The group said it expects early, unofficial results by June 29, an updated count by July 6, and final results around July 12, once all absentee ballots have been counted and received. That’s due to a combination of several factors, including a July deadline for thousands of mail-in ballots and time needed for the city to tabulate the ranked-choice votes.Īccording to Rank the Vote NYC, an organization that previously advocated for bringing ranked-choice voting to the city and is now educating people about the process, full results will likely be available within about three weeks of Election Day. Though Election Day is Tuesday, June 22, and more than 190,000 people participated in early voting that began earlier this month, official results are likely weeks away. Democrats hold most offices in New York City barring an unexpected twist, it’s highly likely that continues this fall.Īnd just to make things even spicier, it’s the city’s first swing at ranked-choice voting, a process in which voters rank up to five candidates for each office rather than just picking one. Though it’s only the primary, it’s functionally a general election for most candidates across the city. New York City’s mayoral primary has been chaotic, and it may not end after polls close Tuesday night.įormer presidential candidate Andrew Yang was dragged for saying the Times Square subway stop is his favorite in the city, Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams was the center of a scandal over whether he actually lives in New Jersey, one of the race’s progressives was accused of sexual harassment, and another was accused of union busting.
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