Politics & Government

2022 Prince George's County Executive, Council Winners

Only one County Council seat had two candidates face off. All other candidates ran unopposed including County Executive. Here are results.

Soon after polls closed on Nov. 8, the Maryland State Board of Elections started releasing the jurisdiction-specific tallies from in-person early voting and mail-in ballots counted up to Election Day.
Soon after polls closed on Nov. 8, the Maryland State Board of Elections started releasing the jurisdiction-specific tallies from in-person early voting and mail-in ballots counted up to Election Day. (Kristin Borden/Patch)

PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY, MD — Prince George's County voters went to the polls Tuesday. Angela D. Alsobrooks ran unopposed for County Executive, as did most County Council candidates.

Here are the preliminary results for the races in Prince George's County as of 5 p.m. Wednesday.

County Executive

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  • Angela D. Alsobrooks (D) - unopposed winner

County Council At Large (two seats)

  • Mel Franklin (D) - unopposed winner
  • Calvin S. Hawkins, Jr. (D) - unopposed winner

County Council District 1

Find out what's happening in Bowiefor free with the latest updates from Patch.

  • Tom Dernoga (D) - unopposed winner

County Council District 2

  • Wanika Fisher (D) - unopposed winner

County Council District 3

  • Eric C. Olson (D) - unopposed winner

County Council District 4

  • Ingrid S. Harrison (D) - unopposed winner

County Council District 5

  • Jolene Ivey (D) - unopposed winner

County Council District 6

  • Wala Blegay (D) - unopposed winner

County Council District 7

  • Gary Falls (R) - 4.46%
  • Krystal Oriadha (D) - 95.35%

County Council District 8

  • Edward Burroughs, III (D) - unopposed winner

County Council District 9

  • Sydney Harrison (D) - unopposed winner

County State's Attorney

  • Aisha Braveboy (D) - unopposed winner

Sheriff

  • John D.B. Carr (D) - unopposed winner

When Will The Results Be Certified?

Election officials will not certify the final results for at least 10 days. Officials must wait for every mail-in and provisional ballot to come in.

Soon after polls close on Nov. 8, the Maryland State Board of Elections will release the jurisdiction-specific tallies from in-person early voting and mail-in ballots counted up to Election Day.

Officials will start releasing the Election Day vote counts over the following hours on election night.

All 24 jurisdictions will start releasing their early voting and Election Day tallies on Nov. 8. Only 10 will release the mail-in ballot results tallied before Election Day.

The Maryland Court of Appeals on Oct. 7 ruled that local election offices can opt to start counting mail-in ballots before Election Day. They cannot release these results until after polls close on Election Day, and they must continue accepting ballots until the statewide deadline of Nov. 18 at 10 a.m.

Related: Maryland's Highest Court Upholds Order Allowing Early Counting Of Mail-In Ballots

These jurisdictions plan to conduct pre-Election Day canvassing of mail-in ballots: Baltimore City and Allegany, Baltimore, Calvert, Frederick, Howard, Montgomery, Prince George's, Saint Mary's and Washington Counties.

Election officials will tally provisional ballots on Nov. 16. Mail-in ballots will be counted as they arrive until Nov. 18. Local boards cannot certify their results before Nov. 18.

Here is some more coverage of Maryland's biggest races:

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