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2022 Oregon Commissioner of Labor election

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2022 Oregon Commissioner of Labor and Industries election

← 2018
November 8, 2022
2026 →
 
Nominee Christina Stephenson Cheri Helt
Popular vote 916,455 582,609
Percentage 60.74% 38.61%

Stephenson:      50–55%      55–60%      60–65%      65–70%      70–75%      80–85%
Helt:      50–55%      55–60%      60–65%

Commissioner of Labor and Industries before election

Val Hoyle

Elected Commissioner of Labor and Industries

Christina Stephenson

The 2022 Oregon Commissioner of Labor and Industries election was held on November 8, 2022, in order to elect the Oregon Commissioner of Labor and Industries. The election was held on a nonpartisan basis. Nevertheless, Christina Stephenson was favored by the Democrats while Cheri Helt was favored by the Republicans.

Incumbent Commissioner Val Hoyle did not seek reelection in order to run for the U.S. House of Representatives. Christina Stephenson was decisively elected to succeed her in the November runoff, defeating former state representative Cheri Helt.

Primary election

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The primary election was held on May 17, 2022. Since no candidate won a majority of the vote, the top two placing candidates advanced to a runoff in November.

Candidates

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Prior to the election, Chris Henry withdrew from the race and endorsed Christina Stephenson. However, his name remained on the ballot.[2]

While the position of Labor Commissioner is nonpartisan, Barker, Helt, and Neuman have run for office as Republicans, while Kulla and Stephenson are Democrats. Henry is a member of the Oregon Progressive Party.[3]

Results

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Primary results by county:
Christina Stephenson
  •   65–70%
      55–60%
      50–55%
      45–50%
      40–45%
      35–40%
      30–35%
      25–30%
Cheri Helt
  •   35–40%
      30–35%
      25–30%
Casey Kulla
  •   35–40%
Nonpartisan election primary results[4]
Candidate Votes %
Christina Stephenson 421,619 47.17%
Cheri Helt 171,168 19.15%
Casey Kulla 126,036 14.10%
Brent Barker 101,576 11.36%
Robert Neuman 32,331 3.62%
Chris Henry 22,936 2.57%
Aaron Baca 14,217 1.59%
Write-in 3,922 0.44%
Total votes 893,805 100.00%

Runoff

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Campaign

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Although the position is officially nonpartisan, Stephenson was endorsed by Democratic Party officials, including gubernatorial nominee Tina Kotek and incumbent commissioner Val Hoyle. Helt was endorsed by Republican gubernatorial nominee Christine Drazan and independent gubernatorial candidate Betsy Johnson.[5]

Results

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Runoff results[6]
Candidate Votes %
Christina Stephenson 916,455 60.74%
Cheri Helt 582,609 38.61%
Write-in 9,826 0.65%
Total votes 1,508,890 100.00%

By county

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County[6] Christina Stephenson
Democratic
Cheri Helt
Republican
Write-in
Various
Margin Total
# % # % # % # %
Baker 2,911 44.31% 3,611 54.96% 48 0.73% -700 -10.65% 6,570
Benton 24,969 69.87% 10,526 29.45% 243 0.68% 14,443 40.41% 35,738
Clackamas 92,011 56.97% 68,692 42.53% 807 0.50% 23,319 14.44% 161,510
Clatsop 9,077 61.00% 5,728 38.49% 76 0.51% 3,349 22.51% 14,881
Columbia 11,021 50.99% 10,421 48.21% 173 0.80% 600 2.78% 21,615
Coos 11,580 49.14% 11,841 50.24% 146 0.62% -261 -1.11% 23,567
Crook 3,902 35.62% 6,935 63.32% 116 1.06% -3,033 -27.69% 10,953
Curry 4,888 50.90% 4,647 48.39% 69 0.72% 241 2.51% 9,604
Deschutes 44,867 49.16% 46,050 50.45% 356 0.39% -1,183 -1.30% 91,273
Douglas 17,709 45.23% 21,047 53.75% 400 1.02% -3,338 -8.52% 39,156
Gilliam 311 44.05% 393 55.67% 2 0.28% -82 -11.61% 706
Grant 1,178 39.23% 1,786 59.47% 39 1.30% -608 -20.25% 3,003
Harney 1,013 37.87% 1,637 61.20% 25 0.93% -624 -23.33% 2,675
Hood River 5,613 68.11% 2,580 31.31% 48 0.58% 3,033 36.80% 8,241
Jackson 40,637 53.45% 34,954 45.97% 441 0.58% 5,683 7.47% 76,032
Jefferson 3,410 43.00% 4,458 56.22% 62 0.78% -1,048 -13.22% 7,930
Josephine 13,570 42.53% 18,103 56.74% 233 0.73% -4,533 -14.21% 31,906
Klamath 8,515 39.86% 12,690 59.41% 156 0.73% -4,175 -19.54% 21,361
Lake 1,135 38.58% 1,777 60.40% 30 1.02% -642 -21.82% 2,942
Lane 88,088 64.85% 46,549 34.27% 1,194 0.88% 41,539 30.58% 135,831
Lincoln 13,389 64.50% 7,270 35.02% 100 0.48% 6,119 29.48% 20,759
Linn 21,857 46.60% 24,592 52.44% 450 0.96% -2,735 -5.83% 46,899
Malheur 2,946 42.13% 4,010 57.34% 37 0.53% -1,064 -15.22% 6,993
Marion 54,709 54.34% 45,270 44.97% 697 0.69% 9,439 9.38% 100,676
Morrow 1,264 40.49% 1,843 59.03% 15 0.48% -579 -18.55% 3,122
Multnomah 240,296 80.26% 57,487 19.20% 1,617 0.54% 182,809 61.06% 299,400
Polk 17,890 54.83% 14,500 44.44% 240 0.74% 3,390 10.39% 32,630
Sherman 252 35.49% 455 64.08% 3 0.42% -203 -28.59% 710
Tillamook 6,232 58.31% 4,360 40.79% 96 0.90% 1,872 17.51% 10,688
Umatilla 7,838 40.13% 11,596 59.37% 98 0.50% -3,758 -19.24% 19,532
Union 4,018 42.39% 5,389 56.86% 71 0.75% -1,371 -14.47% 9,478
Wallowa 1,430 42.08% 1,945 57.24% 23 0.68% -515 -15.16% 3,398
Wasco 4,619 53.66% 3,939 45.76% 50 0.58% 680 7.90% 8,608
Washington 132,645 66.45% 65,576 32.85% 1,398 0.70% 67,069 33.60% 199,619
Wheeler 207 36.57% 355 62.72% 4 0.71% -148 -26.15% 566
Yamhill 20,458 50.74% 19,597 48.61% 263 0.65% 861 2.14% 40,318
Totals 916,455 60.74% 582,609 38.61% 9,826 0.65% 333,846 22.13% 1,508,890

By congressional district

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Stephenson won five of six congressional districts, including one that elected a Republican.[7]

District Stephenson Helt Representative
1st 69% 30% Suzanne Bonamici
2nd 45% 54% Cliff Bentz
3rd 75% 25% Earl Blumenauer
4th 61% 38% Peter DeFazio (117th Congress)
Val Hoyle (118th Congress)
5th 55% 44% Kurt Schrader (117th Congress)
Lori Chavez-DeRemer (118th Congress)
6th 59% 41% Andrea Salinas

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f Withycombe, Claire (April 21, 2022). "Election 2022: Meet the candidates for Oregon labor commissioner". The Statesman Journal. Retrieved March 30, 2024.
  2. ^ a b Manning, Rob (May 9, 2022). "Race for Oregon labor commissioner attracts candidates with legal, government experience". Oregon Public Broadcasting. Retrieved March 30, 2024.
  3. ^ "OR Commissioner of Labor - 2022". Our Campaigns. Retrieved March 30, 2024.
  4. ^ "May 17, 2022, Primary Election Abstract of Votes" (PDF). Oregon Secretary of State. May 17, 2022. Retrieved March 30, 2024.
  5. ^ "Stephenson wins race to lead Oregon's Bureau of Labor and Industries". Oregon Public Broadcasting. November 8, 2022. Retrieved March 30, 2024.
  6. ^ a b Fagan, Shemia (November 8, 2022). "November 8, 2022, General Election Abstract of Votes". Oregon Secretary of State. Retrieved February 8, 2026.
  7. ^ Oregon 2022-11-08 results by district (@elium2). docs.google.com (Report).