New York Daily News

Freight train derails near Albany

Poll of likely voters gives Suozzi edge ove Pilip

- BY DAVE GOLDINER

Democrat Tom Suozzi leads Republican Mazi Melesa Pilip by 4% in a new poll of their special election battle for the Long Island seat previously held by disgraced exRep. George Santos.

Suozzi holds a 48%-to-44% lead over Pilip in the poll of likely voters in the election set for Tuesday, according to the Siena College-Newsday poll released Thursday.

Pollster Don Levy suggested turnout will be comparativ­ely light at about 25% and the results will be determined by the most regular voters in the suburban swing district.

“Relative turnout Democratic to Republican is indeed the dynamic that will probably turn the race,” Levy said.

The poll came out as Suozzi (inset l.) and Pilip (inset r.) prepared to clash in their only face-to-face debate Thursday night on the Long Island News 12 cable channel.

The election will help determine control of Congress and comes as the GOP clings to a narrow margin in the House.

The tiny edge was dramatized when Republican­s fell a single vote short of impeaching Homeland Security Director Alejandro Mayorkas.

The survey of 694 voters in the district spanning the North Shore and a slice of Queens is the second poll to show Suozzi, who represente­d the district for three terms, with a modest advantage.

The poll included 39% Democrats and 39% Republican­s with the rest being independen­ts.

More Democrats than Republican­s have voted in recent elections including the 2022 contest won by Santos when the electorate included 39% Democrats and 35% Republican­s.

But Levy contends the electorate will look more like the off-year 2021 race for Nassau County executive that the GOP won.

The same Siena survey found former President Donald Trump leading President Biden by a 47%-42% margin. If that proved true, the result would flip the script on Biden’s 8% win in the district in 2020. The only other poll of the district last month showed Suozzi with a similarly narrow lead, but found his edge could balloon to double digits if only the most likely of voters turn out.

So far, turnout has been fairly robust in early in-person and absentee mail-in voting, with both sets of voting data offering mostly good news for Suozzi.

After four days of early voting, registered Democrats held a 13.7% lead over Republican­s, compared to a smaller 7.8% edge in 2022, according to Target Smart, a voting analysis firm. Among absentee ballots, Democrats led by 29% compared to a 26% edge in the race won by Santos.

“The early vote data thus far suggests Democrats are more engaged,” Tom Bonior, a Democratic analyst with Target Smart, told the News.

Republican­s say they are pleased by strong early turnout in Pilip’s home base of Great Neck and note that GOP voters tend to vote in person on Election Day.

 ?? ?? Freight train cars sit off the tracks following a Wednesday evening derailment along the Hoosic River in upstate Valley Falls, north of Albany. Inset, some of the cargo of plastic pellets and cooking oil ended up in the river.
Freight train cars sit off the tracks following a Wednesday evening derailment along the Hoosic River in upstate Valley Falls, north of Albany. Inset, some of the cargo of plastic pellets and cooking oil ended up in the river.
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