Why is New York so bad at running elections?
After 100 days of counting, suing and recounting, NY-22 has a congresswoman
ONE HUNDRED days after November’s election, New York’s 22nd congressional district (NY-22) has a representative in Washington. On February 5th a state judge ordered Oneida County in upstate New York and the state’s boards of elections to certify their results. Claudia Tenney, a Republican, beat Anthony Brindisi by 109 votes. It was the last undecided congressional race in the country. The lengthy delay meant the district’s constituents did not have a voice in votes on impeachment and the House leadership or on a presence on committees. Yet NY-22 is far from the only district with election problems. For New Yorkers across the state, dysfunction at the board of elections is par for the course and a perennial problem.
This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Count-22”
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