Cuomo Postpones New York’s Main Election From April 28 to June 23

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Cuomo Postpones New York’s Main Election From April 28 to June 23

New York will postpone its April 28 presidential main till June 23, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo introduced on Saturday, shopping for time for the state to


New York will postpone its April 28 presidential main till June 23, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo introduced on Saturday, shopping for time for the state to manage an election because it struggles to answer the escalating coronavirus outbreak.

“I don’t assume it’s clever to be bringing lots of people to at least one location to vote, lots of people touching one doorknob, lots of people touching one pen,” Mr. Cuomo stated in a information convention. “So we’re going to delay that and hyperlink it to an election that was beforehand scheduled on June 23.”

A main for state legislative and congressional races had already been set for June 23, and now the entire state’s main elections will likely be held on the identical date, he stated.

Ten different states, in addition to Puerto Rico, have rescheduled their main elections because the marketing campaign calendar has been upended by the outbreak, citing steerage from well being officers who’ve urged folks to keep away from gathering spots, together with polling locations. A handful of different states have switched to voting solely by mail and have prolonged deadlines for doing so.

“Elections board around the state are risking personnel safety and health to prepare for impending elections on April 28,” the Elections Commissions’ Association of the State of New York said in a news release last Tuesday.

Some influential Democrats in New York had privately expressed hope that the election could be avoided all together, pointing out that a decision by Senator Bernie Sanders to withdraw would remove the need for a costly and logistically difficult primary vote.

State Democratic Party chair Jay Jacobs, citing former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s substantial lead in the delegate count, questioned whether Mr. Sanders should continue his campaign absent a legitimate chance for the nomination. “There’s nothing to be gained by keeping the contest going if there’s no reasonable path,” Mr. Jacobs said.

The state’s Republican primary — which would also would have been held on April 28 — had been called off in March after President Trump, the presumptive nominee, was the only candidate who qualified to appear on the ballot.

Had the Democratic primary been canceled, the duty of selecting delegates to the Democratic National Convention would have been left up to the party’s state committee.

The State Board of Elections had explored the possibility of holding New York’s primary entirely by mail, but the board’s staff concluded that county elections offices were not geared up to process huge volumes of mail-in ballots.



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