Offices and Incumbents Up For Election

Elected offices and incumbents whose terms of office are ending and may appear on the ballot in the June 2, 2026, Statewide Direct Primary Election. 

  • Appointed incumbents are indicated with an asterisk "*" following the name.
  • Incumbents who are termed out are indicated with a dagger "" following the name.
  • There is no incumbent for a vacancy or if the district boundaries have changed due to Redistricting & Reapportionment or as a result of redistricting congressional districts after the passage of Proposition 50 in the November 4, 2025, Statewide Special Election.

Incumbents and candidates are required to live in their district and, due to boundary line changes, may no longer reside in those districts. Candidates or incumbents who have questions regarding which districts they reside in may Email Yolo County Elections or call 530-666-8133. View a list of Shared Districts in Yolo County.

Review the Election Calendar for the dates of the nomination period to obtain and file nomination documents by appointment with the Elections Services Appointment Scheduler.

Refer to Primary Elections in California for more information on how primaries are conducted in California.

Top Two Voter-Nominated Offices

Under the Top Two Candidates Open Primary Act, all candidates running for Voter-Nominated Offices regardless of their party preference, will appear on the single combined ballot and voters can vote for any candidate from any political party.

The Top Two Candidates Open Primary Act requires that only the two candidates for Voter-Nominated Offices who receive the highest and second-highest number of votes cast at the primary election shall appear on the ballot as candidates at the ensuing general election.

Nonpartisan Offices

Nonpartisan Offices include the state Superintendent of Public Instruction as well as Judicial Offices, County Offices, Municipal Offices, School District Offices and Special District Offices. A candidate's political party preference is not listed on the ballot and voters can vote for any candidate. 

In majority vote contests (at least 50% +1), candidates that receive a majority of the votes in the primary win outright. Otherwise, the top two candidates who receive the most votes in the primary move on to the general election.