Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Prendergast vs. Muldoon: no significant change, few ballots counted since yesterday

Nov. 9:
THOMAS "T.J." PRENDERGAST
109,340 - 50.65%

KEVIN M. MULDOON
106,531 - 49.35%

     Gosh, they've only counted 760 or so ballots since yesterday.
     Yesterday's tally:

THOMAS "T.J." PRENDERGAST
108,949 - 50.6%

KEVIN M. MULDOON
106,160 - 49.4%

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

I think it's almost over....sweet.

Rupert said...

I'm sensing—victory!

Anonymous said...

Yep!

Anonymous said...

must be that new math.
heheehe

Anonymous said...

thanks for the update.

Jonathan K. Cohen said...

I thought it took about four weeks to count and verify all the provisional votes. With this small a margin of difference, it is possible that there will be no concession to forestall going through that process to the bitter end.

BvT said...

Jonathan, I do believe you are correct about the counting period. On the other hand, this particular trustee area is relatively homogeneous and there is no reason to suppose that some remaining clump of votes will skew strongly toward Muldoon. Or so I'm told by those who know more about the different "clumps" than I do. And given P's 2700 vote lead, it will take considerable skewing to reverse P's lead.

gj said...

The trend is your friend, folks, the trend is your friend.

gj said...

Jonathan: there is no legal impact to a concession speech. Even if Prendergast were to concede (for some unimaginable reason), if he still had the most votes when all the counting was finished he would be declared the winner.

When a candidate concedes it generally only means that she or he does not intend to contest the results by requesting a recount or the like. Even if a candidate concedes an election, and even if the vote is 100,000 to 10 at the time of the concession, the Registrar of Voters will still count ALL the votes. Provisionals, late absentees, everything. Every vote is counted, regardless of whether the ultimate outcome will be affected by the counting of the remaining ballots.

Jonathan K. Cohen said...

gj, thanks for the helpful clarification. I've been in many poll worker training classes over the years, and the instructors have never made that point clear.

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