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Disputed Ballots Must Be Counted in N.Y. Congressional Race, U.S. Judge Rules | Disputed Ballots Must Be Counted in N.Y. Congressional Race, U.S. Judge Rules |
(32 minutes later) | |
A federal judge in Manhattan ruled late Monday that more than a thousand disputed ballots in a closely watched congressional primary should be counted, upending a six-week-old race that has drawn the attention of President Trump and embarrassed the New York City Board of Elections. | |
The ruling, by Judge Analisa Torres of Federal District Court in Manhattan, may not affect the outcome in the June 23 primary: Representative Carolyn B. Maloney is leading her Democratic challenger, Suraj Patel, by some 3,700 votes, and the judge’s decision was narrowly drawn to force the counting of only a portion of the 12,500 disputed absentee ballots. | |
Still, the judge’s decision is just the latest twist in a race that has been used by the president to cast doubts on the efficacy of vote-by-mail systems nationwide, even as he trails in polls leading up to his bid for re-election in November. | |
On Monday, Mr. Trump said that Ms. Maloney’s race was “a mess” and “a total disaster,” and suggested that it should be “rerun.” | |
“They’re six weeks into it now,” Mr. Trump said. “They have no clue what’s going on.” | “They’re six weeks into it now,” Mr. Trump said. “They have no clue what’s going on.” |
Under Judge Torres’s decision, ballots received the day after Election Day — June 24 — will be counted “without regard to whether such ballots are postmarked by June 23.” Mr. Patel estimates that this is about 1,200 ballots, not enough to overtake Ms. Maloney. | |
In sworn testimony last week, postal officials conceded that their system of identifying and postmarking ballots — a critical element in determining whether ballots were sent by the Election Day deadline — was not foolproof, and that some ballots had not been postmarked. | |
Late Monday, Mr. Patel lauded the decision, casting it as a warning about possible complications in November. “This is no longer a Democratic or a Republican fight, this is not an establishment versus progressive fight,” he said. “This is now a fight for the voting rights of millions in a pandemic.” | Late Monday, Mr. Patel lauded the decision, casting it as a warning about possible complications in November. “This is no longer a Democratic or a Republican fight, this is not an establishment versus progressive fight,” he said. “This is now a fight for the voting rights of millions in a pandemic.” |