Politics & Government

Greenwich Election Results 2025: BET Chairmanship Decided, Camillo Wins 4th Term, Unofficial Results Show

Greenwich residents hit the polls Tuesday to make their voices heard in the 2025 municipal election.

Greenwich residents cast their ballots for several key local races on Election Day.
Greenwich residents cast their ballots for several key local races on Election Day. (Patch Graphics)

GREENWICH, CT — The top of the Republican ticket had a good night in Greenwich with First Selectman Fred Camillo winning a fourth term in office, but Republicans lost the powerful chairmanship on the Board of Estimate and Taxation to the Democrats for just the second time in memory, according to unofficial results.

Camillo tallied 10,302 votes against 7,990 for Anthony Moor, a Democrat and former journalist, unofficial results from the Greenwich Registrars Office said.

"I am grateful to the voters of my hometown for again giving me the opportunity to serve them for the next two years. As I mentioned tonight, with the exception of playing centerfield for the Yankees, there’s no job in the world that would compare to it to me, and I will give it my all, as always," Camillo said in a statement to Patch late Tuesday.

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"Greenwich is doing well and firing on all cylinders, but we always strive to do even better and that certainly will not change in the next two years," Camillo added. "Our residents can rest assured that we will not become complacent and will continue to make Greenwich the best place in the nation in which to live."

Another key race Tuesday revolved around the Board of Estimate and Taxation. Democrats will have the chairmanship on the board, as their six candidates tallied 56,397 total votes compared to 47,610 for the Republicans.

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Democrats won the chairmanship in 2017 for the first time, and the Republicans regained control in 2019.

A $4 million reduction to the school budget passed 7-6 on a tiebreaking vote from Republican Chair Harry Fisher last April, a move that sparked backlash from the community. This year's BET budget guidelines were also controversial.

"It’s been a historic day of wins for Greenwich Democrats and for the future of our town," Greenwich Democrats said on Facebook. "To every supporter and volunteer who made this possible, thank you."

Elsewhere in other races, Camillo's running-mate, Selectwoman Lauren Rabin, won re-election with 9,109 votes, while former state Rep. Rachel Khanna, a Democrat, scored 9,001 votes to join the Board of Selectmen.

Selectperson Janet Stone McGuigan did not run for re-election.

In the Town Clerk race, incumbent Republican Jackie Budkins won with 9,267 votes against Meghan McCreary, a Democrat, who tallied 8,819 votes.

For the Board of Education, Democrat Bob Chaney won a seat with 9,756 votes, unofficial results showed, as did fellow Democrat Veronica Chiavaroli with 9,595 votes.

Republicans Karen Krause (8,695 votes) and Paul Cappiali (8,515) were also elected. Incumbent Democrat Laura Kostin finished third amongst her party with 8,686 votes.

The Greenwich Registrars Office said there were a significant number of write-ins for this election.

"Due to limitations in the new tabulator, the Registrars made the determination in advance that we would count the write-ins using bi-partisan teams on Wednesday. As a result the results for RTM write-in candidates are incomplete," the Registrars Office said late Tuesday.

Turnout in Greenwich was on pace as of Tuesday afternoon with totals from 2023, according to Republican Registrar of Voters Fred DeCaro III.

Greenwich's live voter tracker showed a turnout of 45.17 percent after the polls closed. The turnout for the 2023 municipal election was around 51 percent.

On Wednesday, we'll have vote totals for every candidate. Keep checking back for the latest results and projected winners in key races.

View vote totals for each candidate in Greenwich here.

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Here are the local candidates, winners in bold:

First Selectman, vote for one

  • Democratic Party: Anthony Moor
  • Republican Party: Fred Camillo

Selectman, vote for one

Town Clerk, vote for one

Tax Collector, vote for one

Board of Estimate and Taxation, vote for up to six

Board of Education, full term, vote for up to four

Board of Education, to fill a vacancy for two years, vote for one

  • Republican Party: Michael-Joseph Mercanti-Anthony

Board of Assessment Appeals, vote for up to three

  • Democratic Party: William Grad, Joseph Huley
  • Republican Party: Jeff Reardon, Kit Mill, Mark Pruner

Constables, vote for up to four

  • Democratic Party: Donnie Romeo, Dawn Fortunato
  • Republican Party: Donna Maloney, Thomas Waurishuk, Alan E. Gaynor, Charles Thivierge

Representative Town Meeting

District 1, vote for up to 19

  • Carl G.R. Carlson Jr., Anthony J. Chimblo III, Edward D. Dadakis, Grace Ann Duffield, Lynn B. Garelick, Michael A. Gaudiano, Brigitte A. lee, Frederick Lee Jr., David Aaron Levine, William B. Lewis Jr., Richard T. Malloy, Jaysen Lee Medhurst, Elizabeth Mills "Sanders," Alverardo "Aldo" Peruzzi Pascarella, Aakash Patel, Chloe Helena Rosenfeld, Samuel Aaron Rosenfeld, Elizabeth Somers Urdang, Jeffrey Scott Urdang

District 2, vote for up to 14

  • David Wentworth Carter, Donald R. Conway, Marissa Dungey, Jennifer Alexis Jones, Jill T. Kelly, Katherine N. LoBalbo, Ammar F. Murad, Pragati Soni, Joyce "Jay" Pauline Teevan, Erika Walsh

District 3, vote for up to 10

  • Hale Bayram, Isra Selin Bayram, John V. Bologna, Christopher Joseph Colford, Tiffany Aparecida Evangelista, Paul Charles Genovese, Peter P. Mynarski Jr., Rosalind Nicastro, Sylvester J. Pecora Sr., Steven Paul Rubin, Karsten Vagner

District 4, vote for up to 17

  • Javier Alejandro Aleman, Seth Wayland Bacon, Ronald Francis Carosella, Andrea J. Casson, Elizabeth J. "Liz" Eckerts, Rosemarie Macaluso, Alexander J. Popp, Catherine E. Reynolds, Romulo E. Samaniego, Diego Sanchez, Gregg E. Sollenne, Lucy H. von Brachel, Bonnie E. Zeh

District 5, vote for up to 19

  • Eric Peter Beiley, Jennifer Leigh Bird, Edward T. "Tom" Broadhurst III, Linda A. Cochran, Christina S. Downey, Odysseas Demosthenes Kostas, Christopher Michael Langel, Lindy Marie Lilien, Sean Andrew Elesen, Felice "Felix" Rovelli, Joan Button Thakor, Kimberly R. Treibick

District 6, vote for up to 21

  • Jennifer Ann. Andrews, Radley Baine, Marilyn Ross Cahn, Robert W. Carter, Nicole Murphy Chaudhri, Jessica Hope Cosloy, Morgan R. Evans, Noah R. Finz, Daniel Izzo, Coline Jenkins, Brian J. Maher, James S. McGuigan, John M. Merrill, Stephen Meskers, Barbara E. O'Neill, Tracy Dawn Parsons "Grossman," Anna S. Povinelli, Vernon B Schwartz, Pascale Sejean, Kathleen S. "Kathy" Smith, David P. Snyder, Janet L. Stone McGuigan, Mary Manuel Tobin, Alexis Voulgaris, Stacy L. Widlitz, Joanna Githa Marie Willott, Victoria Martin Young

District 7, vote for up to 20

  • Debbie L. Applebaum, Michael Peter Behringer, Kimberly Morgan Blank, Ellen M. Brennan-Galvin, Margaret H. Butler, Thomas Chill, Alice B. Duff, Danielle Eason, Irwin George "Patrick" Freydberg Jr., Elizabeth J. "Betsy" Galindo, William W. Galvin III, Dean C. Gamanos, Marianne Gattinella, Hilary Adams Gunn, Lucia D. Jansen, Scott E. Kalb, Elizabeth C. MacGillivray, Elizabeth "Wynn" McDaniel, William J. Meurer, Anthony James Moor, Ellen-Jane Moss, Valerie Stauffer, Maya Louise Tichio, Sandra N. Waters, Stephen M. Waters

District 8, vote for up to 26

  • Hector Eduardo Arzeno, Lisa Becker Edmundson, Francis J. "Kip" Burgweger Jr., Craig Edward Chapman, Blazej Rafal Cichy, Stephanie A. Cowie, Peter Michael Cruikshank, Michael J. DeVita, M. Irene Dietrich, Philip A. Dodson, Nicholas Gt Enthoven, Samuel Gonzalez Jr., Myra H. Klockenbrink, Genevieve J. "Genny" Krob, Gail A. Lauridsen, Sharon Lee Lazar, Cheryl A. Moss, Sheila M. Phelan, Caryn S. Rosenbaum, Mary M. "Molly" Saleeby, Siv J. Schultz, Brian George Sullivan, Nicholas Medgyesi Wilder, Kathleen A. Yu

District 9, vote for up to 21

  • Patricia Adams, Anthony G. Cicchetti, Barbara T. Darula, Pamela R. Ferraro, Donna Gaudioso-Zeale, Elizabeth Porcher "Shaye" Hester, Abbe F. Large, Brian J. Malin, Lauren B. O'Keefe, Geralyn Beth Onovitz Rubenstein, Ferdinando Giuseppe Schiro, Jonathan R. Shankman, Joanne I. Steinhart, Jane C. Weisbecker, Stacy A. Young, Carol A. Zamilli

District 10, vote for up to 19

  • D. Ryan Brumberg, Peter Jude Collins, Allyson Tucker Cowin, Pamela Mercedes Fontana, Annabel F. Gatto, Michael T. Goldstein, Amaris Loren Guadalupe, Ogden H. Hammond, Hilary Haroche, Sandra K. Harris, W. Brooks Harris, John S. Hopley, Ramya Thambuswamy Hopley, Michael R. Howe, Nan Michelle Levy, Peter Bennett Levy, Pamela C. Pell, Kara Lynn Philbin, Jane S. Sprung

District 11, vote for up to 22

  • Jennifer L. Barro, Thomas M. Devaney, Susan D. Fahey, Joanna Foyle, Tracy Freedman, Ingrid Hang, Elizabeth Hopley, Cathleen M. "Cate" Keeney, Susan Chisholm Khanna, Jennifer Ann Klein, Jan Rogers Kniffen, Adam L. Leader, Mark J. Lewis, Cyril E. Moulle-Berteaux, Richard J. Neuman, Vinay S. Pande, Peter J. Samponaro, Robin C. Sherwood, Erin B. Spiess Chang, Cathryn Fineman "Cathy" Steel, Thomas M. West, Jordan E. Yarett, Gregory J. Zorthian

District 12, vote for up to 22

  • Francia Alvarez, Craig W. Amundson, Glen A. Canner, Mary Connolly Flynn, Barbara G. Hindman, Jonathan A. Kantor, Mary A. Keller, Aaron J. Leonard, Abigail R. McCarthy, Ellen Margaret Murdock, Jocelyn Yuan Riddle, Jane S. Sulich, Christina Turiano-Sander, James Waters

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