Joe Biden wins New York on an unprecedented Election Day
NEW YORK - Pandemic-scarred New Yorkers have chosen Democrat Joe Biden for president and were awaiting results Tuesday in congressional and state legislative races.
Biden's victory in New York over Republican President Donald Trump was widely expected and was called by The Associated Press shortly after the polls closed at 9 p.m. The former vice president takes the state's 29 Electoral College votes.
The national race for president remains undecided in an election where in-person campaigning was limited and volunteers in many places couldn't go door-to-door to get out the vote.
In other New York races, New York state Republicans are trying to seize back seats in the congressional delegation that the party lost two years ago. Democrats, meanwhile, have hopes of winning a two-thirds supermajority in the state Senate, which could move the state further to the left.
New York City police are keeping an eye on election-related protests but don't anticipate the kind of unrest that unfolded in cities across the U.S. after Minneapolis police killed George Floyd in May, Chief of Department Terence Monahan said. Many New York City businesses, including Macy's flagship Manhattan store, have boarded up windows as a precaution.
A pair of races are slated to make history with two Democrats poised to become the first openly gay Black members of Congress. Ritchie Torres and Mondaire Jones both won Democratic primaries in the spring to replace veteran Congress members who are retiring.
Torres, who identifies as Afro-Latino, has been a member of the New York City Council since 2014. The congressional district in the Bronx he hopes to represent is one of the poorest and most Democratic in the nation. Torres, 32, faces Republican Patrick Delices in the race to succeed U.S. Rep. Jose Serrano.
Jones is a 33-year-old Black lawyer who ran with the backing of progressives including U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders and U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez in a district that includes all of Rockland county and part of Westchester County. The Republican candidate in the race to succeed U.S. Rep. Nita Lowey is Maureen McArdle Schulman.
Openly gay white people have served in Congress since the 1980s, as well as at least one Black congresswoman who chose not to speak publicly about her sexuality, the late U.S. Rep. Barbara Jordan, of Texas.
2020 Election: Here are the House races to watch
The first openly gay person to represent New York in Congress, U.S. Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney, was first elected in 2012. The Democrat is now seeking a fifth term in a race against Republican Chele Farley.
More than 3.7 million votes, a record, were cast in New York before the polls even opened on Election Day. That includes more than 2.5 million ballots from early voting and at least 1.2 million absentee ballots, according to the state Board of Elections.
Winners in some New York congressional contests in the state's June primary were not declared for weeks because of the volume of absentee ballots cast as voters stayed home to avoid potential risks connected to the coronavirus pandemic.
Similar waits for results were expected in close races for several New York House seats, including some that flipped from the Republican to the Democratic column in 2018 — and that Republicans have been hoping to flip back.
Democrat Max Rose is trying to win a second term in a battleground district that includes all of Staten Island and a slice of Brooklyn. He's in a tough fight with Republican challenger Nicole Malliotakis, a member of the state Assembly who unsuccessfully ran for mayor in 2017.
Former U.S. Rep. Claudia Tenney, a Republican voted out of office in 2018, is trying to reclaim her seat in central New York from the Democrat who beat her, U.S. Rep. Anthony Brindisi.
Another rematch in a neighboring district features Democrat Dana Balter challenging three-term Republican U.S. Rep. John Katko, who beat her in 2018.
There's less suspense about results in the 14th Congressional District, where the 31-year-old incumbent, Ocasio-Cortez, is widely expected to win. Her little-known Republican challenger John Cummings, a teacher and former police officer, has spent more than $8.5 million on the race with fundraising buoyed by out-of-town conservatives.
One district to the north, in parts of the Bronx and Westchester County, former middle school principal Jamaal Bowman is also poised for victory after defeating longtime U.S. Rep. Eliot Engel in the Democratic primary. He has no Republican opponent in the race but faces Patrick McManus, a former police officer and firefighter, running on the Conservative Party line.
In state legislative races, Democrats were seeking veto-proof supermajority in the state Senate two years after they won control of the chamber for the first time in decades.
Democrats hold 40 seats in the 63-seat Senate. They need only two more to achieve a two-thirds supermajority. The party already holds a supermajority in the state Assembly.
The consolidation of Democratic control in both houses could alter the balance of power between the Legislature and Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a moderate Democrat who would be unable to veto progressive legislation affecting taxes, law enforcement and other issues.
Get breaking news alerts in the FOX5NY News app. Download for FREE!