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United StatesEconomyOverlooked from the left3 days ago

Mail-in ballots delay naming winner of District's mayoral primary

Mail-in ballot processing has delayed the announcement of the winner in the District of Columbia's mayoral primary election. With approximately 75% of ballots counted, Council member Janeese Lewis George leads with 53% of the vote, while her main opponent, Kenyan McDuffie, trails with 37%. The election uses ranked choice voting, which may require multiple rounds of counting. Lewis George, a self-described democratic socialist, has outlined plans including building housing, expanding rent control, and implementing a tax on out-of-state businesses.

Batches of uncounted mail-in votes left D.C. residents without a clear answer Wednesday to the question of who will be the city’s next mayor.

A Board of Elections spokesperson said staffers are working through the mail-in ballots that were dropped off on Tuesday’s Election Day and expected to provide an update to their initial results sometime on Wednesday.

This is also the District’s first go-around using ranked choice voting. Some residual delays were anticipated as poll workers adjust to the tiered system that can involve two rounds of counting before a winner is determined.

With roughly three-quarters of the ballots tabulated, D.C. Council member Janeese Lewis George held a commanding lead with 53% of the vote while her main contender, former Councilman Kenyan McDuffie , trailed with 37%.

The primary winner will replace Mayor Muriel Bowser , who opted not to seek reelection at the end of her third term.

Ms. Lewis George, a self-described democratic socialist, would provide a major shakeup to city hall if she can seal the win. She promised to build more than 70,000 units of housing over the next five years, expand rent control in the District and ensure no family pays more than 7% of their household income for childcare.

Those policy goals will come to life, in part, from a proposed tax on business owners who live in Virginia and Maryland.

President Trump threatened to “take over” the District if Ms. Lewis George did win the District’s crucial mayoral primary, which all but guarantees who will come out on top in the general election this fall in the Democratic-heavy city.

But Ms. Lewis George acknowledged on election night that the president’s comments benefited her political ambitions.

“It motivated people to get to the polls,” she told a press gaggle at Howard Theatre late Tuesday. “I heard that today when I went to the polls, that residents came up to me and said, ’You know what? If Trump doesn’t like you, I love you.’”

But Mr. McDuffie, who billed himself as the pro-business, crime-fighting candidate in the primary, has not lost hope for a comeback.

“As results continue to come in, I urge residents to remain patient because every vote matters and every vote must be counted,” the former at-large D.C. Council member said in a statement. “Every ballot cast by a DC resident deserves to be heard and they will. We respect that process, and we are going to see it through.”

The race for the District’s nonvoting congressional representative was the lone office decided on election night.

D.C. Council member Robert White trounced his council colleague Brooke Pinto by winning 63% of the vote to her 22%. The seat became open after incumbent Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton, who first took office in 1991, chose to retire from politics.

Mr. White campaigned on showing some teeth to the Trump administration and preserving the District’s autonomy.

“My election means we’re going to keep our independence and we’re going to get statehood. People know I’m not going to lay down. I’m going to fight,” Mr. White told The Associated Press after his win was declared.

Elsewhere on the ballot, democratic socialist Aparna Raj leads the race for the Ward 1 council seat and Oye Owolewa leads for the at-large Democrat seat.

As for the at-large independent council seat, former Councilwoman Elissa Silverman is poised to revive her political career with a double-digit lead over the next closest candidate.

Read the full article at The Washington Times
Source document: Board of Elections spokesperson

1 reports

The Washington TimesIndependentRight3 days ago
Mail-in ballots delay naming winner of District's mayoral primary

Mail-in ballot processing has delayed the announcement of the winner in the District of Columbia's mayoral primary election. With approximately 75% of ballots counted, Council member Janeese Lewis George leads with 53% of the vote, while her main opponent, Kenyan McDuffie, trails with 37%. The election uses ranked choice voting, which may require multiple rounds of counting. Lewis George, a self-described democratic socialist, has outlined plans including building housing, expanding rent control, and implementing a tax on out-of-state businesses.

Bias read (Right): The article frames the potential victory of Janeese Lewis George, a self-described democratic socialist, as a 'major shakeup' and highlights her progressive policies such as rent control and a tax on out-of-state businesses. These elements suggest a critical perspective toward her platform, aligning

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  • governmentBoard of Elections spokesperson