California's 3rd State Assembly district

California's 3rd State Assembly district is one of 80 California State Assembly districts. It is currently represented by Republican James Gallagher of Yuba City.

California's 3rd State Assembly district
Current assemblymember
  James Gallagher
RYuba City
Population (2010)
  Voting age
  Citizen voting age
468,983[1]
352,351[1]
311,791[1]
Demographics
Registered voters244,621
Registration38.41% Republican
32.13% Democratic
22.79% No party preference

District profile

The district consists of much of the northern Sacramento Valley, along with parts of the adjacent foothills. The district is primarily rural.

Election results from statewide races

Year Office Results
2018 Governor Cox 59.7 – 40.3%
Senator de Leon 59.2 – 40.8%
2016 President Trump 53.3 – 39.5%
Senator Harris 56.8 – 43.2%
2014 Governor Kashkari 56.3 – 43.7%
2012 President Romney 52.5 – 42.4%
Senator Emken 55.4 – 44.6%

List of assemblymembers

Due to redistricting, the 3rd district has been moved around different parts of the state. The current iteration resulted from the 2011 redistricting by the California Citizens Redistricting Commission.

Assemblymember Party Years of Service Residence Notes
John H. O'Donnell Democratic 1932–1940
Lloyd W. Lowrey Democratic 1940–1962
Leroy F. Greene Democratic 1962–1974
Eugene A. Chappie Republican 1974–1980
Wally Herger Republican 1980–1986 Rio Oso
Christopher Chandler Republican 1986–1992 Yuba City
Bernie Richter Republican 1993–1999 Chico
Sam Aanestad Republican 1999–2002 Grass Valley
Rick Keene Republican 2002–2008 Chico
Dan Logue Republican 2008–2014 Marysville
James Gallagher Republican 2014–present Nicolaus

Election results

2020

2020 California's 3rd State Assembly district election
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican James Gallagher (incumbent) 83,022 65.3
Democratic James R. Henson 44,107 34.7
Total votes 127,129 100.0
General election
Republican James Gallagher (incumbent)
Democratic James R. Henson
Total votes

2018

California State Assembly election, 2018
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican James Gallagher (incumbent) 64,975 65.0
Democratic Sonia Aery 34,941 35.0
Total votes 99,916 100.0
General election
Republican James Gallagher (incumbent) 95,786 60.2
Democratic Sonia Aery 63,445 39.8
Total votes 159,231 100.0
Republican hold

2016

California State Assembly election, 2016
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican James Gallagher (incumbent) 66,686 61.0
Democratic Edward Ritchie 42,700 39.0
Democratic Bryce Corron (write-in) 12 0.0
Total votes 109,398 100.0
General election
Republican James Gallagher (incumbent) 108,910 63.0
Democratic Edward Ritchie 63,867 37.0
Total votes 172,777 100.0
Republican hold

2014

California State Assembly election, 2014
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican James Gallagher 34,744 44.4
Democratic Jim Reed 26,557 34.0
Republican Ryan Schohr 16,906 21.6
Total votes 78,207 100.0
General election
Republican James Gallagher 69,552 63.1
Democratic Jim Reed 40,736 36.9
Total votes 104,288 100.0
Republican hold

2012

California State Assembly election, 2012
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Dan Logue (incumbent) 38,742 42.9
Democratic Charles Rouse 28,926 32.0
Republican Bob Williams 22,657 25.1
Total votes 90,325 100.0
General election
Republican Dan Logue (incumbent) 86,692 55.6
Democratic Charles Rouse 69,265 44.4
Total votes 155,957 100.0
Republican hold
gollark: It's verified when you construct a string. Disregarding unsafe hackery or any implementation bugs, a string will always be valid UTF-8.
gollark: In Rust a string is *guaranteed* to be valid UTF-8.
gollark: Well, yes, but they're byte sequences.
gollark: I mean, it's better than C and stuff, and I wouldn't mind writing simple apps in it.
gollark: Speaking specifically about the error handling, it may be "simple", but it's only "simple" in the sense of "the compiler writers do less work". It's very easy to mess it up by forgetting the useless boilerplate line somewhere, or something like that.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.