Two women speaking into microphones on stage. One holds notes and is wearing a white sweater; the other is in a dark jacket. A projection with illustrations and text is seen in the background.
From left to right, District 1 supervisorial candidates Connie Chan and Marjan Philhour at a Thursday night Mission Local debate. Photo by Kelly Waldron, Oct. 17, 2024.

The San Francisco Department of Elections moments ago released the results of an additional 35,979 ballots. That brings the grand total of processed ballots as of Saturday to 325,114 — 62.3 percent of the electorate.  

There are, perhaps, 81,000 ballots remaining. The ceiling on turnout appears to be about 77.8 percent, just a shade higher than the 77 percent historical average in presidential contests going back to 1916.

On to the contested Board of Supervisors races.

Two women standing outdoors, both smiling. The woman on the left holds a clipboard and wears a white blouse. The woman on the right wears a colorful dress with a sunburst design.
District 1 Supervisor Connie Chan and challenger Marjan Philhour are now untied. Photos by Junyao Yang on Mar. 16 and June 1, 2024.

Thursday’s earlier ballot drop resulted in the mathematical oddity of District 1 incumbent supervisor Connie Chan and challenger Marjan Philhour both having exactly 11,001 votes

The race continues to trend Chan’s way. After being up by 262 votes yesterday, today’s vote drop saw her lead rise to 558. Four years ago, Chan bested Philhour by fewer than 200 votes. Two years ago, the affluent Seacliff neighborhood was grafted into District 1 during the contentious redistricting process. For Chan to — possibly — win in 2024 by a greater margin than in 2020 was not an expected outcome. 

Thousands of votes remain to be counted and this race is still a tight, 51-49 tilt.  

In case you were wondering, per Elections Director John Arntz, the official method of settling a tied vote in a Board of Supervisors race is a “drawing of lots” — that is, drawing long or short straws. 

Bilal Mahmood, Dean Preston and Scotty Jacobs are seated behind a panel table with name placards, microphones, and water bottles in front of them. The person in the middle is clasping their hands while listening.
Candidates Bilal Mahmood, Supervisor Dean Preston, and Scotty Jacobs participate in a District 5 forum on Sept. 9, 2024. Photo by Eleni Balakrishnan

In District 5, incumbent Dean Preston has not been able to make up ground against top challenger Bilal Mahmood. While Preston has more first-place votes than Mahmood — 9,751 to 9,581 — the polarizing incumbent is being swamped in the transfers. After ranked-choice voting permutations, Mahmood leads by 1,307 votes. That’s 20 votes more than Friday. 

While a hefty number of votes are outstanding, every subsequent tranche of votes has not helped Preston mitigate his deficit. This pattern could reverse in the coming days, but there’s no logical reason to expect it should. Preston is running out of runway. A great deal of money has been expended to target him and he is the only incumbent trailing at this point.

Three people stand behind a table with water bottles and cups. The wall behind them is white and tiled, and they appear to be at an indoor event or meeting.
Stephen Martin-Pinto (left), Myrna Melgar (middle) and Matthew Boschetto (right) are running in the District 7 supervisor election.

In District 7, Supervisor Myrna Melgar added a shade under 100 votes to her lead over political newcomer Matt Boschetto and is now ahead by nearly 1,600. Like Preston, challenger Boschetto is running out of electorate with which to mitigate his deficit. He is benefiting from transfer votes from Republican-turned-independent candidate Stephen Martin-Pinto, but cannot yet handle Melgar’s sizable lead in first-place votes.

Patrick Hoge, San Francisco Examiner reporter and moderator of the forum, Jose Morales, Roger Marenco, Michael Lai, Chyanne Chen, Ernest "E.J." Jones, and Adlah Chisti holding her daughter. District 11 forum
From left to right: Patrick Hoge, San Francisco Examiner reporter and moderator of the forum, Jose Morales, Roger Marenco, Michael Lai, Chyanne Chen, Ernest “E.J.” Jones, and Adlah Chisti holding her daughter. Photo by Xueer Lu. June 25, 2024.

In District 11, Chyanne Chen has caught and passed Michael Lai. She is now 99 votes up on Lai after having trailed by 136 yesterday. In every subsequent tranche of votes, Chen has cut into Lai’s lead before leapfrogging him today.  

This contest remains tighter than tight. 

In Districts 3 and 9 Danny Sauter and Jackie Fielder continue to hold nigh-insurmountable leads. 

Three people in conversation, with one person gesturing while talking. Two have their backs to the camera, and one faces forward. They are in an indoor setting with a wooden backdrop.
Matt Alexander. Photo by Yujie Zhou, Sep. 20, 2024.

In the Board of Education race, top vote-getters Jaime Huling, Parag Gupta and Supriya Ray will be taking office in January. In the battle for the fourth and final slot, newcomer John Jersin is only 1,162 votes ahead of incumbent board president Matt Alexander (100,289 to 99,127). Alexander gained 988 votes in today’s count after gaining 1,100 in yesterday’s. He has gained just shy of 4,000 votes on Jersin since the initial vote drop on Tuesday.

We have a race.  

There were 15 ballot measures put before San Francisco voters in this election. There are no significant changes. The lavishly funded Prop. D continues to spiral into the city’s political septic tank, and is now being rejected by 56 percent of the electorate. Its scantly funded countermeasure, Prop. E, looks to be pulling into a comfortable position; it now has 52 percent of the vote and is up by 11,390 votes

While Aaron Peskin finished third in the mayor’s race, his ballot measures — Props. C, E and G — are all on track to win. The three of them fund-raised less than $100,000.

Prop. F, a police pension measure, continues to be submerged with 54.2 percent of voters inveighing against it. Prop. H, a fire pension measure, is clinging to a 51.7 percent approval rate (at least endorsee Rep. Nancy Pelosi won something this cycle). 

Prop. K, the polarizing measure to close portions of the Great Highway, continues to sit strong. A shade over 54 percent of voters are now in favor of shutting down the roadway — a bulge of 28,402 votes. The measure’s backers today claimed victory.

Mayor London Breed conceded her race on Thursday and Daniel Lurie on Friday claimed victory. After Saturday’s ballot drop and ranked-choice voting permutations, Lurie leads by just over 30,000 votes (55.7 percent to 44.3 percent). 

The next updates will come on Sunday at 4 p.m. and Monday at 4 p.m. 

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Joe is a columnist and the managing editor of Mission Local. He was born in San Francisco, raised in the Bay Area, and attended U.C. Berkeley. He never left.

“Your humble narrator” was a writer and columnist for SF Weekly from 2007 to 2015, and a senior editor at San Francisco Magazine from 2015 to 2017. You may also have read his work in the Guardian (U.S. and U.K.); San Francisco Public Press; San Francisco Chronicle; San Francisco Examiner; Dallas Morning News; and elsewhere.

He resides in the Excelsior with his wife and three (!) kids, 4.3 miles from his birthplace and 5,474 from hers.

The Northern California branch of the Society of Professional Journalists named Eskenazi the 2019 Journalist of the Year.

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4 Comments

  1. If pathological liar, carpet bagger and mirage philanthropist Bilal Mahmood “wins” because he joined forces with spoiler candidates like snotty Scotty and Los Altos Looijen, he will have one heckuva time trying to supervise D5ers. Eyes wide open. Tricking ones way into public office ain’t gonna fly with constituents.

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    1. Try governing now Bilal. In Trump2 times. As a billionaire and YIMBY backed candidate. Best of luck. We see you. You are a fake and unfit for elected office.

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  2. Go Chan and Chen! I’m not a fan of the liar beating out Preston but I’ll be happy if District 1 and District 11 both manage to beat back candidates sponsored by TogetherSF.

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  3. District representation is still important even as they jerrymander the borders inexplicably. Recall Engardio and sue to defeat flawed, unsafe, illegal and dishonest Prop K. Developers be damned, we live here now.

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