Official Election Returns, 20th U.S. House District

New York has released official election returns for the special election of March 31 in the 20th U.S. House district. The only candidates on the ballot were Democrat Scott Murphy and Republican Jim Tedisco. Murphy won with a margin of 726 votes. There were 429 “blank, void and scattering” votes. Probably the overwhelming majority of these were for Eric Sundwall, Libertarian Party nominee whose petitions were challenged so that he did not appear on the regular ballot. He did appear on some absentee ballots. Since U.S. House was the only office on the ballot, it is not likely that many, if any, of the 429 “blank, void and scattering” votes were actual blanks. If someone took the bother to go to the polls, it is unlikely that he or she would not vote for the only office on the ballot.

The Conservative Party cross-endorsed the Republican nominee; the Working Families and Independence Parties cross-endorsed the Democratic nominee. The percentage that each party received in the special election was: Democratic 43.64%; Republican 42.73%; Conservative 7.04%; Independence 4.20%; Working Families 2.39%. The Conservative Party showing was unusually strong; that party had not polled as much as 7% in any U.S. House race in New York in November 2008, even in districts with no Republican nominee.

In November 2008, the percentage for each party had been: Democratic 57.43%; Republican 32.06%; Conservative 3.23%; Independence 2.57%; Working Families 4.70%. In November 2008 the Independence Party had cross-endorsed the Republican nominee.


Comments

Official Election Returns, 20th U.S. House District — No Comments

  1. certification challenge (appeal emergency motion of USCA 2nd Circ 08-4323) has been NOTICED at SCOTUS based on Loeber v Spargo unconstitutional districting claim.

  2. As I read the report, there is no breakdown by candidate of the split voting which may have occurred. Is the breakdown by candidate available?
    The surge in Conservative and Independence voters as a percent of total votes, and the comparison with earlier voting, is quite interesting.

    Jack Grogan
    J

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