multnomah County)
- Adrienne C. Nelson - 134,269
- Other - 3,464
Judge of the Circuit Court, 4th District, Position 28 (Multnomah County)
- Judith Hudson Matarazzo - 39,782
- Mary Overgaard - 38,323
- James J. McIntyre - 31,408
- Mark K. Kramer - 25,046
- Ulanda L. Watkins - 18,368
- Christopher D. Wright - 11,641
- Charles L. Best - 8,961
- Theodore E. Sims - 7,652
- James E. Leuenberger - 2,506
- Other - 1,580
Judge of the Circuit Court, 4th District, Position 31 (Multnomah County)
- Cheryl Albrecht - 93,528
- Kathleen Payne - 78,778
- Other - 1,836
Judge of the Circuit Court, 4th District, Position 37 (Multnomah County)
- Leslie Roberts - 116,321
- Other - 34,227
Judge of the Circuit Court, 6th District, Position 5 (Morrow and Umatilla counties)
- Christopher R. Brauer - 11,003
- Annetta L. Spicer - 8,631
- Other - 45
Judge of the Circuit Court, 14th District, Position 2 (Josephine County)
- Pat Wolke - 19,204
- Other - 367
Judge of the Circuit Court, 15th District, Position 3 (Coos and Cutty counties)
- Jesse Margolis - 7,569
- Other - 7,449
Judge of the Circuit Court, 16th District, Position 5 (Douglas County)
- George Ambrosini - 20,741
- William (Bill) Marshal - 11,810
- Nancy Cook - 5,620
- Other - 52
Judge of the Circuit Court, 18th District, Position 3 (Clatsop County)
- Cindee S. Matyahs - 7,392
- Don H. Haller, III - 5,829
- Other - 23
Judge of the Circuit Court, 20th District, Position 6 (Washington County)
- Charlie Bailey - 71,811
- Vincent A. Deguc - 41,813
- Other - 578
Remove ads
District Attorneys

Remove ads
See also
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads