Gov. Kathy Hochul declared victory late Tuesday night over Republican
Lee Zeldin.
At 11:27 p.m., she had a 55% to
45% lead over the congressman with 68% of the vote counted in the state.
If declared the victor, she would
make history by becoming the first woman to win election to the job.
Sources told News 12 earlier in
the night that she was encouraged by the turnout.
Zeldin, an ally of former President Donald Trump who
objected to the 2020 election results, had made appeals to scared suburbanites
and rattled urbanites amid a string of high-profile violent incidents.
The issue of crime is one that Republicans have been
running on across the country and nowhere is its saliency more on display than
in the campaign of Zeldin, who harnessed it to carve a potential path to win in
the blue state and become the first Republican elected New York governor in two
decades.
Hochul, a former congresswoman, was serving as former Gov.
Andrew Cuomo’s low-profile lieutenant governor before taking over in August
2021 when he resigned amid sexual harassment allegations, which he denies. She
has tried to cast herself as a fresh change from Cuomo, promising more
collaboration and transparency while trying to steer the state through the
pandemic aftereffects.
AP Wire Services were used in this report.