2022 Oregon Commissioner of Labor election
The 2022 Oregon Commissioner of Labor and Industries election was held on November 8, 2022, in order to elect the Oregon Commissioner of Labor and Industries. The election was held on a nonpartisan basis. Nevertheless, Christina Stephenson was favored by the Democrats while Cheri Helt was favored by the Republicans.
November 8, 2022
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Stephenson: 50–55% 55–60% 60–65% 65–70% 70–75% 80–85% Helt: 50–55% 55–60% 60–65% | ||||||||||||||
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The primary election was held on May 17, 2022
Incumbent Commissioner Val Hoyle did not seek reelection in order to run for the U.S. House of Representatives. Christina Stephenson was decisively elected to succeed her in the November runoff, defeating former state representative Cheri Helt.
Primary election
editWhile the position of Labor Commissioner is nonpartisan, Barker, Helt, and Neuman have run for office as Republicans, while Kulla and Stephenson are Democrats. Henry is a member of the Oregon Progressive Party.[1]
Candidates
editAdvanced to general
edit- Cheri Helt, former state representative[2]
- Christina Stephenson, lawyer[2]
Eliminated in primary
edit- Aaron Baca, reforestation company owner[2]
- Brent Barker, real estate broker[2]
- Casey Kulla, Yamhill County commissioner[2]
- Robert Neuman, business manager[2]
Withdrawn
edit- Chris Henry, truck driver and perennial candidate (endorsed Stephenson; remained on ballot)[3]
Results
edit
- 65–70%55–60%50–55%45–50%40–45%35–40%30–35%25–30%
- 35–40%30–35%25–30%
- 35–40%
| Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Christina Stephenson | 421,619 | 47.17% | |
| Cheri Helt | 171,168 | 19.15% | |
| Casey Kulla | 126,036 | 14.10% | |
| Brent Barker | 101,576 | 11.36% | |
| Robert Neuman | 32,331 | 3.62% | |
| Chris Henry | 22,936 | 2.57% | |
| Aaron Baca | 14,217 | 1.59% | |
| Write-in | 3,922 | 0.44% | |
| Total votes | 893,805 | 100.00% | |
Runoff
editCampaign
editAlthough the position is officially nonpartisan, Stephenson was endorsed by Democratic Party officials, including gubernatorial nominee Tina Kotek and incumbent commissioner Val Hoyle. Helt was endorsed by Republican gubernatorial nominee Christine Drazan and independent gubernatorial candidate Betsy Johnson.[5]
Results
edit| Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Christina Stephenson | 916,455 | 60.74% | |
| Cheri Helt | 582,609 | 38.61% | |
| Write-in | 9,826 | 0.65% | |
| Total votes | 1,508,890 | 100.00% | |
By county
edit| County[6] | Christina Stephenson Democratic |
Cheri Helt Republican |
Write-in Various |
Margin | Total | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| # | % | # | % | # | % | # | % | ||
| Baker | 2,911 | 44.31% | 3,611 | 54.96% | 48 | 0.73% | -700 | -10.65% | 6,570 |
| Benton | 24,969 | 69.87% | 10,526 | 29.45% | 243 | 0.68% | 14,443 | 40.41% | 35,738 |
| Clackamas | 92,011 | 56.97% | 68,692 | 42.53% | 807 | 0.50% | 23,319 | 14.44% | 161,510 |
| Clatsop | 9,077 | 61.00% | 5,728 | 38.49% | 76 | 0.51% | 3,349 | 22.51% | 14,881 |
| Columbia | 11,021 | 50.99% | 10,421 | 48.21% | 173 | 0.80% | 600 | 2.78% | 21,615 |
| Coos | 11,580 | 49.14% | 11,841 | 50.24% | 146 | 0.62% | -261 | -1.11% | 23,567 |
| Crook | 3,902 | 35.62% | 6,935 | 63.32% | 116 | 1.06% | -3,033 | -27.69% | 10,953 |
| Curry | 4,888 | 50.90% | 4,647 | 48.39% | 69 | 0.72% | 241 | 2.51% | 9,604 |
| Deschutes | 44,867 | 49.16% | 46,050 | 50.45% | 356 | 0.39% | -1,183 | -1.30% | 91,273 |
| Douglas | 17,709 | 45.23% | 21,047 | 53.75% | 400 | 1.02% | -3,338 | -8.52% | 39,156 |
| Gilliam | 311 | 44.05% | 393 | 55.67% | 2 | 0.28% | -82 | -11.61% | 706 |
| Grant | 1,178 | 39.23% | 1,786 | 59.47% | 39 | 1.30% | -608 | -20.25% | 3,003 |
| Harney | 1,013 | 37.87% | 1,637 | 61.20% | 25 | 0.93% | -624 | -23.33% | 2,675 |
| Hood River | 5,613 | 68.11% | 2,580 | 31.31% | 48 | 0.58% | 3,033 | 36.80% | 8,241 |
| Jackson | 40,637 | 53.45% | 34,954 | 45.97% | 441 | 0.58% | 5,683 | 7.47% | 76,032 |
| Jefferson | 3,410 | 43.00% | 4,458 | 56.22% | 62 | 0.78% | -1,048 | -13.22% | 7,930 |
| Josephine | 13,570 | 42.53% | 18,103 | 56.74% | 233 | 0.73% | -4,533 | -14.21% | 31,906 |
| Klamath | 8,515 | 39.86% | 12,690 | 59.41% | 156 | 0.73% | -4,175 | -19.54% | 21,361 |
| Lake | 1,135 | 38.58% | 1,777 | 60.40% | 30 | 1.02% | -642 | -21.82% | 2,942 |
| Lane | 88,088 | 64.85% | 46,549 | 34.27% | 1,194 | 0.88% | 41,539 | 30.58% | 135,831 |
| Lincoln | 13,389 | 64.50% | 7,270 | 35.02% | 100 | 0.48% | 6,119 | 29.48% | 20,759 |
| Linn | 21,857 | 46.60% | 24,592 | 52.44% | 450 | 0.96% | -2,735 | -5.83% | 46,899 |
| Malheur | 2,946 | 42.13% | 4,010 | 57.34% | 37 | 0.53% | -1,064 | -15.22% | 6,993 |
| Marion | 54,709 | 54.34% | 45,270 | 44.97% | 697 | 0.69% | 9,439 | 9.38% | 100,676 |
| Morrow | 1,264 | 40.49% | 1,843 | 59.03% | 15 | 0.48% | -579 | -18.55% | 3,122 |
| Multnomah | 240,296 | 80.26% | 57,487 | 19.20% | 1,617 | 0.54% | 182,809 | 61.06% | 299,400 |
| Polk | 17,890 | 54.83% | 14,500 | 44.44% | 240 | 0.74% | 3,390 | 10.39% | 32,630 |
| Sherman | 252 | 35.49% | 455 | 64.08% | 3 | 0.42% | -203 | -28.59% | 710 |
| Tillamook | 6,232 | 58.31% | 4,360 | 40.79% | 96 | 0.90% | 1,872 | 17.51% | 10,688 |
| Umatilla | 7,838 | 40.13% | 11,596 | 59.37% | 98 | 0.50% | -3,758 | -19.24% | 19,532 |
| Union | 4,018 | 42.39% | 5,389 | 56.86% | 71 | 0.75% | -1,371 | -14.47% | 9,478 |
| Wallowa | 1,430 | 42.08% | 1,945 | 57.24% | 23 | 0.68% | -515 | -15.16% | 3,398 |
| Wasco | 4,619 | 53.66% | 3,939 | 45.76% | 50 | 0.58% | 680 | 7.90% | 8,608 |
| Washington | 132,645 | 66.45% | 65,576 | 32.85% | 1,398 | 0.70% | 67,069 | 33.60% | 199,619 |
| Wheeler | 207 | 36.57% | 355 | 62.72% | 4 | 0.71% | -148 | -26.15% | 566 |
| Yamhill | 20,458 | 50.74% | 19,597 | 48.61% | 263 | 0.65% | 861 | 2.14% | 40,318 |
| Totals | 916,455 | 60.74% | 582,609 | 38.61% | 9,826 | 0.65% | 333,846 | 22.13% | 1,508,890 |
By congressional district
editStephenson won five of six congressional districts, including one that elected a Republican.[7]
| District | Stephenson | Helt | Representative |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | 69% | 30% | Suzanne Bonamici |
| 2nd | 45% | 54% | Cliff Bentz |
| 3rd | 75% | 25% | Earl Blumenauer |
| 4th | 61% | 38% | Peter DeFazio (117th Congress) |
| Val Hoyle (118th Congress) | |||
| 5th | 55% | 44% | Kurt Schrader (117th Congress) |
| Lori Chavez-DeRemer (118th Congress) | |||
| 6th | 59% | 41% | Andrea Salinas |
See also
editReferences
edit- ↑ "OR Commissioner of Labor - 2022". Our Campaigns. Retrieved March 30, 2024.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Withycombe, Claire (April 21, 2022). "Election 2022: Meet the candidates for Oregon labor commissioner". The Statesman Journal. Retrieved March 30, 2024.
- ↑ Manning, Rob (May 9, 2022). "Race for Oregon labor commissioner attracts candidates with legal, government experience". Oregon Public Broadcasting. Retrieved March 30, 2024.
- ↑ "May 17, 2022, Primary Election Abstract of Votes" (PDF). Oregon Secretary of State. May 17, 2022. Retrieved March 30, 2024.
- ↑ "Stephenson wins race to lead Oregon's Bureau of Labor and Industries". Oregon Public Broadcasting. November 8, 2022. Retrieved March 30, 2024.
- 1 2 Fagan, Shemia (November 8, 2022). "November 8, 2022, General Election Abstract of Votes". Oregon Secretary of State. Retrieved February 8, 2026.
- ↑ Oregon 2022-11-08 results by district (@elium2). docs.google.com (Report).