Guamanian gubernatorial election, 2018

Guamanian gubernatorial election, 2018

Tuesday, November 6, 2018

 
Nominee Ray Tenorio Lourdes Leon Guerrero
Party Republican Democratic
Running mate Tony Ada Josh Tenorio

Incumbent Governor

Eddie Baza Calvo
Republican


This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
Guam

The 2018 Guam gubernatorial election will take place on Tuesday, November 6, 2018, to elect the next Governor of Guam.[1] Incumbent Republican Governor Eddie Baza Calvo is barred from re-election, after his win in 2014, since Guam does not allow governors more than two consecutive terms. The Governor and Lieutenant Governor of Guam are elected on the same ticket. Five candidates officially declared their bids. After the August 25 primaries, the Republican party nominated Lieutenant Governor Ray Tenorio, while the Democratic party nominated former territorial senator Lourdes Leon Guerrero.

A victory by Leon Guerrero would see Guam elect its first female governor.

Republican primary

Candidates

Republican Lieutenant governor Ray Tenorio shakes hands with his running mate, former senator Tony Ada, as they officially submit their candidacy papers to the Guam Election Commission.
    • Lt. Governor Tenorio declared his bid for governor and has chosen former Senator Vicente Anthony "Tony" Ada as his running mate in the upcoming gubernatorial election.[2] The lieutenant governor and former senator officially proclaimed their gubernatorial bid in January, days after election posters of the two were spotted at the Republican Party of Guam headquarters in Maite.
    • Tenorio, along with Ada, were former senators of the Guam Legislature with Tenorio serving in the 27th-30th legislature and Ada in the 29th-33rd legislature. Ada won his seat in 29th legislature in a special election after the resignation of former Democratic senator Matt Rector.

Results

The Tenorio/Ada ticket was unopposed in the Republican primaries.

Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Ray Tenorio and Tony Ada 3,148 97.98
Republican Write-ins 65 2.02
Total votes 3,213 100.0

Democratic primary

The following candidates have officially declared their bids to run in 2018 Gubernatorial Elections.

Candidates

  • Sen. Frank B. Aguon, 24th-33rd, currently serving in the 34th Guam Legislature
    • He announced his bid to be the Governor of Guam in February, just within weeks of winning his ninth legislative term and has chosen the former US attorney for Guam Alicia Limtiaco as his running mate in the primary and general election.[3]
    • Aguon ran for Lt. Governor in 2006 under the Underwood-Aguon ticket and lost. He later ran again as Lt. Governor in 2010 with Governor Carl T.C. Gutierrez in which he also lost.
Democratic senator Frank B. Aguon gives his remarks after officially filing his candidacy along with his running mate, Alicia Limtiaco, to be the next Governor of Guam.
  • Former Senator Lourdes Leon Guerrero, 23rd-24th, 26th-28th Guam Legislature
    • She announced her bid to run for governor in February while attending a wedding at Plaza de España in Hagatña. In a video, she declared her candidacy and chose Joshua "Josh" Tenorio, the new vice president of Guam Autospot, to be her running mate in the 2018 primary and general election.[4]
    • Leon Guerrero once ran for Lt. Governor under the Ada/Leon Guerrero ticket in the 1998 Democratic primary and lost against the incumbent ticket of Governor Carl T.C. Gutierrez and Lt. Governor Madeleine Z. Bordallo.
    • Leon Guerrero currently serves as the chair of the board of directors at the Bank of Guam.[5]Josh Tenorio served as the deputy chief of staff under the administration of former governor Carl T.C. Gutierrez, who is running once again for Governor of Guam.
Lourdes Leon Guerrero, a former Democratic senator and current Bank of Guam CEO, holds hand with Guam Autospot Vice President Josh Tenorio as they officially open their campaign headquarter in Hagåtña
  • Former Governor Carl T.C. Gutierrez, serving from 1995 to 2003
    • Governor Gutierrez declared his bid for governor in his home in Agaña Heights.[6] He has selected former Guam Police Department chief Fred Bordallo as his running mate.[7] Bordallo once ran for a seat in the Guam Legislature in 2016 but lost.
    • He ran again as governor in 2006 under the Gutierrez/Cruz ticket but lost in the primaries against former Delegate Robert A. Underwood and Senator Frank B. Aguon.
    • He ran once again as Governor of Guam in 2010, with Frank B. Aguon as his running mate. They were narrowly defeated by the Republican Calvo-Tenorio ticket by 487 votes.
    • In 2014, former Governor Gutierrez and his running mate Gary Gumataotao ran against the re-election bid of Republican Governor Eddie Baza Calvo and Lt. Governor Ray Tenorio. They later lost the election and gave their support to the re-elected leaders.
  • Sen. Dennis G. Rodriguez Jr., 31st-33rd, currently serving in the 34th Guam Legislature
    • In January, Senator Rodriguez officially announced his bid for the Governor of Guam, selecting former educator and military veteran David Cruz Jr. as his running mate.[8][9]
    • Rodriguez's running mate, David Cruz Jr., faced challenges in his bid for Lt. Governor due to an employment contract with the Guam Department of Education. Laws on Guam prohibit government employees from running for public office. Cruz was fired by the Department of Education by late June 2018, after serving for years as a Air Force Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps instructor at the John F. Kennedy High School.

Results

Democratic primary results[10]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Lou Leon Guerrero and Josh Tenorio 8,218 32.14
Democratic Frank B. Aguon Jr. and Alicia Limtiaco 7,958 31.12
Democratic Carl T.C. Gutierrez and Fred Bordallo 5,609 21.94
Democratic Dennis Rodriguez Jr. and David Cruz Jr. 3,761 14.71
Democratic Write-ins 22 0.09
Total votes 25,568 100.0

General election

The general elections will be held on Tuesday, November 6, 2018.

Results

Guamanian gubernatorial election, 2018
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Ray Tenorio/Tony Ada
Democratic Lou Leon Guerrero/Josh Tenorio
Total votes

References

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