Local non-partisan contests are not treated the same way as partisan 'voter-nominated' offices. If Kreep got more than 50%, he's considered elected. I am not sure what happens when a candidate in one of these non-partisan contests gets less than 50%. Does anybody know if there is a run-off or not?
From Ca SoS website:
Quote:
Top Two Candidates Open Primary Act and Voter-Nominated Offices
On June 8, 2010, California voters approved Proposition 14, which created the Top Two Candidates Open Primary Act.
Except for the office of U.S. President and county central committee offices, offices that used to be known as "partisan offices" (e.g., state constitutional offices, U.S. Congress, and state legislative offices) are now known as "voter-nominated" offices.
Under the Top Two Candidates Open Primary Act, all candidates running in a primary election, regardless of their party preference, will appear on a single Primary Election ballot and voters can vote for any candidate. The top two overall vote-getters – not the top vote-getter from each qualified party and anyone using the independent nomination process – will move on to the General Election.
Candidates for voter-nominated office must indicate their party preference or lack of party preference on the primary and general election ballots. Political parties can no longer formally nominate candidates for voter-nominated offices, so a candidate who finishes in the top two at the primary election and advances to the general election is not the official nominee of any party for the office.
http://www.sos.ca.gov/elections/npp.htmAlso, the rules vary from state to state and are constantly changing. It is very hard for the average voter to keep up.
_________________
Mark TwainQuote:
Research shows that 61.91944 per cent of all statistics are made up.
For other Mark Twain quotes and attributions, true and false:
http://www.twainquotes.com/Lies.html No evidence of "A lie will travel...."