New York Post

New York congressio­nal races

Reliable red is blue as NY Dems flip House seats

- By NOLAN HICKS Additional reporting by Kevin Sheehan and Shari Logan

New Yorkers delivered a sharp rebuke to President Trump on Tuesday in a mini-“Blue Wave” of House races that included an Afghan war veteran’s stunning upset of incumbent GOP Congressma­n Dan Donovan.

It was one of three Democratic victories in the Empire State that helped the party flip the US House of Representa­tives — with the others coming in upstate races fueled by massive fundraisin­g hauls.

“Everybody gets a piece of the American dream in America, rich or poor. We believed and then we won!” Democrat victor Max Rose told supporters after Donovan conceded.

He ended his remarks by urging supporters to applaud his defeated opponent, saying, “Tonight we party but tomorrow we get to work!”

Voters in the normally red 11th Congressio­nal District — which covers Staten Island and portions of southern Brooklyn — gave Rose 53-47 percent win with more than 99 percent of precincts reporting.

Rose’s upset came despite lastminute GOP robocalls featuring Trump that aimed to bolster the incumbent, who struggled after swinging to the right to beat back a primary challenge from former Congressma­n-turned-convict Michael Grimm.

In another key race, Harvardedu­cated lawyer Antonio Delgado defeated incumbent GOP Rep. John Faso, who also had Trump’s support during the often nasty race.

Faso conceded the Hudson Valley seat to his opponent about two hours after the polls closed. With all precincts tallied, the incumbent trailed by three points, 49-46 percent.

“I am proud of the tenure that I had,” said Faso, who served only one term.

CNN and CBS News projected that Assemblyma­n Anthony Brindisi had defeated incumbent Rep. Claudia Tenney to take her seat representi­ng Central New York south of Syracuse. He led the one-term incumbent by less than 1 percentage point, 49.5-49.0, with all precincts tallied.

Joining them in the winner’s circle was Alexandria OcasioCort­ez. The Democratic socialist easily cruised to victory in the 14th District, which covers Queens and parts of The Bronx.

Her virtually unconteste­d race followed a stunning upset in June of longtime Congressma­n Joe Crowley, the chairman of the Queens Democratic Party.

New York City’s other Democratic incumbents cruised to victory: Reps. Gregory Meeks, Nydia Velazquez, Hakeem Jeffries and Eliot Engel did not even have Republican opponents. Reps. Yvette Clarke, Jerry Nadler, Carolyn Maloney, Adriano Espaillat and Jose Serrano all easily topped their GOP rivals.

Republican­s were able to find some good news out on Long Island — barely.

Longtime GOP Rep. Pete King squeaked by Liuba Grechen Shirley, a newbie pol who raised nearly $1 million in the upstart bid.

“This is a great victory for the people of Long Island,” said King, whose 2nd District includes parts of Nassau and Suffolk counties. “It’s a victory for those people who believe in supporting the po- lice, who believed in rebuilding the military and who believe in destroying MS-13 and going after ISIS and al Qaeda.”

GOP Rep. Lee Zeldin, whose 1st District covers part of Suffolk County, had a 52-45 percent lead on Democratic Perry Gershon.

Indicted upstate GOP Congressma­n Chris Collins, who represents rural areas outside Buffalo, also appeared to hang on in his deep-red district despite facing charges for alleged insider stock trading.

However, Democratic challenger Nate McMurray demanded a recount after conceding when Collins’ lead fell to just one point, 48-47 percent.

“We are demanding a recount. Mr. Collins is going to need another set of lawyers,” McMurray tweeted.

Rose’s battle to represent New York’s 11th District was the only competitiv­e congressio­nal race this cycle in heavily Democratic New York City.

He dominated the Brooklyn portion of the district, taking an 8,000 vote victory out of Bay Ridge, Fort Hamilton, Bath Beach and nearby neighborho­ods.

But the Democrat also managed to win typically GOP-friendly Staten Island, eking out a 400vote margin in Richmond County.

“Voters are looking for non-incumbent and relatable,” said David Birdsell, the dean of the Marxe School of Public and Internatio­nal Affairs at Baruch College-CUNY. “Donovan labored under the image of the recondite, ‘safe’ officehold­er, an anathema in this cycle.”

Congratula­tions poured in from Democrats in Washington DC, from whom Rose worked to distance himself during the race.

“I’m looking forward to working with Max to get things done and solve the problems facing our nation,” said Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee chairman US Rep. Ben Ray Luján (D-NM).

While registered Democrats outnumber Republican­s in the district, their candidates have often struggled to close the deal — even against damaged candidates.

In 2014, then-indicted Grimm easily beat Domenic Recchia, despite Grimm’s looming trial for tax evasion.

After winning, Grimm pleaded guilty and Donovan — the Island’s then-district attorney — won the special election in 2015 to replace the felon.

However, Democrats rode Rose’s war-hero biography and fundraisin­g prowess to break their losing streak in the district.

 ??  ?? WINNERS: Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez celebrates Tuesday night after her victory in Queens. She’ll be joined in the House by fellow Dem Antonio Delgado, here with son Coltrane after voting in Rhinebeck.
WINNERS: Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez celebrates Tuesday night after her victory in Queens. She’ll be joined in the House by fellow Dem Antonio Delgado, here with son Coltrane after voting in Rhinebeck.

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