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Friday, November 6, 2020
Vol. 8, No. 45
HOME & DESIGN
W.P. MAN PLEADS NOT GUILTY TO ESPIONAGE
CURRAN VETOES BUDGET AMENDMENTS
PAGES 27-38
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PAGE 7
Outcomes hinge on count of mail-in ballots Victory expected: Suozzi, Sillitti, Kaplan BY R O S E W E L D ON AND ROBERT PELAEZ
PHOTO BY ROBERT PELAEZ
Nassau County voters cast their ballots at Michael J. Tully Park in New Hyde Park on Tuesday.
After over one million Long Islanders went to the polls on Election Day, waited in line for early voting or sent off their absentee ballots, candidates in most major local races held back on declaring victory or conceding until vote counts can be finalized. According to early election figures, 1.4 million Long Islanders made their voices heard this election season, surpassing the 1.33 million who cast ballots in 2016. Around 715,000 Nassau County residents voted, beat-
ing the previous record of 653,676 in the 2016 election, according to Nassau Democratic Elections Commissioner James Scheuerman. More than 350,000 Nassau residents cast their ballots on Election Day Tuesday, with others taking advantage of the county’s second year of early voting and use of absentee ballots due to the coronavirus pandemic. Scheuerman said 142,962 absentee ballots were cast in Nassau County this year, a figure that shatters the previous record of 48,000 in 2016. Continued on Page 22
Trump lead in Nassau short-lived? BY R OB E RT PELAEZ
more than a 6,000-vote lead in Nassau County as of Wednesday morning, according to the counDespite election officials de- ty Board of Elections. Trump, a Republican, reclaring former Vice President Joe Biden victorious in New York, ceived 286,661 votes, or 49.6 President Donald Trump had percent of the 578,383 votes cast
in Nassau County as of Wednesday morning. Biden, a Democrat, received 280,288, or 48.5 percent. Libertarian candidate Jo Jorgensen received 2,823 votes, Green Party candidate Howie Hawkins received 1,439 votes, Independent candidate Brock Pierce received 1,495 votes, and 1,476 write-in votes were submitted. More than 4,000 Nas-
sau votes were deemed blank or void, according to the state Board of Elections. The vote tally did not include a large number of write-in ballots, which will be counted in the next week. Nassau Democratic Elections Commissioner James Scheuerman said 142,962 absentee ballots were cast in Nassau County this year, a figure that shatters the previous record of 48,000 in 2016.
According to early election figures, 1.4 million Long Islanders voted this year, compared with 1.33 million in 2016. More than 350,000 Nassau residents cast their ballots on Election Day Tuesday, with others taking advantage of the county’s second year of early voting and use of absentee ballots due to the coronavirus pandemic. Continued on Page 24
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