June 2012 California elections   
  The California state elections, June 2012  were held on June 5, 2012, and included two propositions , primary elections  for each party's  nominee for President , and primary elections to determine the top-two  candidates for California's Class I seat  to the United States Senate , all of California's seats to the House of Representatives , all of the seats of the State Assembly , and all odd-numbered seats of the State Senate , who will compete against each other in a run-off  on November 6, 2012. 
This was the first election with California's newly implemented nonpartisan blanket primary  in effect, pursuant to Proposition 14 , which passed with 53% voter approval in June 2010. Additionally, in November 2010, voters approved Proposition 20 , which authorized a California Citizens Redistricting Commission  to re-draw congressional district lines , in addition to its current job of drawing state senate district lines  and state assembly district lines , taking away that job from the California state legislature . This was the first election which used the Citizens Redistricting Commission's maps. 
   
 
Primary elections  
President of the United States  Incumbent president Barack Obama  ran unopposed on the Democratic primary ballot. Governor Mitt Romney  and Rep. Ron Paul  competed in the Republican primary . 
 
Republican primary   Results by county. Mitt Romney won all of California's 58 counties.      California Republican primary, 2012[ 1]       Candidate   Votes   Percentage   Delegates      Mitt Romney     1,151,197   79.6%   169     Ron Paul    147,893   10.2%   0     Rick Santorum    75,802   5.2%   0     Newt Gingrich    55,458   3.8%   0     Buddy Roemer    9,714   0.7%   0     Fred Karger    6,481   0.4%   0     Unpledged delegates:    3     Total:    1,446,545   100%   172   
   Key:   Withdrew prior to contest   
 
United States Senate   Results by county. Dianne Feinstein  won all of California's 58 counties.    
United States House of Representatives   
State Senate   
State Assembly   
Propositions  100% ( 21,993 of 21,993 ) precincts partially or fully reporting as of June 22, 2012, 4:49 p.m 
 
Proposition 28  Results by county.    Proposition 28 is an initiative constitutional amendment that would change California state legislature  term limits from a limit of 8 years for the Senate  and 6 years for the Assembly , to a limit of 12 years on combined service. 
  Limits on Legislators' Terms in Office[ 3]      Choice   Votes   %         Yes    3,001,137    61.0     No   1,915,154   39.0             
 
Proposition 29  Results by county.    Proposition 29 is an initiative statute that would add a $1 tax on cigarettes  to fund cancer research. 
  Tax on Cigarettes for Cancer Research[ 4]      Choice   Votes   %        No    2,553,137    50.3     Yes   2,523,572   49.7             
 
References   
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