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New York primary: will the Empire State deliver for Clinton and Trump? – live | New York primary: will the Empire State deliver for Clinton and Trump? – live |
(35 minutes later) | |
3.44pm BST | |
15:44 | |
From the comments / the mood in New York | |
Megan Carpentier | |
There’s a call in the comments for the feeling in New York on primary day... | |
Anyone in NY-how's turnout? The mood? Thanks! | |
... and throughout the day we’ll bring you reports from polling stations and around town. It’s difficult to gauge turnout at this early hour, but voter participation at candidate rallies and the rare sense among New York voters of wielding influence in two closely fought presidential primaries would seem to increase voter volume. | |
The Guardian’s Megan Carpentier stopped by a polling station in the northwestern corner of Astoria, Queens, where Bernie Sanders made an impromptu campaign stop yesterday. “Voters at PS 122 were quietly shuffled into one of six lines, depending on their precinct, as three translators – Spanish, Bengali and Vietnamese – sat at a nearby table assisting voters for whom English is not their first language,” Megan reports: | |
On-site coordinators said at 9:30 that traffic had been steady all morning, with short lines during the rush hour, when a large percentage of the borough’s residents commute into Manhattan for work. | |
They reported only a few problems with voters who weren’t aware that they needed to be registered as a Democrat or Republican to vote today. | |
One voter - a man in his mid-thirties with an American accent - did appear to get frustrated and leave, after showing the table of translators his driver’s license but not acquiring a ballot; they directed him to the information table to get his precinct number but, realizing he’d have to go to the precinct table to get his actual ballot, he loudly sighed with disgust and walked out, as the Spanish translator helped an elderly woman to her precinct line. | |
3.39pm BST | |
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Reid marks Oklahoma City anniversary with call for hearing on Garland | |
On the 21st anniversary of the Oklahoma City bombing, in which a truck bombing attack on a federal building killed 168 and wounded more than 680, senator minority leader Harry Reid has renewed his call for senate hearings for the lead prosecutor in the case – Merrick Garland, now a circuit court judge and president Obama’s nominee to fill the Supreme Court vacancy. | |
21 years ago today, Judge Garland oversaw the prosecution of those involved in the OKC bombing and adhered to the law every step of the way. | |
Republicans are treating this good man very unfairly, especially when you consider what Garland has done for US. https://t.co/CYj0b3dZbf | |
A group called WeNeedNine, which supports Garland’s nomination, has posted a video on YouTube featuring Garland’s work on the bombing case. As the lead prosecutor on the ground, he coordinated federal and state agencies to ensure that evidence was collected and preserved for use in trial and secured the conviction of bomber Timothy McVeigh. | |
3.25pm BST | |
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Trump refers to 9/11 as 7/11 | |
At a rally in Buffalo, New York, last night, Donald Trump confused 9/11, the date of the terrorist attacks that brought down the World Trade Center, and 7/11, the convenience store chain. | |
He said: | |
I was down there, and I watched our police and our fireman down on 7/11 down at the World Trade Center right after it came down, and I saw the greatest people I’ve ever seen in action, I saw the bravest people I’ve ever seen... | |
3.19pm BST | |
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Amanda Holpuch | |
Police arrested the co-founders of Ben & Jerry’s ice cream at the US Capitol on Monday as they protested against the influence of money in politics, writes the Guardian’s Amanda Holpuch: | |
Jerry Greenfield and Ben Cohen were arrested while participating in the Democracy Spring protests, a two-week series of demonstrations at the US Capitol. Since the protests began on 11 April, 12 people have handcuffed themselves to scaffolding in the building’s rotunda and more than 1,200 people have been arrested. | |
The demonstrations are not affiliated with any presidential candidate, but are calling on politicians at all levels of government “to commit to fight for reform to save our democracy and ensure political equality”. | |
Two of the world’s most famous Vermonters, Ben and Jerry arguably should have been thrown in jail for calling an ice cream Bernie’s Yearning, which they produced as a personal tribute to Bernie Sanders. | |
“We’ve been his constituents for over 30 years,” Ben Cohen said in January. “We’ve seen the way he governs. We’ve seen his tremendous consistency on the issues. Where he’s coming from is a place of real internal passion about economic inequality. He’s a politician that comes along once in a generation.” | |
(Bernie’s Yearning was Cohen’s own creation, and is not connected to Ben & Jerry’s brand, which was sold to Unilever a decade ago.) | |
Related: 'Bernie's Yearning': Ben & Jerry's duo hit the road for Sanders in Iowa | |
But that’s not even the most controversial flavor the dairy duo have perpetrated. In 2011 they produced Schweddy Balls, a limited-edition flavor based on an infamous Saturday Night Live sketch. | |
3.07pm BST | 3.07pm BST |
15:07 | 15:07 |
The approach of the top local tabloids to the day is about what you’d expect. The New York Post goes with a fake story about fears in the Clinton camp of a Sanders upset, and the Daily News slugs Donald Trump in the gut one last time on the way out the door, with a kick in the pants for good measure for Rex Ryan, the National Football League coach who introduced Trump last night in Buffalo. | The approach of the top local tabloids to the day is about what you’d expect. The New York Post goes with a fake story about fears in the Clinton camp of a Sanders upset, and the Daily News slugs Donald Trump in the gut one last time on the way out the door, with a kick in the pants for good measure for Rex Ryan, the National Football League coach who introduced Trump last night in Buffalo. |
That Bernie Sanders peeking out from behind the Empire State Building on the cover of the Post is pretty funny, though. | That Bernie Sanders peeking out from behind the Empire State Building on the cover of the Post is pretty funny, though. |
Today's cover: Hillary is feelin' the Bern https://t.co/Xb1xhr24RK pic.twitter.com/zHhtt6STBT | Today's cover: Hillary is feelin' the Bern https://t.co/Xb1xhr24RK pic.twitter.com/zHhtt6STBT |
Today's front page...HE'S WITH STUPID, TOO!Dopey ex-Jets coach Ryan supports bigot Trump https://t.co/pDUH2aAuel pic.twitter.com/Zb6Ucny6MZ | Today's front page...HE'S WITH STUPID, TOO!Dopey ex-Jets coach Ryan supports bigot Trump https://t.co/pDUH2aAuel pic.twitter.com/Zb6Ucny6MZ |
1.21pm BST | 1.21pm BST |
13:21 | 13:21 |
Hello, and welcome to our live-wire coverage of the 2016 race for the White House. | Hello, and welcome to our live-wire coverage of the 2016 race for the White House. |
It’s primary day in New York, where voters are enjoying a rare sense of influence in a pair of close national races. On the Democratic side, Hillary Clinton hopes that polling averages showing her in the lead by double digits tell a truth that the crowds of thousands who have gravitated to her rival, Bernie Sanders, do not. They’re in a fight for 247 Democratic delegates, to be awarded proportionally. | It’s primary day in New York, where voters are enjoying a rare sense of influence in a pair of close national races. On the Democratic side, Hillary Clinton hopes that polling averages showing her in the lead by double digits tell a truth that the crowds of thousands who have gravitated to her rival, Bernie Sanders, do not. They’re in a fight for 247 Democratic delegates, to be awarded proportionally. |
On the Republican side, Donald Trump appears poised to win by as much as 30 points, if the polls are to be believed, in what may be his most authoritative victory of the cycle so far. If he could capture more than 50% of the vote statewide and in each of New York’s 27 congressional districts, he would sweep the state’s 95 Republican delegates and gain a crucial boost in his determined climb toward 1,237. | On the Republican side, Donald Trump appears poised to win by as much as 30 points, if the polls are to be believed, in what may be his most authoritative victory of the cycle so far. If he could capture more than 50% of the vote statewide and in each of New York’s 27 congressional districts, he would sweep the state’s 95 Republican delegates and gain a crucial boost in his determined climb toward 1,237. |
Polling station hours depend on where you live. Polls are open in New York City and in Nassau, Suffolk, Westchester, Rockland, Orange, Putnam and Erie counties from 6am-9pm. Elsewhere in the state, polls are open from 12 pm-9pm. | Polling station hours depend on where you live. Polls are open in New York City and in Nassau, Suffolk, Westchester, Rockland, Orange, Putnam and Erie counties from 6am-9pm. Elsewhere in the state, polls are open from 12 pm-9pm. |
Related: New York primaries: from values to votes as decision day arrives | Related: New York primaries: from values to votes as decision day arrives |
Both frontrunners have big parties planned for midtown Manhattan tonight. There’s a lot on the line in the Empire State – thank you for reading and please make your predictions and observations in the comments! | Both frontrunners have big parties planned for midtown Manhattan tonight. There’s a lot on the line in the Empire State – thank you for reading and please make your predictions and observations in the comments! |
Updated | Updated |
at 3.03pm BST | at 3.03pm BST |