Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Democrat wins Santos’ old seat

3-term ex-N.Y. congressma­n’s victory narrows GOP edge

- ANTHONY IZAGUIRRE

Democrat Tom Suozzi won a special election for a U.S. House seat in New York on Tuesday, coming out on top in a politicall­y mixed suburban district.

Suozzi defeated Republican Mazi Pilip to take the seat that was left vacant when George Santos, also a Republican, was expelled from Congress. The victory marks a return to Washington for Suozzi, who represente­d the district for three terms before giving it up to run, unsuccessf­ully, for governor.

It’s unclear how long his next stint on Capitol Hill will last, as a redistrict­ing process unfolds that could reshape the district. But for now the result narrows the already slim Republican majority in the House. And it provides Democrats a much-needed win in New York City’s Long Island suburbs, where the GOP showed surprising strength in recent elections.

Pilip conceded the race and said she congratula­ted Suozzi in a phone call Tuesday night.

“Yes we lost, but it doesn’t mean we are going to end here,” Pilip told supporters at her election watch party.

Suozzi’s win will likely reassure Democrats that they can perform well in suburban communitie­s across the nation, which will be critical to the party’s efforts to retake control of the U.S. House and reelect President Joe Biden.

Still, forecastin­g for November could be complicate­d given that turnout, already expected to be low given the abbreviate­d race, was potentiall­y hampered by a storm that dumped several inches of snow on the district on election day. Both campaigns offered voters free rides to the polls as plows cleared wet slush from the roads.

On the campaign trail, Suozzi, a political centrist, leaned into some of the same issues that Republican­s have used to bash Democrats, calling for tougher U.S. border policies and a rollback of New York laws that made it tougher for judges to detain criminal suspects awaiting trial.

The unusual midwinter election became necessary after Santos was ousted by his colleagues in December, partway through his first term.

With no time for a primary before the special election, Democrats nominated Suozzi, a political centrist well known to voters in the district.

Republican leaders turned to Pilip, a relatively unknown candidate with a unique personal backstory.

Born in Ethiopia, Pilip was part of a community of 14,500 Black Orthodox Jews who were airlifted to Israel to escape civil war and famine in 1991. She was 12 at the time. Pilip later served in Israel’s defense forces, then moved to the U.S. after marrying a Ukrainian-American doctor in 2005. She became a U.S. citizen in 2009 and was elected to Nassau County’s legislatur­e in 2021.

The short campaign was dominated by issues — abortion, immigratio­n and crime — that are expected to shape crucial suburban races nationwide in this year’s battle for control of Congress.

Despite being an internatio­nal migrant once herself, Pilip hammered Suozzi over an influx of asylum-seekers into New York City, accusing Democrats and Biden of failing to secure the U.S. southern border.

In response, Suozzi spent much of the campaign talking about the need to strengthen border policy, pointing out times when he bucked his own party on the issue while in Congress. In the final stretch, Suozzi said he would support a temporary closure of the border to slow the number of arrivals, similar to comments that Biden has made.

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