Skip to main content
November 2022 Election Results

San Francisco Board of Supervisors

District 2

CandidateVotesPercentage
Catherine Stefani
21,709
100%

District 4

CandidateVotesPercentage
Joel Engardio
13,509
51%
Gordon Mar
13,030
49%

District 6

First choice results

CandidateVotesPercentage
Matt Dorsey
8,113
51%
Honey Mahogany
6,954
44%

District 8

CandidateVotesPercentage
Rafael Mandelman
26,948
78%
Kate Stoia
7,783
22%

District 10

CandidateVotesPercentage
Shamann Walton
11,863
73%
Brian Sam Adam
4,409
27%

Other Local Offices

District Attorney

First choice results

CandidateVotesPercentage
Brooke Jenkins
123,287
46%
John Hamasaki
99,742
37%

Board of Education

There are 3 open seats

CandidateVotesPercentage
Lisa Weissman-Ward
147,551
22%
Lainie Motamedi
129,928
19%
Alida Fisher
118,762
18%

Community College Board

The 4 year term has three open seats

CandidateVotesPercentage
Anita Martinez
88,756
15%
Vick Chung
83,032
14%
Susan Solomon
82,592
14%

Community College Board

The 2 year term has one open seat

CandidateVotesPercentage
Murrell Green
115,665
56%
Adolfo Velasquez
63,570
31%

Assessor-Recorder

CandidateVotesPercentage
Joaquin Torres
213,370
100%

BART Board of Directors, District 8

CandidateVotesPercentage
Janice Li
97,511
100%

Public Defender

CandidateVotesPercentage
Mano Raju
178,980
72%
Rebecca Susan Feng Young
68,840
28%

Local Propositions

San Francisco has a unique political system in which many government actions—whether they be new laws, tax and spending decisions or changes in how the city operates—are subject to the will of the voters. Voters decided on 14 ballot measures this election.

Prop A

50%+1 votes required to pass

Prop. A would grant additional cost-of-living benefits to certain city retirees and allow the Retirement Board to contract with future directors.

Yes
65%
183,547 Votes
No
35%
99,117 Votes

Prop B

50%+1 votes required to pass

Prop. B would undo the 2020 proposition that ordered the creation of a new Department of Sanitation and Streets and return its duties to the Department of Public Works.

Yes
75%
207,772 Votes
No
25%
70,690 Votes

Prop C

50%+1 votes required to pass

Prop. C would create a new commission to oversee the Department of Homelessness and Supportive Housing.

Yes
67%
191,493 Votes
No
33%
93,385 Votes

Prop D

50%+1 votes required to pass

Prop. D is the latest effort by the mayor and her political allies to boost housing construction. If Prop. D gets more votes than rival Prop. E, then it nullifies the latter.

Yes
49%
137,930 Votes
No
51%
143,308 Votes

Prop E

50%+1 votes required to pass

Prop. E was devised by opponents of market-rate housing development as an alternative to Prop. D. If Prop. E gets more votes than Prop. D, then it nullifies the latter.

Yes
46%
128,055 Votes
No
54%
151,200 Votes

Prop F

50%+1 votes required to pass

Prop. F would continue a property tax carve-out for the Library Preservation Fund, which is used to fund library services and materials. The set-aside is 2.5 cents per $100 of property tax revenue.

Yes
83%
233,882 Votes
No
17%
49,281 Votes

Prop G

50%+1 votes required to pass

Prop. G establishes a new fund for grants that aim to support the academic achievement and social and emotional wellness of SF school students.

Yes
78%
221,230 Votes
No
22%
63,706 Votes

Prop H

50%+1 votes required to pass

Prop. H would shift elections for mayor, sheriff, district attorney, city attorney and treasurer to even-numbered years.

Yes
71%
199,373 Votes
No
29%
80,631 Votes

Prop I

50%+1 votes required to pass

Prop. I is the drivers’ revenge: Reopen all of JFK Drive and the Great Highway to cars.

Yes
35%
100,611 Votes
No
65%
187,149 Votes

Prop J

50%+1 votes required to pass

Prop. J makes car-free JFK Drive permanent (See Prop I above). If it gets more votes than Prop. I, then the JFK Promenade, and its walkers and bikers and skaters, will win the day.

Yes
63%
177,248 Votes
No
37%
104,469 Votes

Prop L

66⅔% votes required to pass

Prop. L would renew the 0.5% sales and use tax, which funds transit and street improvements, for another 30 years.

Yes
72%
204,351 Votes
No
28%
80,625 Votes

Prop M

50%+1 votes required to pass

Prop. M would tax apartments in buildings with three or more units that are kept vacant for more than six months.

Yes
54%
155,346 Votes
No
46%
130,493 Votes

Prop N

50%+1 votes required to pass

Prop. N, another measure related to cars in Golden Gate Park, would enable the city to take over the underground garage in the park’s Music Concourse and turn it into public parking.

Yes
75%
207,987 Votes
No
25%
70,531 Votes

Prop O

50%+1 votes required to pass

Prop. O would add a small amount of additional property tax, ranging from $150 to $4,000, beginning in July 2023 to fund specific programs at City College.

Yes
36%
103,612 Votes
No
64%
180,462 Votes

State propositions

Prop 1

50%+1 votes required to pass

Prop. 1 would amend the California Constitution to enshrine a fundamental right to reproductive freedom.

Yes
65%
3,587,589 Votes
No
35%
1,955,049 Votes

Prop 26

50%+1 votes required to pass

Would allow tribal casinos and the state’s four horse race tracks to offer in-person sports betting.

Yes
30%
1,654,446 Votes
No
70%
3,869,308 Votes

Prop 27

50%+1 votes required to pass

Would allow licensed tribes and gaming companies which contract with them to offer mobile and online sports betting.

Yes
17%
929,280 Votes
No
83%
4,641,896 Votes

Prop 28

50%+1 votes required to pass

Requires the state to allocate at least 1% of Prop. 98 funding — money guaranteed for public schools and community colleges in the state budget — for music and arts education.

Yes
61%
3,411,873 Votes
No
39%
2,142,089 Votes

Prop 29

50%+1 votes required to pass

This is the third ballot initiative in recent years that aims to change how kidney dialysis clinics operate.

Yes
30%
1,659,705 Votes
No
70%
3,862,359 Votes

Prop 30

50%+1 votes required to pass

Imposes a 1.75% personal income tax increase on Californians making more than $2 million per year to fund climate programs.

Yes
41%
2,270,432 Votes
No
59%
3,296,890 Votes

Prop 31

50%+1 votes required to pass

Affirms a 2020 law banning sale of some flavored tobacco products.

Yes
62%
3,443,927 Votes
No
38%
2,101,251 Votes

Voter Turnout

Precinct-Level Voting Maps for Local Propositions

Precinct-Level Voting Maps for Local Offices