Aug. 2 Primary Election Results as of 11:59 p.m.

While the polls closed at 8 p.m., Washtenaw County and Ann Arbor election workers are still tallying results. As of 11:59 p.m., 38 percent of the County’s 151 precincts had been fully counted. In Ann Arbor, City Clerk Jackie Beaudry said she expected to have absentee ballots counted by 10 p.m. At 11:59 p.m. no absentee results for City Council races had been posted. In 2020, 25,000 Ann Arbor voters cast absentee ballots for City Council candidates. Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson announced recently that 2022 requests for absentee ballots statewide had jumped a whopping 78 percent. This suggests that there were, perhaps, more than 25,000 absentee ballots cast in this year’s Ann Arbor local races.

The in-person voting results for City Council are available and have been posted to the Washtenaw County Clerk’s website:

 Anne Bannister39120391237.88%
 Christopher Taylor64020640262.00%
With 0 of 53 precincts fully counted and no absentee ballots included, Mayor Taylor leads.

Cynthia Harrison10110101170.06%
 Angeline Smith432043229.94%
With 0 of 53 precincts fully counted and no absentee ballots included, Cynthia Harrison leads in Ward 1.

 Dharma Akmon11620116252.94%
 Elizabeth Nelson931093142.41%
 Mozhgan Savabieasfahani10001004.56%
With 0 of 53 precincts fully counted and no absentee ballots included, Dharma Akmon leads in Ward 4.

Jenn Cornell19290192959.08%
 Ali Ramlawi13350133540.89%
With 0 of 53 precincts fully counted and no absentee ballots included, Jenn Cornell leads in Ward 5.

In Wards 2 and 3, the Council candidates ran unopposed.

In-person voter turnout, thus far, is lowest in Ward 1. Only 8.76 percent of the Ward’s 19,747 registered voters went to the polls. In Ward 4, the percentage of voters who voted in-person was slightly higher, 10.5 percent of the Ward’s 23,463 registered voters. Of the 25,105 registered voters in Ward 5, 14.7 percent of them voted at their local polling places.

In Ypsilanti, Mayor Lois Allen-Richardson trails challenger Nicole Brown by over 1,000 votes with 90 percent of precincts counted. Brown is the Ypsilanti Mayor Pro Tem and has served on City Council since 2014. Allen-Richardson has served on City Council since 2000. She was appointed to the Mayor’s office in 2020, the first Black woman to hold that office in Ypsilanti. Ypsilanti, unlike Ann Arbor, has non-partisan elections.

Lois Allen-Richardson35645981527.93%
Nicole Brown1018877189564.94%
Anthony Morgan991022016.89%
In the Mayor’s race, there is no Republican challenger. The primary winner will serve as mayor

Ann Arbor voters are also electing State-level representatives. In the newly-created 14th District, Washtenaw County Commissioner Sue Shink is leading with 45.45 percent of precincts counted. Shink will face Republican Tim Golding in the Nov. general election.

Sue Shink628354431172674.78%
Val Cochran Toops3192305493.50%
Kelsey Heck Wood21231270339321.64%

In the Michigan governor’s race, Gov. Gretchen Whitmer will face one of five Republican challengers in November. With 38.4 percent of precincts counted, Washtenaw County voters have cast the most votes for Trump-backed candidate Tudor Dixon.

Ann Arbor, Ypsilanti and Ypsilanti Township voters are deciding on whether to approve a proposed 240 percent increase in the AAATA millage. With 10.9 percent of precincts fully tallied, these are the millage enhancement results as of 11:59 p.m.

  Yes1075311891194262.83%
  No6669396706537.17%

In Ypsilanti Township, where officials sent out a postcard questioning the economic impact of an increased millage on Township residents, residents have in large part voted against the increase.

In 2020, a total of 111,385 Washtenaw County voters cast ballots, or 36.64 percent of the County’s 304,836 registered voters.

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