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Pinto Leads Kennedy by 102 Votes; Evans Loses         
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The Georgetowner Newspaper -- Local Georgetown News The Georgetowner Newspaper -- Local Georgetown News
For Immediate Release:
Dateline: Georgetown, DC
Wednesday, June 3, 2020

 
Ward 2 Council candidates Brooke Pinto and Patrick Kennedy are virtually tied with mail-in ballots still to be counted. Courtesy Pinto and Kennedy campaigns.

The result of the heavily contested Democratic Primary for Ward 2’s District Council seat was too close to call by noon, Wednesday, June 3 — and the final winner might not be know for a week.

According to the D.C. Board of Elections, Brooke Pinto was leading Patrick Kennedy by only 102 votes – 2,150 to 2,048. Several thousand mail-in and special ballots were still to be counted.

Former Ward 2 councilman Jack Evans, who had held the seat for 25 years before relinquishing it in January due to ethics violation accusations, had garnered only 293 votes by noon June 3.  Jordan Grossman was third with 1,562 votes, Kishan Putta fourth with 760 votes and John Fanning fifth with 526.

Voting conditions for this election were unusual in almost every way due to public health precautions taken to protect voters during the covid-19 pandemic. Beginning on May 22, the Board of Elections opened only 22 precincts for in-person voting between 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. It mailed more than 92, 000 absentee ballots – equally almost the total number of voters by mail-in and in-person in 2016. The board encouraged everyone to mail in the ballots by June 2. By May 31, the BOE had received 37,000.

But there were glitches.

Many people did not receive the ballots they had signed up for. By Tuesday afternoon, many — the Washington Post estimated close to one-third — decided to go vote in person.

Long lines of waiting voters with face coverings and standing at least six feet apart at Hardy Middle School, Georgetown’s only voting center, wound up the block and around the corner on June 2 in the afternoon.

Only 10 voters were allowed in the voting center at a time. Inside, registration and ballot distribution tables, voting booths for electronic and paper ballots and a final ballot completion station were all spaced about ten feet apart and overseen by poll volunteers with face covering and in some cases glove. The two parking spots for mobile voting – where poll officials brought ipads for registered voters to register votes in their car – were busy all afternoon.

At proper distance from the Georgetown precinct and along the sidewalk of waiting voters, many of the candidates including Kennedy, Putta and Fanning wearing face masks and practicing social distancing, were introducing themselves to voters and willing to answer questions. Pinto had set up a large table covered by an umbrella with bottles of water for voters who wanted them. Evans sat across the street with supporters and answered questions. He argued his experience in city finances was crucial to help the District navigate the massive revenue losses caused by the coronavirus shutdown.

The DOE estimated that some 13,000 people cast votes in person on June 2.

“If the top vote getters are within a few hundred of each other by Wednesday morning, that will probably mean several days if not a week of delay before the all the mail-in and absentee and provisional special ballots are counted,” Kennedy told the Georgetowner on Tuesday. On Wednesday morning Kennedy wrote: “The preliminary counts are very promising, showing us within just a hundred votes so far. Likely thousands of the mail-in votes have not yet been counted and are at least a week away.”

Evans failed to persuade voters to give him a second chance. After his low results on Wednesday, Evans told the Washington Post: “I am glad I ran. I’m glad I gave the voters in Ward 2 an opportunity, and I want to thank the voters and residents of Ward 2 for their support over the last 29 years and the opportunity to serve. And now it’s a new chapter in my life, and I don’t know what that is, but I’ll be heading in a different direction. And that’s all there is to it.”

“The election systems struggled to manage more than 90,000 absentee ballot requests, compared to the usual 6,000,” said Michael Bennett, the chairman of the District Board of Elections, who acknowledged the election did not go smoothly because the agency’s technology was not able to handle the surge of absentee ballot requests. “The system gets clogged and the technology doesn’t tend to have to manage that large of a volume.”

In a noontime press conference today, Mayor Muriel Bowser called the long lines at some voting centers “nothing short of failed execution.”

News Media Interview Contact
Name: Sonya Bernhardt
Group: The Georgetowner Newspaper
Dateline: Georgetown, DC United States
Direct Phone: 202-338-4833
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