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New York primary: will the Empire State deliver for Clinton and Trump? – live New York primary: Trump and Clinton look set to win Empire State – live
(35 minutes later)
7.47pm BST
19:47
De Blasio 'surprised' at drop in registered Democrats
The Sanders camp team is highlighting cases of mysteriously dropped voter registrations and other difficulties New Yorkers are reporting with voting:
This is a disgrace. Why are we making it so hard for people to participate in democracy?https://t.co/nNyyUUylsT
“Mayor Bill de Blasio has ordered the New York City Board of Elections to investigate why more than 63,000 registered Democrats were dropped from the voting rolls since last fall,” WNYC reports:
The request comes the same day a WNYC analysis revealed the largest decline in active registered Democrats statewide was in Brooklyn.
But new data provided by the city Board of Elections on Monday indicates it actually removed 126,000 Brooklyn Democrats from the rolls, according to executive director Michael Ryan. [...]
As a Brooklyn Democrat himself, de Blasio said he’s concerned about the sudden slump of Democrats on the voter rolls there.
“This number surprises me,” said de Blasio, “I admit that Brooklyn has had a lot of transient population – that’s obvious. Lot of people moving in, lot of people moving out. That might account for some of it. But I’m confused since so many people have moved in, that the number would move that much in the negative direction.”
Read the full piece here.
7.43pm BST
19:43
The New York Daily News is reporting broken voting machines at some polling stations and other trouble as New York City votes:
New York primary voting at some Brooklyn and Queens polling places was a disaster Tuesday morning — with early morning voters arriving to broken machines and belated polling.
Queens resident George Mack said he came to P.S. 52 in Springfield Gardens to vote right at 6 a.m. He, and about 50 other early voters, learned all three machines on site were broken. Volunteers at the school told voters to place their ballots in a slot, and they would all get processed later. [...]
Meanwhile, voters at the Cooper Park Houses in Greenpoint, Brooklyn couldn’t even get close to a machine. More than two hours after polls were supposed to open at 6 a.m., that site was still closed. [...]
A similar snafu happened at the Atlantic Terminal site in Brooklyn, which didn’t open until after 7:30.
Read the full piece here.
Brooklyn polling site closed at 7:50am #NYPrimary2016 pic.twitter.com/rPcgsbwCQO
Updated
at 7.44pm BST
7.36pm BST
19:36
Video – Bernie Sanders, religion and Aipac: what matters to Jewish voters
Related: Who is God's candidate? Jewish voters speak out ahead of New York primary
Updated
at 7.39pm BST
7.35pm BST
19:35
True to form, Sanders is on to the next state before the current state is done voting. Pennsylvania votes next Tuesday, along with Rhode Island, Connecticut, Delaware and Maryland.
Expectations? Sanders starts Eerie event right off the bat: "you know what? I think we're going to win Pennsylvania" pic.twitter.com/nhUVEXwJBb
7.31pm BST
19:31
View from the polls: agreeing with Sanders on income inequality
Lauren Gambino
The Guardian’s Lauren Gambino caught Michael Griesinger, 38, an emergency room doctor, outside a polling station in Brooklyn.
Griesinger said he voted for Bernie Sanders because he agreed with the candidate on a range of issues, especially income inequality.
Living in Prospect-Lefferts Garden, a gentrifying neighborhood in the past decade, Griesinger said he’s observed a marked difference among residents in quality of life.
“Then you look at Manhattan and the gap between the the rich and poor is enormous.”
He said he’s also hopeful for a president with a less aggressive foreign policy agenda, who invests more in domestic policy and on fixing urgent problems at home. For Griesinger, the answer is Sanders.
“Even if a lot of what he hopes to achieve isn’t possible in our current political climate, I still think it’s important to vote with your conscience,” he said.
7.28pm BST
19:28
Here’s a new video offering circulated by the Trump camp – two-and-a-half-minutes of random montage heavily featuring people of color who support Trump backed by Quad City DJ’s C’Mon N’ ride it (the Train), followed by a minute of a singer singing about “the Trump train.”
LETS GO AMERICA! Time to take backour country, and #MakeAmericaGreatAgainWatch video & go#VoteTrump! https://t.co/lsKdqGFyvQ
7.18pm BST
19:18
Never doubt dad.
"I've learned to never doubt my father's abilities," Donald Trump Jr. says before voting for his dad in midtown pic.twitter.com/z19P5ctVFu
7.07pm BST7.07pm BST
19:0719:07
View from the polls: healthy turnout at upstate siteView from the polls: healthy turnout at upstate site
Megan CarpentierMegan Carpentier
Megan Carpentier finds a line of voters in Wappingers Falls, New York, anxious for a polling station to open at noon:Megan Carpentier finds a line of voters in Wappingers Falls, New York, anxious for a polling station to open at noon:
The polls opened at 6am in New York today - but only if you were voting in New York City, the Long Island counties of Nassau and Suffolk, the four counties immediately north of New York City (Westchester, Rockland, Orange and Putnam) and Erie County, which contains Buffalo.Elsewhere in the state, the primary polls didn’t even open until noon. And so it was that, 10 minutes before noon, a group of anxious voters was queued up outside the Fishkill Plains Elementary School in Wappingers Falls, NY, waiting until the clock ticked down and the doors opened.Poll workers said they’d never seen another primary like it, though the 2008 general election lines were also quite long; one poll worker recalled starting a pool for how many primary voters they’d get and, eventually when they closed the doors, the person who picked “five” won. That year, she said, they did exercises and played word games just to keep from getting bored in the elementary school’s little gym.Not so this year, as folks streamed in and out in clusters through the 1:00 hour, taking perhaps more Republican than Democratic ballots. Only one person had trouble finding her name on the primary rolls: a registered Republican from age 18, the 30-something woman finally found her name and, while her daughter hid behind her legs playing peekaboo with the poll workers, cast her ballot. The polls opened at 6am in New York today - but only if you were voting in New York City, the Long Island counties of Nassau and Suffolk, the four counties immediately north of New York City (Westchester, Rockland, Orange and Putnam) and Erie County, which contains Buffalo.
Elsewhere in the state, the primary polls didn’t even open until noon. And so it was that, 10 minutes before noon, a group of anxious voters was queued up outside the Fishkill Plains Elementary School in Wappingers Falls, NY, waiting until the clock ticked down and the doors opened.
Poll workers said they’d never seen another primary like it, though the 2008 general election lines were also quite long; one poll worker recalled starting a pool for how many primary voters they’d get and, eventually when they closed the doors, the person who picked “five” won. That year, she said, they did exercises and played word games just to keep from getting bored in the elementary school’s little gym.
Not so this year, as folks streamed in and out in clusters through the 1:00 hour, taking perhaps more Republican than Democratic ballots. Only one person had trouble finding her name on the primary rolls: a registered Republican from age 18, the 30-something woman finally found her name and, while her daughter hid behind her legs playing peekaboo with the poll workers, cast her ballot.
UpdatedUpdated
at 7.08pm BST at 7.33pm BST
7.05pm BST7.05pm BST
19:0519:05
6.57pm BST6.57pm BST
18:5718:57
Trump camp accuses Cruz of bribing delegatesTrump camp accuses Cruz of bribing delegates
A Trump surrogate told CNN that Ted Cruz has been bribing delegates and she has seen it with her own eyes.A Trump surrogate told CNN that Ted Cruz has been bribing delegates and she has seen it with her own eyes.
It was a surprising charge in part because by all appearances Cruz’s dominance of Trump at capturing delegates has owed to the Cruz camp’s vastly superior organization and familiarity with the rules of the game.It was a surprising charge in part because by all appearances Cruz’s dominance of Trump at capturing delegates has owed to the Cruz camp’s vastly superior organization and familiarity with the rules of the game.
But Tana Goertz, Iowa co-chair for the Trump campaign and a former contestant on The Apprentice, Trump’s reality TV show, has now accused Cruz of outright bribery. “Bribing people to be delegates for him... I’ve seen it happening,” Goertz told CNN.But Tana Goertz, Iowa co-chair for the Trump campaign and a former contestant on The Apprentice, Trump’s reality TV show, has now accused Cruz of outright bribery. “Bribing people to be delegates for him... I’ve seen it happening,” Goertz told CNN.
Except when challenged on the point she lamely backed down and said she couldn’t talk about it without talking to Mr Trump first.Except when challenged on the point she lamely backed down and said she couldn’t talk about it without talking to Mr Trump first.
“I have seen shady behavior, let’s just call it that. ... Until I speak with Mr Trump, I am not at liberty to discuss this.”“I have seen shady behavior, let’s just call it that. ... Until I speak with Mr Trump, I am not at liberty to discuss this.”
Cruz adviser Ken Cuccinelli later forcefully rebutted the charge on CNN. “You know, I call foul and BS,” he said.Cruz adviser Ken Cuccinelli later forcefully rebutted the charge on CNN. “You know, I call foul and BS,” he said.
(h/t: @TPM)(h/t: @TPM)
6.45pm BST6.45pm BST
18:4518:45
New York representative Peter King, who has supported calls for surveillance of US mosques but said that Donald Trump went to far in calling for a ban on Muslim immigrants, tells MSNBC that he will “take cyanide” if Ted Cruz gets the nomination.New York representative Peter King, who has supported calls for surveillance of US mosques but said that Donald Trump went to far in calling for a ban on Muslim immigrants, tells MSNBC that he will “take cyanide” if Ted Cruz gets the nomination.
.@RepPeterKing: : "I'm not endorsing @tedcruz. I hate @tedcruz. I think I'll take cyanide if he got the nomination." pic.twitter.com/L1sqPek7uQ.@RepPeterKing: : "I'm not endorsing @tedcruz. I hate @tedcruz. I think I'll take cyanide if he got the nomination." pic.twitter.com/L1sqPek7uQ
The Guardian’s Ben Jacobs remembers well the support of King – a son of Galway, Limerick and Wales – for the Irish Republican Army and Sinn Féin, opposed in Northern Ireland politics, as some readers will know better than others, by the Social Democratic and Labour Party.The Guardian’s Ben Jacobs remembers well the support of King – a son of Galway, Limerick and Wales – for the Irish Republican Army and Sinn Féin, opposed in Northern Ireland politics, as some readers will know better than others, by the Social Democratic and Labour Party.
Congratulations to Ted Cruz on his endorsement by the SDLP https://t.co/ozKQbDQK9jCongratulations to Ted Cruz on his endorsement by the SDLP https://t.co/ozKQbDQK9j
Ben further recalls that this is not the first time a member of Congress has contemplated death by poisoning in confronting the prospect of a Cruz nomination. But the other member to do so, Lindsey Graham, subsequently concluded that even the poison of Cruz was preferable to the fatal gunshot to which he compared Donald Trump.Ben further recalls that this is not the first time a member of Congress has contemplated death by poisoning in confronting the prospect of a Cruz nomination. But the other member to do so, Lindsey Graham, subsequently concluded that even the poison of Cruz was preferable to the fatal gunshot to which he compared Donald Trump.
“You might find an antidote to poisoning, I don’t know, maybe there’s time,” Graham said in a Daily Show appearance:“You might find an antidote to poisoning, I don’t know, maybe there’s time,” Graham said in a Daily Show appearance:
6.25pm BST6.25pm BST
18:2518:25
The Hillary Clinton campaign is live blogging New York primary day. We’ve scrolled through and discerned a dearth of Bernie Sanders coverage. #skewedThe Hillary Clinton campaign is live blogging New York primary day. We’ve scrolled through and discerned a dearth of Bernie Sanders coverage. #skewed
Consider this bit of Q&A:Consider this bit of Q&A:
3. Hillary’s lead: a big deal?3. Hillary’s lead: a big deal?
It sure is. Hillary is currently leading by a wider pledged delegate margin than President Obama ever did in 2008. That’s important because no Democratic candidate has ever been nominated without winning the most pledged delegates. If Hillary wins New York even by the slimmest of margins, the path to a delegate lead becomes very difficult for Senator Sanders.It sure is. Hillary is currently leading by a wider pledged delegate margin than President Obama ever did in 2008. That’s important because no Democratic candidate has ever been nominated without winning the most pledged delegates. If Hillary wins New York even by the slimmest of margins, the path to a delegate lead becomes very difficult for Senator Sanders.
It's #PrimaryDay in New York. Get all you need to know on our live blog: https://t.co/LB1MIvu39F pic.twitter.com/pXFWgcZPDtIt's #PrimaryDay in New York. Get all you need to know on our live blog: https://t.co/LB1MIvu39F pic.twitter.com/pXFWgcZPDt
6.09pm BST6.09pm BST
18:0918:09
Former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani, who previously said he was voting for Donald Trump but that that did not constitute an endorsement, now admits that he is endorsing Donald Trump.Former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani, who previously said he was voting for Donald Trump but that that did not constitute an endorsement, now admits that he is endorsing Donald Trump.
“Why not say, ‘I’m Rudy Giuliani, I mean a lot in New York politics, I endorse Donald Trump?’” a CNN host asked Giuliani in a morning TV appearance.“Why not say, ‘I’m Rudy Giuliani, I mean a lot in New York politics, I endorse Donald Trump?’” a CNN host asked Giuliani in a morning TV appearance.
“I’m Rudy Giuliani, I mean a lot in New York politics, I endorse Donald Trump,” the former mayor replied.“I’m Rudy Giuliani, I mean a lot in New York politics, I endorse Donald Trump,” the former mayor replied.
6.06pm BST6.06pm BST
18:0618:06
The Guardian’s Megan Carpentier spots some creative advertising on the way upstate:The Guardian’s Megan Carpentier spots some creative advertising on the way upstate:
Hopewell Junction, New York. Primary Day. pic.twitter.com/aUlCeX2KAEHopewell Junction, New York. Primary Day. pic.twitter.com/aUlCeX2KAE
6.03pm BST6.03pm BST
18:0318:03
View from the polls: Trump supporter looking for a changeView from the polls: Trump supporter looking for a change
“I don’t think we need another politician,” says Mary Cummings in West Seneca, New York:“I don’t think we need another politician,” says Mary Cummings in West Seneca, New York:
Voter Voice: Mary Cummings likes @realDonaldTrump because he's a businessman, not "another politician." #NYPrimary pic.twitter.com/u5rhlWq4ZTVoter Voice: Mary Cummings likes @realDonaldTrump because he's a businessman, not "another politician." #NYPrimary pic.twitter.com/u5rhlWq4ZT
5.58pm BST
17:58
View from the polls: voter frustrated by registration glitch
Ciara McCarthy
Garrett O’Connor, a labor organizer in Brooklyn, said he was only able to cast a provisional ballot on Tuesday despite changing his party registration before the deadline, reports the Guardian’s Ciara McCarthy:
O’Connor said he was previously affiliated with the Working Families Party before deciding to change his affiliation to the Democratic Party in October so that he could vote in Tuesday’s primary.
When O’Connor, 36, showed up to his polling location in Brooklyn, he said he didn’t he didn’t appear on the list of registered voters in his polling place, and that election workers weren’t able to explain why his name wasn’t on the list. O’Connor cast a vote for Sanders in a provisional ballot, but his vote won’t be counted until after Tuesday when his voter eligibility is confirmed.
“A provisional ballot isn’t enough,” he said. “[It was] important to me to show up and be counted and not to be labeled lazy or apathetic.”
5.36pm BST
17:36
Here’s a clip from Hillary Clinton’s appearance on the Late Show with Stephen Colbert, which aired Monday night. They went to lunch at the Carnegie Deli on 7th Avenue.
“It’s awkward eating in front of the press,” she says. “Anything that makes you look silly.”
She also compliments Colbert on his Bill Clinton impression. He teaches her how to eat cheesecake. Then he stiffs her on the check.
Updated
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5.27pm BST
17:27
Wonder who these people voted for...#NYPrimary pic.twitter.com/4QWVdT3rQy
5.21pm BST
17:21
The Democratic campaigns get out the vote on Twitter:
Go vote, New York. It'll only take you one try. https://t.co/gRqmpE5EVh #PrimaryDay pic.twitter.com/H7bPYy5Yuu
Every single vote for Bernie is important. Vote Bernie Sanders today in New York!https://t.co/w4zRk7IHl9
5.18pm BST
17:18
If Bernie Sanders finishes as runner-up in New York, it won’t have been for lack of trying to reach voters. In addition to staging mega rallies in at least three of the five boroughs and appearances everywhere, the Sanders camp outspent Clinton 2-1 on TV advertising, NBC News reports:
Sanders outspent Clinton over airwaves in NY by a 2-1 margin, per our data. Little spending on GOP side pic.twitter.com/8IVjhc2kOT
5.14pm BST
17:14
View from the polls: Sleepy Hollow, New York
Megan Carpentier
Just north of New York City in the village of Sleepy Hollow, first made famous by Washington Irving’s book The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, the polling place at the Fraternal Order of Eagles post was quiet just before noon from the outside, writes the Guardian’s Megan Carpentier:
But inside, poll workers confirmed that there was more voter traffic that in the average primary.As they called the county board of elections to ask what to do about a reporter – The Guardian was the first media outlet to ever stop by the site, according to the long-time officials – one of two voters filling out their forms asked for clarification on whether the delegates on the ballot were pledged to a candidate and how he was supposed to pick six.“You need a PhD to figure this out,” he muttered to himself, walking back to his booth to finish filling out his ballot.
Updated
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4.55pm BST
16:55
Imagining Trump taking the oath of office:
Oh God, the fingers. pic.twitter.com/cSwC6SXvIl
"It was a proud moment" @realDonaldTrump says about casting a vote for himself
Updated
at 5.00pm BST
4.45pm BST
16:45
Who are the Democratic superdelegates and where did they come from?
At the Democratic national convention in July, 719 people will cast votes for Hillary Clinton or Bernie Sanders to be the presidential nomination who were not selected at any primary or caucus, writes Guardian political reporter Ben Jacobs:
These are the so-called superdelegates, but it is not their role at the convention, nor any special powers or abilities, that makes them super. It is their stupendous ability to attract controversy.
There are three ways to become a superdelegate. The first is to be elected to public office as a Democratic governor, senator or congressman. The second is to become one of 438 members of the Democratic National Committee as a loyal party activist or powerbroker. The third and most difficult is to become a superdelegate for life by having served as president, vice-president, DNC chair or Democratic leader in either chamber of the US Congress.
Superdelegates were created in the early 1980s after the Democratic party looked at rewriting their rules after an extended fight over them in the bitter primary between incumbent president Jimmy Carter and Massachusetts senator Ted Kennedy. The party had made dramatic changes to its rules after the chaos of 1968, when Hubert Humphrey, who had not won a single primary, was nevertheless nominated at the Chicago convention.
The new rules replaced selection by party bosses in conventions with processes that made picking delegates far more democratic and included language that encouraged women and minorities to be adequately represented.
Read further:
Related: Who are the Democratic superdelegates and where did they come from?
4.29pm BST
16:29
The New York candidates vote.
4.21pm BST
16:21
Ben Jacobs
Like British parliamentary elections in the 18th century, the Republican presidential primary in 2016 may be decided in rotten boroughs, writes Guardian political reporter Ben Jacobs:
While the rotten boroughs in Georgian England were the long since abandoned sites of medieval towns where aristocratic landowners could handpick members of parliament, the Republican rotten boroughs are vibrant, heavily populated urban areas in places like New York and Los Angeles.
They just don’t have very many registered Republicans.
The result of gerrymandered redistricting processes and the deep alienation of minority communities from the Republican party is that there are many congressional districts where registered Republicans are almost as rare as unicorns. Republican delegate apportionment rules in many states, however, mean that every congressional district receives three delegates to the convention, regardless of how many GOP voters live there. [...]
New York has particularly extreme examples of this. A total of 285 people turned out in what was then New York’s 16th congressional district to vote in the 2012 Republican presidential primary: 151 of them voted for Mitt Romney and he won three delegates there. This district, then composed of the South Bronx, was the most heavily Democratic congressional district in the country and Obama won almost 97% of the vote there in 2012. While turnout will certainly be higher on Tuesday with Donald Trump on the ballot, the district, now renumbered the 17th, will still award three delegates no matter how anemic voter turnout is.
Related: Republican 'rotten boroughs' could clinch nominee thanks to delegate quirk