2010 California lieutenant gubernatorial election|
|
|   | 
  County results Newsom:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%      70–80% Maldonado:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%  | 
   | 
  The 2010 California lieutenant gubernatorial election was held on November 2, 2010, to elect the lieutenant governor of California. The primary election took place on June 8, 2010. Incumbent Republican lieutenant governor Abel Maldonado, who had been appointed to the office, ran for election to a full term but was defeated by Democratic Mayor Gavin Newsom of San Francisco. Newsom started his four-year term on 10 January 2011. 
  Democratic Primary
 Candidates
  Polls
    | Poll source  |  Dates administered  |  Gavin Newsom  |  Dean Florez  |  Janice Hahn  |  Alan Lowenthal  |  Undecided  | 
  | Fairbank, Maslin, Maullin and Associates[1]  |  October 3–7, 2009  |  —  |  8%  |  24%  |  7%  |  61%  | 
  | Tulchin Research[2]  |  January 2010  |  33%  |  15%  |  17%  |  —  |  35%  | 
 Results
  California Democratic lieutenant governor primary, 2010   | Candidate  |  Votes  |  %  | 
     | Gavin Newsom  |  1,308,860  |  55.5  | 
   | Janice Hahn  |  780,115  |  33.3  | 
   | Eric Korevaar  |  257,349  |  10.9  | 
   | Total votes  |  2,346,324   |  100.00   | 
     | Voter turnout  |  31.0%  | 
  
 Republican Primary
 Candidates
  Results
  California Republican lieutenant governor primary, 2010   | Candidate  |  Votes  |  %  | 
     | Abel Maldonado (incumbent)  |  939,370  |  43.6  | 
   | Sam Aanestad  |  668,345  |  31.0  | 
   | Dave Harris  |  180,960  |  8.4  | 
   | Bert Davis  |  130,486  |  6.1  | 
   | Scott Levitt  |  126,023  |  5.8  | 
   | Yvonne Girard  |  111,554  |  5.1  | 
   | Total votes  |  2,156,738   |  100.00   | 
     | Voter turnout  |  41.3%  | 
   
 Other Primaries
  [3]  
 General election
 Opinion polls
    | Poll source  |  Dates administered  |  Abel Maldonado (R)  |  Gavin Newsom (D)  |  Undecided/other  | 
  | Times/USC[4]  |  October 13–20, 2010  |  37%  |  41%  |  5%  | 
  | SurveyUSA[5]  |  October 15–18, 2010  |  37%  |  43%  |  6%  | 
  | The Field Poll[6]  |  September 25, 2010  |  35%  |  39%  |  26%  | 
  | Survey USA[7]  |  September 19–21, 2010  |  41%  |  44%  |  11%  | 
  | Public Policy Polling[8]  |  September 14–16, 2010  |  36%  |  39%  |  24%  | 
  | Survey USA[9]  |  August 31-September 1, 2010  |  39%  |  44%  |  15%  | 
  | Survey USA[10]  |  August 8–11, 2010  |  42%  |  43%  |  15%  | 
  | The Field Poll[11]  |  June 22–25, 2010  |  34%  |  43%  |  23%  | 
 Results
  References
  External links
 Official campaign websites
    | 
|---|
U.S. Senate |  | 
|---|
U.S. House (election ratings) |  | 
|---|
| Governors |  | 
|---|
Attorneys general |  | 
|---|
State legislatures |  | 
|---|
| Mayors |  - Anaheim, CA
  - Birmingham, AL (special)
  - Gainesville, FL
  - Honolulu, HI (special)
  - Irvine, CA
  - Lexington, KY
  - Long Beach, CA
  - Louisville, KY
  - New Orleans, LA
  - Newark, NJ
  - Norfolk, VA
  - Oakland, CA
  - Orange County, FL
  - Providence, RI
  - San Jose, CA
  - Sioux Falls, SD
  - Santa Ana, CA
  - Tallahassee, FL
  - Washington, DC
     | 
|---|
| Local |  - Cuygahoga County, OH 
  - Jackson County, MO 
  - Jefferson County, MO 
  - Macomb County, MI 
  - Orange County, FL 
  - St. Charles County, MO 
  - St. Louis County, MO 
  - Wayne County, MI 
     | 
|---|
| States |  | 
|---|