Upcoming Elections
Primary and General Elections
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General Election – November 3, 2026
What’s on your ballot is determined by where you live and are registered to vote. Examples of your ballot and other important voting information can be viewed 40 days before every election. They will also be available here!
Offices up for Election in November 2026:
For information on how to be a Candidate for a local Inyo County office, click here. Candidate filing period begins July 13, 2026. A list of candidates that have filed for any local office will be available on this page starting on 7/13/26, and will be updated daily.
| Office Name | Term |
| Nominated Candidates from the Primary Election | |
| Voter-Nominated Offices | |
| Governor | 4-year term |
| Lieutenant Governor | 4-year term |
| Secretary of State | 4-year term |
| Controller | 4-year term |
| Treasurer (State) | 4-year term |
| Attorney General | 4-year term |
| Insurance Commissioner | 4-year term |
| Member, State Board of Equalization 1st District | 4-year term |
| United States Representative, 5th District | 2-year term |
| Member of the State Senate, 4th District | 4-year term |
| Member of the State Assembly, 8th District | 2-year term |
| State Non-Partisan Office | |
| Superintendent of Public Instruction (State) | 4-year term |
| Local Nonpartisan Offices – Runoff contests | |
| Top two candidates from local countywide Primary Election where more than two candidates filed, but no candidate received more than 50% of the vote. | |
| Offices open for filing in General Election (There are multiple seats available for each entity, unless otherwise indicated) | |
| Municipal | |
| Bishop City Council Member (two seats) | 4-year term |
| Board of Education | |
| County Board of Education, Area 1 (one seat) | 4-year term |
| County Board of Education, Area 3 (one seat) | 4-year term |
| County Board of Education, Area 5 (one seat) | 4-year term |
| School Districts | |
| Big Pine Unified School District Board Member | |
| Bishop Unified School District Board Member | |
| Death Valley Unified School District Board Member | |
| Lone Pine Unified School District Board Member | |
| Owens Valley Unified School District Board Member | |
| Round Valley Joint Elementary School District | |
| Trona Joint Unified School District Board Member | |
| Kern Community College District, Trustee Area 2 | |
| Hospital Districts | |
| Northern Inyo Healthcare District Board Member | |
| Southern Inyo Healthcare District Board Member | |
| Community Services Districts | |
| Northern Inyo Healthcare District Board Member | |
| Southern Inyo Healthcare District Board Member | |
| Community Services Districts | |
| Big Pine Community Services District Board Member | |
| Darwin Community Services District Board Member | |
| Eastern Sierra Community Services District Board Member | |
| Indian Creek – Westridge Community Services District Board Member | |
| Independence Community Services District Board Member | |
| Keeler Community Services District Board Member | |
| Lone Pine Community Services District Board Member | |
| Mesa Community Services District Board Member | |
| Olancha Community Services District Board Member | |
| Sierra Highlands Community Service District Board Member | |
| Sierra North Community Service District Board Member | |
| Starlite Community Service District Board Member | |
| Fire Districts | |
| Big Pine Fire Protection District Board Member | |
| Independence Fire Protection District Board Member | |
| Lone Pine Fire Protection District Board Member | |
| Southern Inyo Fire Protection District Board Member | |
| Sanitary Districts | |
| East Independence Sanitary District Board Member | |
| State and Local Ballot Measures | |
| (information on Measures will be provided here, once available) | |
Learn more …
Learn more about Qualified Write-in Candidates:
You may write in a qualified write‐in candidate’s name on the ballot in a Primary Election contest. If a voter writes in a name of a non-qualified candidate, it will be treated like a “no-vote” for that selection. A list of qualified write‐in candidates will be provided here once available from the California Secretary of State’s office.
In the General Election, you may only write‐in a qualified candidate’s name for Party‐Nominated contests and Non-Partisan contests. Write-in candidates for Voter-Nominated offices can only run in the Primary Election. However, a write-in candidate in the Primary Election can move on to the General Election if the candidate is one of the top two vote-getters in the Primary Election.
Learn more about Non-Partisan contests:
A Non‐Partisan contest is an office in which no political party nominates a candidate. Superintendent of Public Instruction, Superior Court Judges, County Offices, Municipal Offices, Schools, and Special Districts are examples of non‐partisan offices.
Primary Election Non‐Partisan contests:
- Superintendent of Public Instruction
- Judge of the Superior Court
- Board of Supervisors
- Assessor
- Auditor
- Coroner
- County Clerk-Recorder
- County Treasurer-Tax Collector
- District Attorney
- Public Administrator
- Sheriff
- Superintendent of Schools
General Election only Non‐Partisan contests:
(These offices are not included in the Primary Election.)
- Member, School District Boards
- Member, County Board of Education
- Director, Special District Boards
- Member, City Council/City Treasurer
- Member, County Central Committees
For Non‐Partisan contests that are included in the Primary Election:
If a candidate receives simple majority of votes win outright in the Primary. If no candidate receives a majority of the vote, then the top‐two vote‐getters move on to the General Election for a run-off.
For Non‐Partisan contests that are only included in the General Election:
The Candidate that receives the highest number of votes wins outright in the General Election. There is no run-off election for these candidates.
Learn more about Top-Two Voter-Nominated contests:
Voter‐Nominated offices are contests in which the nominee is selected by the voter. In voter‐nominated contests, any voter can vote for any candidate, regardless of party. It also allows candidates to choose whether they want to disclose their party preference on the ballot.
Voter-nominated contests affected by Top-Two rule:
- United States Senator
- United States Representative in Congress
- Governor
- Lieutenant Governor
- Secretary of State
- Controller
- Insurance Commissioner
- State Treasurer
- Attorney General
- Member, State Board of Equalization
- Member of the State Senate
- Member of the State Assembly
On June 8, 2010, California voters passed Proposition 14, which created the “Top-Two Open Primary Act.” As such, all Voter-Nominated office candidates appear on all ballots. The top two vote-getters, regardless of their party affiliations, advance to the General Election. Consequently, it is possible for two candidates belonging to the same political party to win in a top-two primary and face off in the general election.
Top-Two does not affect the election of President and County Central Committees, which are Party-Nominated contests. President and County Central Committees only appear on ballots of voters who are registered as the Party of their affiliations during the Primary election. See section on Party-Nominated contests for more information.
Learn more about Crossover Voting for Party‐Nominated Contests:
Party-nominated offices are contests in which the nominee is selected by the political party.
Party‐Nominated Contests:
- U.S. President
- County Central Committees.
During a Presidential Primary Election, only registered voters in that political party can vote for that party’s candidate on the ballot. This is known as a Closed Presidential Primary.
The exception to that rule: When candidates for the President are on the Primary Election Ballot, some–but not all–political parties choose to allow No Party Preference (NPP) voters to participate in their primary without having to re-register. This is known as a “crossover” or a Modified-Closed Presidential Primary. If you are not registered with one of the certified political parties, the state election laws consider you to be a NPP voter and you will be given the option to crossover.
Certified political parties in California:
- American Independent Party (AI)
- Democratic Party (DEM)
- Green Party (GRN)
- Libertarian Party (LIB)
- Peace & Freedom Party (PF)
- Republican Party (REP)
If a qualified political party chooses to hold a Modified-Closed Presidential Primary, the party must notify the California Secretary of State no later than the 135th day before Election Day. Counties will then notify voters as to which parties allow crossovers as the presidential primary election draws near.
If you are a NPP voter, you have 3 choices for how to participate in the primary:
- Request a crossover. This is only allowed for the parties that authorize it.
- Re-register. Do this if you want to participate in the party’s primary but do not have the option to crossover.
- Do nothing. You will be provided a ballot with no presidential candidates on it, but every other contest will be available to you to vote on.
No matter how you decide to participate in the presidential primary, everyone will be able to vote for President and Vice-President in the November General Election.
Learn more on the Electoral College (click here)