
SJ mayor, gubernatorial candidate Matt Mahan arrives to watch party via Caltrain
San Jose Mayor Matt Mahan has arrived via Caltrain for his downtown watch party ahead of polls closing for tonight's gubernatorial primary.

SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) -- California election results are rolling in as voters wait for outcomes in the California governor's race and several key Bay Area races.
A lot is at stake, and we are breaking everything down.

Ballots are being counted across California, and election results are rolling in.
From the California governor's race to key Bay Area congressional contests, ABC7 has live election results for the key races that matter to you.

San Jose Mayor Matt Mahan has arrived via Caltrain for his downtown watch party ahead of polls closing for tonight's gubernatorial primary.

John Sileo, a 65-year-old business owner, said he voted for candidates who would put a check on Trump and also California's liberal government.
The self-described moderate Republican said he never liked Trump and voted for Democrat Joe Kerr for Congress rather than the two Republican contenders.
"Trump has a monopoly now and you've got to at least turn the House," he said outside a vote center in Orange.
Sileo said he refused to vote for Steve Hilton for California's governor because he is backed by Trump, and wouldn't vote for Xavier Becerra because he sees him as a continuation of Democrats' policies in the state.
"I voted for Tom Steyer because at least he's a disruptor," he said. "He was the best of poor choices."

One of California Democrats' top targets when they redrew the state's congressional map was Republican Rep. Kevin Kiley. They split his Northern California district in two, tethering each half to more Democratic areas near Sacramento to create two Democratic-leaning seats.
Kiley opted to run in the 6th District, which is crowded with local Democratic candidates. He became an outspoken critic of political gerrymandering and then left the Republican Party to run as an independent. That might be his best shot of survival with the new California map.

Jude Mayer says she wasn't thrilled about voting for a billionaire for governor. But she believes Democrat Tom Steyer "is talking about the environment in the way that I want to hear about it."
The 24-year-old says climate change is an imminent threat to her home state in particular.
"I don't want to be under water in 10 years," Mayer said Tuesday after voting in Los Angeles.