2018 Northern Mariana Islands general election
2018 Northern Mariana Islands general election
Gubernatorial election
Results by voting district: Ralph Torres: 55–60% 60–65% 65–70% 70–75%
Delegate election
Results by voting district: Gregorio Sablan: 60–65% 65–70% Angel Demapan: 50–55%
Senate election
6 of the 9 seats in the Senate 5 seats needed for a majority
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
House election
All 20 seats in the House of Representatives 11 seats needed for a majority
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Mayoral elections
4 Mayors
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
The 2018 Northern Mariana Islands general election were held on Tuesday, 13 November 2018. Originally scheduled to take place on Tuesday, 6 November 2018, to correspond with the 2018 United States midterm elections , the elections were delayed by one week due to the impact and aftermath of Typhoon Yutu .[ 1] Early voting was held from Tuesday, 6 November, until Monday, 12 November 2018.[ 2] An estimated 18,975 voters were eligible to vote in the 2018 election.[ 2]
Voters in the Northern Mariana Islands voted for the governor of the Northern Mariana Islands , the non-voting delegate to the United States House of Representatives , attorney general , 6 seats in the Northern Mariana Islands Senate , all twenty seats in the Northern Mariana Islands House of Representatives , 4 mayors, seats for the municipal council, seats for the board of education, and 2 judges.
Ninety-seven candidates competed for 45 elected positions across the Northern Mariana Islands .[ 3] High-profile races included the 2018 gubernatorial election between incumbent governor Ralph Torres , a Republican, and former governor Juan Babauta , as well as the race for non-voting delegate to the United States House of Representatives between incumbent Gregorio Sablan and challenger Angel Demapan .[ 3] [ 4] [ 5]
Background
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(April 2024 )
Gubernatorial election
Ralph Deleon Guerrero Torres , the incumbent republican governor ran for another term alongside running mate Arnold Indalecio Palacios and was challenged by former governor and independent Juan Nekai Babauta alongside running mate Rita Aldan Sablan. The gubernatorial contest was held on Tuesday, 13 November 2018, having been delayed one week due to recovery efforts from Typhoon Yutu . Early voting began on November 6.[ 1] Incumbent Ralph Torres won re-election to his first full term.[ 5]
Candidates
Independents
Republican Party
Results
Delegate to the US House of Representatives
Incumbent Delegate Gregorio Sablan , an independent who caucuses with the Democratic Party , ran against Angel Aldan Demapan for re-election. Sablan, first elected in 2008 , had held the seat since its creation in 2009. Delegate Gregorio Sablan was re-elected.[ 5] The Northern Mariana Islands ' non-voting delegate to the U.S. House of Representatives was elected for a two-year term.
Northern Mariana Islands Commonwealth Legislature
Results summary
Senate
The Northern Mariana Islands Senate is the upper house of the Northern Mariana Islands Commonwealth Legislature , consisting of nine senators representing three senatorial districts (Saipan & the Northern Islands , Tinian & Aguijan , and Rota ), each a Multi-member district with three senators. Each district had two seats open for the 2018 elections.
House of Representatives
The Northern Mariana Islands House of Representatives is the lower house of the Northern Mariana Islands Commonwealth Legislature . The house has seven districts and five of the seven are Multi-member district . All twenty seats were up for 2018 election.
Mayors
All four mayoral posts were up for election across the Commonwealth.
Attorney General
Municipal Council
Board of Education
Judges
Judge[ 5]
For retention
Against retention
Total
Votes
%
Votes
%
Alexander C. Castro
11,644
86.69%
1,788
13.31%
13,432
Teresa K. Tenorio
11,188
84.55%
2,044
15.45%
13,232
Notes
^ David Apatang switched his affiliation from Independent to Republican before the elections
References
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