The Reporter covers Miller, Morgan and Camden County in Central Missouri's Lake of the Ozarks and is published once per week on Wednesdays.

 

Published November 13, 2024

Miller County November 5 election results

MILLER COUNTY – Republicans again came out on top in the county, which is easy when no other party files for local offices.

Don Abbett (First District Commissioner) Travis Rowden (Second District Commissioner) Louis Gregoire (Sheriff) Joseph M Cochran (Assessor) Caleb Shelton (Coroner) Ricky Lynn Wilson (Surveyor) and Theresa Lupardus (Public Administrator) were all running unopposed for their offices.

The Village of St. Elizabeth was asking voters to approve a Use Tax. 65.55 percent of the voters cast yes votes for the tax.

Voters were also asked if they wanted to retain the following judges and all received enough yes votes to stay in power.

Other races

U.S. Representative District 3 was won by Bob Onder (Republican) who brought in a statewide total of 240,137 votes (61.337 percent).

Bruce Sassmann was running unopposed for State Representative District 61.

For State Representative District 124, Don Mayhew (Republican) and Tara Hallmark (Democrat) were fighting it out for the position with Mayhew getting 82.809 percent of the vote.

Andrew Hardwick was running unopposed for the position of Circuit Court Judge Circuit 26 Division 1.

In statewide races, Republican Andrew Bailey kept his position as Attorney General soundly defeating Democrat Challenger Elad Gross and Libertarian Candidate Ryan Munro. Bailey received 59.795 percent, Gross 37.907 percent and Munro 2.298 percent.

Vivek Malek (Republican) kept his job as State Treasurer and Denny Hoskins (Republican) won the office of Secretary of State against three challengers.

The next Lieutenant Governor will be Republican Dave Wasinger and the next Governor will be the former Lieutenant Governor Mike Kehoe (Republican) who brought in 59.124 percent of the votes.

The ballot also asked voters if they wished to retain Supreme Court Judges Kelly C. Broniec and Ginger K. Gooch and they received enough votes statewide to keep their jobs. 

Voters were also asked if Becky J.W. Borthwick and Jennifer R. Growcock should keep their positions as Judge for the Southern District Court of Appeals and voters said yes to both.

Democrat Lucas Kunce was once again trying to take the seat of U.S. Senator from Republican Josh Hawley and like last time didn’t even come close to winning.

Hawley brought in 1,639,359 votes statewide and Kunce 1,234,159 votes.

Donald Trump easily beat Kamala Harris in Missouri with Trump bringing in 1,739,020 votes (58.375 percent) and Harris bringing in 1,190,806 votes (39.973 percent).

Other parties running for the position made up the rest of the percentage points.

State Amendments

Several Missouri Constitutional Amendments were on the ballot with one being a gambling boat on the Osage River between Tuscumbia and the Missouri River (Constitutional Amendment 5). Voters shot that down with 1,511,586 no votes (52.429 percent) and 1,371,524 yes votes (47.571 percent).

But they did narrowly approve Constitutional Amendment 2 which will allow sports betting. It came down to 50.074 for and 48.395 against.

Constitutional Amendment 6 asked voter the following question:

“Shall the Missouri Constitution be amended to provide that the administration of justice shall include the levying of costs and fees to support salaries and benefits for certain current and former law enforcement personnel?”

This one wasn’t even close with 60.614 percent against and 39.386 for.

Constitutional Amendment 7 easily passed with 1,952,138 votes (68.459 percent) for and 899,408 votes (31.541 percent) against. That Amendment said:

Shall the Missouri Constitution be amended to:

Very strong feelings were held on both sides of Constitutional Amendment 3 which would overturn Missouri’s ban on abortion and make it a part of the state constitution.

This vote was also close but the Amendment passed with 51.605 percent for (1,527,096 votes) and 48.395 percent (1,432,084 votes) against.

The only restriction on abortion was in the wording of the amendment in section 4.

“Notwithstanding subsection 3 of this Section, the general assembly may enact laws that regulate the provision of abortion after Fetal Viability provided that under no circumstance shall the Government deny, interfere with, delay, or otherwise restrict an abortion that in the good faith judgment of a treating health care professional is needed to protect the life or physical or mental health of the pregnant person.”

If the lawmakers in Jefferson City do not state when “Fetal Viability” is then abortions could be done up until the moment of birth.

Proposition A also passed. That proposition included, among other things:

The financial aspects of this were also mentioned in the wording on the ballot.

“State governmental entities estimate one- time costs ranging from $0 to $53,000, and ongoing costs ranging from $0 to at least $256,000 per year by 2027. State and local government tax revenue could change by an unknown annual amount depending on business decisions.”

Miller County voter turnout was 69.64 percent of registered voters with 13,148 ballots cast.

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