Southern Arizona election coverage by the Arizona Daily Star
Get caught up on last night's Tucson-area primary election coverage.
(14) updates to this series since Updated
In incomplete vote tallies Tuesday night, Gabriella Cázares-Kelly is leading with 62% of the vote against Kim Challender in the Democratic Party primary race for Pima County recorder.
Laura Conover, who campaigned as an outsider and reformer, will become Pima County's top prosecutor, Tucson's first new one in more than two decades.
Chris Nanos had collected about 65 percent of the vote in the Democratic primary, results showed Wednesday morning. Incumbent Napier was unopposed in the Republican primary.
Incumbents are leading in their primary races for the Arizona House in the southeastern counties of Pima and Santa Cruz, as early vote tallies are released.
Incomplete vote tallies show Suzanne Droubie leading with 58% of the vote against two opponents, Brian Johnson and Dustin Walters, in the Democratic primary for Pima County assessor.
As of Tuesday at 9:00 p.m., early results show that Christy holds a significant lead in the Republican primary vote.
As of Tuesday at 9 p.m., early results showed that Grijalva holds over 66% of the primary votes.
As of Tuesday at 8:50 p.m., early results show that Bronson holds 59% of the primary vote.
As of Tuesday at 8:30 p.m., early results show that Matt Heinz holds more than 54% of the primary vote so far.
Ann Kirkpatrick, a four-term Democratic incumbent who returned to Congress in 2016 after a failed Senate run, had 78% of the vote.
As expected, the two well-financed U.S. Senate candidates in Arizona officially advanced to the general election Tuesday with landslide victories in afterthought primary contests. Their race is one of the most closely watched in the nation.
The constable seats for Precinct 6 and Precinct 9 are decided by the primary race unless write-in candidates emerge for the November general election.
Winners will advance to the general election in November.
The on-site inspector reviewed the sign-in sheet and once the incorrect ballots were turned in, the affected voters cannot vote again.

