There is joy at the NY Post but some skeptism over this change of affairs when few thought the absentee ballots could close an 1100 vote lead. There were ballots tossed - by whom? The Dem party controlled judges? We'll see.Mr. Goldfeder said he intended to challenge the decision to invalidate all but 487 of the 2,816 affidavit ballots cast. Election officials said they had determined that the ballots, used when a voter’s name is not listed at the polling place, were invalid or had been cast by ineligible voters... Mr. Goldfeder said he intended to challenge the decision to invalidate all but 487 of the 2,816 affidavit ballots cast. Election officials said they had determined that the ballots, used when a voter’s name is not listed at the polling place, were invalid or had been cast by ineligible voters.The primary race was cast as a battle between the traditional power bases in Queens and the progressive forces that propelled Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to her primary victory in New York last year. Ms. Katz had the backing of unions and local political leaders, while Ms. Cabán received support from prominent members of Congress, including Ms. Ocasio-Cortez.Ms. Katz is ahead by 20 votes, 34,898 to 34,878, according to lawyers representing her. Jerry H. Goldfeder, a veteran election lawyer representing Ms. Cabán, agreed that Ms. Katz was now ahead by 20 votes..... NY Times
An old pal, Jerry Goldfeder is the best election lawyer there is -- I was a bit surprised to see him identified as Cabán’s lawyer but a good sign for her. Jerry has had many regular Dems as clients and his willingness to step into the progressive trench if he pulls this out for Cabán might get some blowback. In my previous articles on this race I've painted this as a struggle between the Dem party machine and the Democratic Socialists and other progressive elements. Many people on the left do not think the machine can be broken and they will retain control of the Dem Party, which may lead to some interesting developments - like a serious third party -- and it won't be the Greens from what I can see.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/03/nyregion/katz-caban-recount-queens.html?fbclid=IwAR3TxKHSrRldpwrK8S3GdMDsObzacAsqOopqvSRr83cbCfyLIYH-cg6_ZmY
In Surprise, Katz Pulls Just Ahead of Cabán in Queens District Attorney Primary
Tiffany
Cabán’s 1,100-vote lead evaporated after the count of paper ballots,
putting Melinda Katz 20 votes ahead in the hotly contested primary.
The
Democratic primary for district attorney in Queens, a race that drew
nationwide attention, was thrown deep into uncertainty on Wednesday
after a count of paper ballots flipped the primary-night result.
Tiffany
Cabán, a 31-year-old public defender, saw her almost 1,100-vote lead
evaporate, with Melinda Katz, the Queens borough president, edging out
to a 20-vote lead.
The tight margin
will automatically trigger a recount, according to Valerie Vazquez-Diaz,
a spokeswoman for the New York City Board of Elections. It also spurred
accusations from Ms. Cabán’s side that elections officials improperly
invalidated more than 2,000 affidavit ballots before the paper ballots
were counted.
“We are going to fight
to make sure every valid vote is counted and every voter has a voice,”
said Bill Lipton, the New York director of the Working Families Party,
which supported Ms. Cabán. “And when all the votes are counted, we are
confident Tiffany Cabán will be the next Queens district attorney.”
The
primary race was cast as a battle between the traditional power bases
in Queens and the progressive forces that propelled Representative
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to her primary victory in New York last year.
Ms. Katz had the backing of unions and local political leaders, while
Ms. Cabán received support from prominent members of Congress, including
Ms. Ocasio-Cortez.
Ms. Katz is ahead
by 20 votes, 34,898 to 34,878, according to lawyers representing her.
Jerry H. Goldfeder, a veteran election lawyer representing Ms. Cabán,
agreed that Ms. Katz was now ahead by 20 votes.
The new vote total meant that Ms. Katz drew twice as many votes from the paper ballots as Ms. Cabán did.
Mr.
Goldfeder said he intended to challenge the decision to invalidate all
but 487 of the 2,816 affidavit ballots cast. Election officials said
they had determined that the ballots, used when a voter’s name is not
listed at the polling place, were invalid or had been cast by ineligible
voters.
The Board of Elections would
not release any information until the election results were certified
but confirmed that there would be a recount. The board has a policy of
conducting a manual recount when the victory is by less than 0.5
percent, Ms. Vazquez-Diaz said.
“Queens
voters are inspired by Tiffany Cabán’s campaign and her vision for real
criminal justice reform,” Ms. Cabán’s spokeswoman, Monica Klein, said
in a statement. “If every valid paper ballot vote is counted, we are
confident we will prevail.”
On primary night in June, Ms. Cabán declared victory, even as Ms. Katz vowed to fight on. On Wednesday, the roles were reversed.
“We
said from the beginning that every vote needs to be counted and that
every voter needs to be heard, and now we see clearly why this must
always be the case,” Ms. Katz said in a statement issued Wednesday
night. “I am honored to be ready to serve as Queens’ next district
attorney.”
Ms. Cabán, a first-time candidate, had drawn celebrity support and a wealth of out-of-state donations
after running a campaign that was seen as an extension of other
criminal justice reformers who have won top prosecutor jobs in places
like Boston and Philadelphia. Those prosecutors, Larry Krasner, in
Philadelphia, and Rachael Rollins, in Boston, both endorsed her.
Ms. Cabán had also picked up endorsements from Ms. Ocasio-Cortez — they campaigned together
two days before the election — and Senators Elizabeth Warren of
Massachusetts and Bernie Sanders of Vermont, who are both running for
president.
Before the paper ballots
were counted, Ms. Warren even used Twitter to congratulate Ms. Cabán on
her apparent victory in the primary.
If
Ms. Katz’s slim lead holds up, it would be a victory for the power
bases that typically dictate election results in Queens; traditionally,
party leaders back the Democratic incumbent or an anointed successor.
The last contested Democratic primary occurred in 1955.
Mr.
Goldfeder said he was “optimistic” that Ms. Cabán could still win the
primary because of the more than 2,000 affidavits that were invalidated.
“We have identified a goodly number that should have been counted,” he said.
Under
a manual recount, there is also the possibility that some ballots that
were initially invalidated — possibly because voters failed to properly
fill in the bubble next to their chosen candidate — would be validated
and added to the vote total.
Whoever
wins will be an overwhelming favorite in November’s general election
against the Republican candidate, Daniel Kogan. No Republican has been
elected to the office since Dana Wallace’s win in 1920.
The
Democratic primary showed that voters in Queens were willing to
entertain major change to the borough’s criminal justice system. All six
candidates had backed proposals to get rid of bail for low-level
offenses, move away from prosecuting sex workers and form a
conviction-integrity unit.
The Indypendent
Of the 3,552 absentee votes counted yesterday, Katz received 1993 (56 percent), five other candidates split 785 (22.1 percent) and Cabán garnered 774 (21.7 percent). That means Katz gained roughly 18 percent while Cabán dropped 17 percent since election night.
Such a large swing raises questions about the sources of the votes. A breakdown of the absentee votes is not yet available, but Katz reportedly did well on Assembly Districts 23–29, which span from the Rockaways through SE Queens to Forest Hills and Flushing, all areas of Katz’s strength.
The Queens Board of Elections tossed almost 2300 of nearly 2800 affidavit votes cast on election day. Veteran election lawyers say that is not an uncommon ratio, given that many voters registered in various parties turn out in a closed primary.
This past January the state legislature passed reforms to the process of voters changing their registration address (as part of a larger package of updated election legislation). The old method, which remains on the Board of Elections (BoE) site, required voters to file a change of address through the Post Office.
The new law, which took effect at the end of March, allows voters to simply show up at the new address and file an affidavit. The Queens DSA and Cabán campaign are actively soliciting stories regarding affidavit votes.
Election lawyer Sarah Steiner says that while counting affidavits in a Harlem district leader race yesterday “the Manhattan BoE was applying the new law, which means that the NYC BoE has adopted it as policy.”
It’s still possible that some affidavits from voters who recently moved to or within Queens were wrongly rejected. While Cabán’s election lawyer Jerry Goldfeder says his team has found a “goodly number” of mistakenly denied ballots, it will be a surprise if the number gives Cabán a substantial lead.
The next stage is the full recount, during which paper ballots not read by machine scanners will be pivotal. Conspicuously absent from the election recount process is any auditing of the voter sign-in books at poll sites. While handwriting analysis is not an exact science, signatures on ballot petitions often show clear patterns of fraud.
Starting next week, Cabán’s team will embark on the long slog through 90k votes. One thing is clear: Her troops will continue to fight until the last ballot is counted.
https://indypendent.org/2019/07/with-queens-da-election-too-close-to-call-caban-troops-prepare-to-fight-for-every-vote/?fbclid=IwAR0S1kTaosbi-N5fwLotpeH313oC8UrtpyQFy0II9g-5PXBT1WcszobF38k
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