Montgomery County Primary Results: Elrich Squeaks in by 80 Votes
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Votes

Montgomery County Primary Results: Elrich Squeaks in by 80 Votes

After adding in absentee and provisional ballots.

County Executive, Democrats

(269 of 269 Precincts Counted, as of July 8 unofficial results)

Marc Elrich, 37,529 29.02 percent

David Blair, 37,449, 28.95 percent

Rose Krasnow, 19,644, 15.19 percent

Roger Berliner, 16,712, 12.92 percent

George Leventhal, 13,316, 10.30 percent

Bill Frick, 4,687, 3.62 percent

Total . . . . . . . . . 129,337

According to numbers released by the Montgomery County Board of Elections July 8, the Democratic winner of the June 26 Primary Election is Marc Elrich. He will face Republican Robin Ficker in November. Ficker ran unopposed.

Elrich defeated David Blair by 80 votes after the counting of absentee and provisional ballots.

Democratic County Councilmember at large Nancy Floreen filed paperwork on July 2 to preserve her option to run as an independent for County Executive, according to Andrew Metcalf of Bethesda Magazine.

County Council At Large

Top four vote-getters of 33 Democrats — Hans Riemer, Will Jawando, Evan Glass, and Gabe Albornoz — on the primary ballot move on to General Election to face Republicans Robert Dyer, Chris P. Fiotes, Jr., Penny Musser, and Shelly Skolnick who ran unopposed in the primary.

Note that every county resident is represented by five members of the nine-member Montgomery County Council, the four at-large members and the councilmember for their local district, District One for almost all Potomac and Bethesda. The large number of candidates for County Council at Large followed passage of term limits for County Council and County Executive in the last election, limiting them to three consecutive terms. This forced Nancy Floreen, Marc Elrich, and George Leventhal, all long-time members At large, and Roger Berliner in District One, off the County Council. Hans Riemer was the only incumbent who could run for County Council At Large.

County Council At Large, Democrats

Hans Riemer*, 54,583, 12.19

Will Jawando*, 43,154, 9.64

Evan Glass*, 35,599, 7.95

Gabe Albornoz*, 33,049, 7.38

Marilyn Balcombe, 28,066, 6.27

Chris Wilhelm, 26,453, 5.91

Brandy H. M. Brooks, 26,214, 5.86

Ashwani Jain, 19,367, 4.33

Hoan Dang, 16,911, 3.78

Bill Conway, 14,815, 3.31

Jill Ortman Fouse, 14,704, 3.28

Danielle Meitiv, 14,807, 3.31

Charles Barkley, 10,468, 2.34

Loretta Jean Garcia, 10,280, 2.30

Shruti Bhatnagar, 9,389, 2.10

Cherri L. Branson, 9,262, 2.07

Mohammad Siddique, 9,060, 2.02

Melissa McKenna, 8,034, 1.79

Seth Grimes, 6,716, 1.50

Graciela Rivera-Oven, 6,682, 1.49

Rosemary O. Arkoian, 6,578, 1.47

Lorna Phillips Forde, 6,436, 1.44

Michele Riley, 6,216, 1.39

Steve Solomon, 5,666, 1.27

Neil H. Greenberger, 5,607, 1.25

Paul S. Geller, 3,854, 0.86

Richard Gottfried, 3,035, 0.68

David V. Lipscomb, 2,464, 0.55

Jarrett Smith, 2,390 0.53

Darwin Romero, 2,300 0.51

Tom R. Falcinelli, Jr., 2,207, 0.49

Craig Carozza-Caviness, 1,589, 0.35

Ron Colbert, 1,675, 0.37

Total, 447,630

County Council - District 1

(With 72 of 72 Precincts Counted as of July 8 unofficial results)

Democrat Andrew Friedson will face Republican Richard Banach, who ran unopposed in the primary.

Councilmanic District 1, Democratic

Andrew Friedson* 9,321 28.16

Ana Sol Gutierrez 7,090 21.42

Regina "Reggie" Oldak 5,613 17.59

Meredith Wellington 5,797 17.51

Pete Fosselman 3,384 10.22

Bill Cook 828 2.50

Jim McGee 781 2.36

Dalbin Osorio 194 0.59

Total . . . . . . . . . 33,106

Board of Education, Nonpartisan

Montgomery County voters elected four nonpartisan members to the Board of Education in November. The top two vote-getters in the June 26 primary for the at-large and District 3 seats will move on to the general election. Districts 1 and 5 only have two candidates who filed, and the candidates will advance to the general election. The board consists of seven county residents elected by voters for a four-year term and a student elected by secondary school students for a one-year term. Every voter in the county can vote for all Board members in all districts and At Large. However district Board members must live in the district they will represent.

Board of Education At Large, nonpartisan

Top two will appear on the November ballot

(With 269 of 269 Precincts Counted as of July 8 unofficial results)

Julie Reiley*, 39,117, 32.03 percent

Karla Silvestre*, 34,082, 27.90 percent

John A. Robertson, 14,145, 11.58 percent

Marwa Omar Ibrahim, 11820, 9.68 percent

Stephen Sugg, 7,940, 6.50 percent

Brandon Orman Rippeon, 6,490, 5.31 percent

Ryan Arbuckle, 4,659, 3.81 percent

Timur Edib, 3,886, 3.18 percent

Total . . . . . . . . . 122,139

Board of Education - District 3, nonpartisan

Top two will appear on the November ballot

(With 269 of 269 Precincts Counted as of July 8 unofficial results)

Patricia O'Neill*, 73,218, 60.01 percent


Lynn Amano*, 28,926, 23.71 percent

Laura Simon, 19,861, 16.28 percent

Total . . . . . . . . . 122,005

Governor and Lieutenant Governor

Democrat Ben Jealous and Susan Turnbull to face incumbent Republican Gov. Larry Hogan and Boyd K. Rutherford, who ran unopposed in the primary.

Ben Jealous and Susan Turnbull*, 224,549, 39.7 percent

Rushern L. Baker, III and Elizabeth Embry, 166,199, 29.4 percent

Jim Shea and Brandon M. Scott, 47,134, 8.3 percent

Krish O'Mara Vignarajah and Sharon Y. Blake, 46,231, 8.2 percent

Rich Madaleno and Luwanda Jenkins, 32,709, 5.8 percent

Valerie Ervin and Marisol Johnson, 18,099, 3.2 percent (withdrew)

Alec Ross and Julie C. Verratti, 13,266, 2.3 percent

Ralph Jaffe and Freda Jaffe, 9,051, 1.6 percent

James Hugh Jones, II and Charles S. Waters, 8,773, 1.5 percent

Representative in Congress

Potomac and Bethesda, along with most of Montgomery County, are split between Maryland Congressional District 6 and District 8. District 6 is an open seat as incumbent John Delaney (D) is vacating the seat to pursue candidacy for President of the United States. David Trone (D) will face Amie Hoeber (R) in November. Both are Potomac residents.

District 6, Republican Candidates

Amie Hoeber*, 19,168, 67.9 percent

Lisa Lloyd, 5,011, 17.8 percent

Kurt Elsasser, 2,467, 8.7 percent

Bradley St. Rohrs, 1,584, 5.6 percent

District 6, Democratic Candidates

David Trone*, 23,419, 40.3 percent

Aruna Miller, 17,755, 30.6 percent

Nadia Hashimi, 8,010, 10.4 percent

Roger Manno, 5,979, 10.3 percent

Andrew Duck, 2,835, 4.9 percent

Chris Graves, 933, 1.6 percent

George English, 815, 1.1 percent

Christophe Hearsey, 505, 0.9 percent

District 8 Republican Candidates

John Walsh*, 8,833, 45.2 percent

Bridgette L. Cooper, 6,091, 31.1 percent

Victor Williams, 4,637, 23.7 percent

District 8 Democratic Candidates

Jamie Raskin, 76,655, 90.5 percent

Summer Spring, 4,922, 5.8 percent

Utam Paul, 3,120, 3.7 percent

General Assembly

Upcounty and upper Potomac are in General Assembly District 15. Bethesda and lower Potomac are in General Assembly District 16. Each district has one State Senator and three members of the House of Delegates.

State Senator, District 15

Republican Candidates

David Wilson, unopposed in primary, will face Brian J. Feldman (D-15), the incumbent State Senator in November.

Democratic Candidates

Brian J. Feldman*, incumbent, 12,007, 86.1 percent

Hongjun Xin, 1,938 13.9 percent

State Senator, District 16

Marcus Alzona (R) ran unopposed in the Republican primary, and will face Susan C. Lee (D) the incumbent State Senator, in November.

House of Delegates District 15, Republican Candidates

Laurie Halverson, Harvey Jacobs and Marc A. King ran unopposed in the Republican primary. They will appear individually on the ballot with the top three Democrats, Kathleen Dumais, Lily Qi and David Fraser-Hidalgo.

House of Delegates, District 15, Democratic Candidates

Kathleen Dumais*, incumbent, 8,207, 22.37 percent

Lily Qi*, 6,568, 17.9 percent

David Fraser-Hidalgo*, incumbent, 6,206, 16.91 percent

Amy Frieder, 5,289, 14.41 percent

Kevin Mack, 4,257, 11.6 percent

Anis Ahmed, 2,097, 5.71 percent

Hamza Sarwar Khan, 1,262, 3.44 percent

Tony Puca, 776 2.11 percent

House of Delegates District 16 Republican Candidates

Bill Day was the only Republican on the ballot. He will appear on the November ballot with the top three Democrats, Marc Korman, Ariana Kelly, and Sara Love.

District 16, Democratic Candidates

Marc Korman*, incumbent, 13,593, 24.34 percent

Ariana Kelly*, incumbent, 12,189, 21.82 percent

Sara Love*, 11,294, 20.22 percent

Samir Paul, 11,285, 20.21 percent

Jordan Cooper, 3,613, 6.47 percent

Nuchhi Currier, 2,130, 3.81 percent

Joseph Aloysius Hennessey 1,184, 2.11 percent