Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)
Court enmeshed in tight congressional rematch
GOP candidate seeks to reclaim central N.Y. seat
ALBANY, N.Y. — A rematch between a Republican former House member and the Democrat who ousted her from office two years ago has come down to a just a few dozen votes, with a judge likely to play a role in the final outcome.
Republican Claudia Tenney is vying to reclaim her seat from U.S. Rep. Anthony Brindisi, the Democrat, in a district that stretches from Lake Ontario to the Pennsylvania border east of Syracuse.
She had a lead of more than 28,000 votes on Nov. 3, but absentee ballots have highly favored Brindisi.
County election boards have withheld information about the current count from the public, but Tenney’s campaign put the current gap at around 100 votes, while Brindisi’s campaign says it could be less than 100.
That could make the outcome dependent on a judge’s examination of rejected and challenged ballots, which is set to begin Monday and continue Tuesday. In a court hearing Friday, Justice Scott J. DelConte ordered the eight counties in the district to bring those ballots to the Oswego County Courthouse next week.
Tenney said she’s confident her thin lead will hold.
Brindisi, who defeated Tenney by fewer than 4,500 votes in 2018, is still hopeful he’ll come out on top.
Going into the election, Brindisi, 41, was seen as among the vulnerable House Democrats. Republicans outnumber Democrats in the district and President Donald Trump remains popular with many people in central New York.
There are eight counties in the congressional district. The counting of absentee ballots is largely finished, elections officials said, but disputes remain about some ballots that were rejected for technical errors or weren’t initially counted because of voter eligibility questions.
State law requires a winner to be certified by Nov. 28.