Government The
government of Stanislaus County is defined and authorized under the
California Constitution and
law as a
general law county. The county government provides countywide services such as elections and voter registration, law enforcement, jails, vital records, property records, tax collection, public health, and social services. In addition, the county serves as the local government for all unincorporated areas. The county government is composed of the elected five-member board of supervisors, several other elected offices including the
sheriff-coroner, district attorney, tax assessor, auditor-controller, treasurer-tax collector, and clerk-recorder, and numerous county departments and entities under the supervision of the chief executive officer. As of January 2025, the members of the Stanislaus County Board of Supervisors were: • Buck Condit, District 1, chairman • Vito Chiesa, District 2, vice chairman • Terry Withrow, District 3 • Mani Grewal, District 4 • Channce Condit, District 5
Policing Sheriff The Stanislaus County Sheriff provides court protection, jail administration, and coroner services for the entire county. It provides patrol and detective services for the unincorporated areas of the county. The sheriff also provides law-enforcement services by contract to the municipalities of Riverbank, Patterson, Waterford, Salida, and Hughson. These municipalities fund police coverage as specified in the respective sheriff's contract with each city.
Municipal police Municipal police departments in the county are: Modesto, population 213,000; Turlock, 73,000; Ceres, 46,000; Oakdale, 23,000; Newman 11,000.
Politics Voter registration statistics Cities by population and voter registration Overview Just like neighboring
Merced County, Stanislaus is considered a bellwether county in presidential elections. The last major-party nominee to gain over 60% of the vote was
Lyndon B. Johnson in
1964. Furthermore, in
1960, Stanislaus County was one of the most bellwether counties in terms of the popular vote, voting 0.02% more Democratic than the national average. It has voted for the winning candidate for president in every election since
1972, except in
2016 when it voted for
Hillary Clinton instead of
Donald Trump. In
2024,
Donald Trump won the county in a decisive victory, continuing the county's bellwether county status.
Trump's win in Stanislaus County made it one of ten counties in California to flip from
Biden to
Trump, as well as making Stanislaus one of six counties to vote for the Republican presidential candidate for the first time in 20 years since
George W. Bush in
2004. The last Democrat to win a majority in the county was
Jimmy Carter in
1976, although
Barack Obama won a
plurality in
2008 and
2012, as did
Bill Clinton in both
1992 and
1996, and as Biden did in
2020. In the
United States House of Representatives, Stanislaus County is split between , , and . In the
California State Senate, Stanislaus is represented by: • the
4th Senate District, represented by
Republican Marie Alvarado-Gil. In the
California State Assembly, Stanislaus is split between the
22nd Assembly District, represented by
Republican Juan Alanis, and the
9th Assembly District, represented by
Republican Heath Flora. ==Economy==