2022 Oregon gubernatorial election


The 2022 Oregon gubernatorial election took place on November 8, 2022, to elect the governor of Oregon. Incumbent Kate Brown took office when fellow Democrat John Kitzhaber resigned on February 18, 2015. She won the subsequent 2016 special election and a full term in 2018. Due to term limits, she was unable to run again in 2022.
The Oregonian anticipated the election to have "the first competitive Democratic primary in more than a decade and potentially the closest such race since 2002." Willamette Week anticipated a "wide open field of Democrats", citing the lack of an incumbent. Almost 20 Republican Party candidates ran for the office, including two previous nominees for governor in 1998 and 2016, as well as 15 Democrats and some non-affiliates/third-party members. This was the state's first gubernatorial election since 2002 in which there was no current or former governor on the ballot.
In the May 17 primary elections, former Oregon House Speaker Tina Kotek was declared the winner of the Democratic primary half an hour after the ballot deadline. The next day, former House Minority Leader Christine Drazan was determined to have won the Republican primary. Notably, the general election featured three prominent female candidates, including former state senator Betsy Johnson, who was a moderate Democrat, running as an independent.
Oregon was considered a possible Republican pickup, as Kate Brown had the lowest approval rating of any governor in the United States at the time and Johnson could have siphoned votes from Kotek. Nonetheless, Kotek narrowly won the election, becoming Oregon's 7th consecutive Democratic governor. Notably, none of Oregon's counties flipped parties from the 2018 or 2016 gubernatorial elections. Kotek became one of the first lesbian governors in the United States, along with Maura Healey, who was elected Governor of Massachusetts the same day.

Democratic primary

Candidates

Nominee

Eliminated in primary

Disqualified

Withdrew

Declined

Republican primary

Candidates

Nominee

Eliminated in primary

Withdrew

  • Angelique Bouvier, psychologist and business owner
  • Reed Christensen, former electrical engineer
  • Mark Duncan, fight instructor
  • John L. Fosdick III, customer service representative, Army veteran
  • Darin Harbick, businessman
  • Jim Huggins, film producer, businessman and Air Force veteran
  • Alexander Males, polyurethane manufacturing worker
  • Monte Sauer Jr., CEO of AmericaProud

Declined

Independents and other parties

Candidates

Candidates for general election

Withdrew

  • Nathalie Paravicini, naturopathic doctor ''''

Failed to qualify for general election

In order to be listed as candidates on the general election ballot, non-affiliated candidates for governor needed to collect 23,744 signatures from Oregon voters.
  • Tim Harrold, security expert
  • Dustin Watkins, dishwasher

Not nominated

General election

Polling

Aggregate polls

Graphical summary

Poll sourceDate
administered
Sample
size
Margin
of error
Tina
Kotek
Christine
Drazan
Betsy
Johnson
OtherUndecided
Data for Progress November 1–6, 20221,393 ± 3.0%48%44%7%1%
Emerson CollegeOctober 31 – November 1, 2022975 ± 3.1%44%40%8%1%6%
Emerson CollegeOctober 31 – November 1, 2022975 ± 3.1%46%41%9%4%
Nelson ResearchOctober 31 – November 1, 2022577 ± 4.1%43%45%6%1%5%
Blueprint Polling October 26 – November 1, 2022585 ± 4.0%45%41%10%<1%4%
FM3 Research October 24–26, 2022741 ± 4.0%40%38%13%8%
The Trafalgar Group October 18–22, 20221,161 ± 2.9%40%42%13%1%4%
Hoffman Research Group October 17–18, 2022684 ± 3.8%35%37%17%12%
Data for Progress October 16–18, 20221,021 ± 3.0%42%43%12%2%
CiviqsOctober 15–18, 2022804 ± 4.3%47%39%7%2%5%
GBAO October 10–13, 2022800 ± 3.5%40%38%14%8%
Clout Research October 8–9, 2022842 ± 3.4%38%44%11%1%5%
Emerson CollegeSeptember 29 – October 1, 2022796 ± 3.4%34%36%19%2%9%
Clout Research September 23–26, 2022422 ± 4.8%35%39%16%2%8%
DHM ResearchSeptember 23–24, 2022600 ± 4.0%31%32%18%4%15%
DHM ResearchSeptember 23–24, 2022600 ± 4.0%33%35%21%12%
Nelson ResearchSeptember 19–20, 2022620 ± 3.9%32%33%19%16%
Clout Research August 10–14, 2022397 ± 4.9%32%33%21%15%
Cygnal June 28–30, 2022600 ± 3.9%31%32%24%13%
GS Strategy Group June 23–29, 2022600 ± 4.0%33%23%30%15%
Nelson Research May 25–27, 2022516 ± 4.3%28%30%19%24%
GS Strategy Group May 202234%24%22%20%
GS Strategy Group March 202223%18%19%41%

Tina Kotek vs. Christine Drazan

Poll sourceDate
administered
Sample
size
Margin
of error
Tina
Kotek
Christine
Drazan
Undecided
Clout Research September 23–26, 2022422 ± 4.8%47%53%

Generic Democrat vs. generic Republican vs. Betsy Johnson

Poll sourceDate
administered
Sample
size
Margin
of error
Generic
Democrat
Generic
Republican
Betsy
Johnson
Undecided
DHM ResearchJanuary 18–22, 2022400 ± 4.9%31%22%11%36%

Generic Democrat vs. generic Republican

Poll sourceDate
administered
Sample
size
Margin
of error
Generic
Democrat
Generic
Republican
Undecided
Clout Research September 23–26, 2022422 ± 4.8%50%50%
DHM ResearchFebruary 17–23, 2022600 ± 4.0%29%47%23%
DHM ResearchJanuary 18–22, 2022400 ± 4.9%40%31%29%

Generic Democrat vs. generic Republican vs. generic independent

Poll sourceDate
administered
Sample
size
Margin
of error
Generic
Democrat
Generic
Republican
Generic
Independent
Undecided
DHM ResearchFebruary 17–23, 2022600 ± 4.0%16%26%21%37%

Results

By county

Note: In Gilliam County, where Kotek placed behind Johnson, the margin of difference is the Drazan vote minus the Johnson vote.

By congressional district

Kotek won three of six congressional districts, with the remaining three going to Drazan, including one that elected a Democrat.
DistrictKotekDrazanJohnsonRepresentative
57%31%11%Suzanne Bonamici
27%64%8%Cliff Bentz
65%27%7%Earl Blumenauer
46%44%8%Peter DeFazio
46%44%8%Val Hoyle
43%47%9%Kurt Schrader
43%47%9%Lori Chavez-DeRemer
44%46%9%Andrea Salinas