Early returns show Santa Clara County Supervisors race tight after polls close

Early returns show Santa Clara County Supervisors race tight after polls close

Races for two Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors seats were tight after polls closed on Tuesday night, while an unopposed incumbent appeared likely to lock up a third open seat.

Early returns showed Madison Nguyen, a former San Jose vice mayor, and Betty Duong, chief of staff for outgoing Supervisor Cindy Chavez, were locked in a tight race to lead all candidates for District 2, which includes downtown and East San Jose. Nguyen had 32% of the vote and Duong had 29%. Corina Herrera-Loera, a local school board member, was in third with 24%

In District 5, encompassing the northern part of the county and a swath of the West Valley, early returns placed Mountain View City Councilmember Margaret Abe-Koga and California State Board of Equalization member Sally Lieber at the top of the race with 41% and 25%, respectively. Retired neurologist Peter Fung had 20%.

District 3 Supervisor Otto Lee currently holds the remaining uncontested seat, likely cementing a second term representing Sunnyvale, Milpitas and parts of North San Jose.

The two competitive races are to replace soon-to-be-termed-out supervisors Chavez in District 2, and Joe Simitian, who is running for U.S. Congress, in District 5. The top two vote-getters in each contest will head to the general election in November unless a single candidate captures a majority of votes.

Supervisors will be expected to manage a more than $11 billion budget all while facing an estimated $250 million deficit in the coming fiscal year, triggered by the rising cost of labor and a slower turnover in home ownership that has curbed tax revenue streams.

In the coming years, the board will also grapple with finding a new funding source for affordable housing as Measure A, a $950 million affordable housing bond passed by voters in 2016, is nearly exhausted.

Check back for updates.