He works hard for the money
Nathaniel, I wonder how much he could charge for a Big Board-style elections analysis on Cameo. I'd put my money on 538 dollars.
— Brittany Shepherd, ABC News
Democrats cut into Republicans’ already narrow House majority.
Democrat Tom Suozzi has won the special election in New York’s 3rd District, defeating Republican Mazi Pilip to flip a House seat from red to blue. (The seat was formerly held by Republican Rep. George Santos, who was expelled from Congress in December after a series of scandals.) As a result, Republicans’ already narrow House majority has been reduced to 219-213.
Throughout the night, 538 reporters, analysts and contributors have been live-blogging the results in real time and breaking down what (if anything) they mean for November. Read our full analysis below.
Nathaniel, I wonder how much he could charge for a Big Board-style elections analysis on Cameo. I'd put my money on 538 dollars.
— Brittany Shepherd, ABC News
—Nathaniel Rakich, 538
Pilip and Republicans in the district attempted to smear Suozzi with an attack they figured would brandish him with a big, fat Scarlet Letter here: Friend of the Squad. But Rep. Alexandria Ocascio-Cortez on CNN just now put major distance between her progressive group and the incredibly moderate Suozzi, who is the sort of Democrat who likely wouldn't even know what a DSA rose emoji on social media means: "The idea that we're part of the same kind of cadre in Congress is incorrect, it's wrong. But that doesn't mean that we're not on the same team." AOC went on to call Pilip's attempt to paint Suozzi as part of merry band of lefty Congressional troublemakers as "desperate."
And if early returns from Queens are any indication, it seems like those attempts didn't quite land.
—Brittany Shepherd, ABC News
I spoke too soon about not having precinct results in the 3rd District. Ben Rosenblatt, a Democratic data guru in New York politics, is hosting a precinct map of the results on his website — though there's a question about whether Nassau County will make precinct-level data available at all. Still, the map of Queens is pretty!
—Nathaniel Rakich, 538