Rangel's Democratic challenger, state Senator Adriano Espaillat,
has not conceded defeat, and the New York Times and other news
outlets said the race was too close to call.
With 99 percent of precincts reporting, Rangel was leading 47
percent to 44 percent, according to NY1, a local television station,
which called Rangel the winner.
Rangel, 84, is among the longest-serving and best-known black
lawmakers. Espaillat hopes to become the first Dominican-American
elected to Congress.
In this liberal bastion of New York City, where blacks and Latinos
form the majority, the winner of the Democratic primary is all but
guaranteed to win the mid-term general election in November.
The race was a rematch between Rangel and Espaillat. Two years ago,
Espaillat, 59, came within 1,000 votes of ousting Rangel after the
district boundaries were redrawn.
The two men had few policy disagreements, but sparred over whether
it was time for Rangel, who has indicated this will be his last
election, to yield to the next generation of politicians.
"Who can walk into the national arena with the most friends, the
most supporters, who's fought the good battles?" Rangel told
supporters.
Rangel, who entered Congress in 1971, was a founding member of the
Congressional Black Caucus and chaired the powerful House Ways and
Means committee.
[to top of second column] |
But his political brand was dealt a serious blow in 2010, when he
was censured by the House after failing to pay taxes on rent he
earned from a property in the Dominican Republic and misusing his
office to secure fund-raising.
A Siena College poll released last week found voters divided along
racial lines: Rangel held a 70-point advantage among blacks;
Espaillat, who grew up in the Dominican Republic, held a 24-point
advantage among Latinos.
Rangel boasted a long list of endorsements going into the poll,
including former President Bill Clinton, New York's two senators and
Governor Andrew Cuomo.
Newspapers were split. The New York Times threw its support behind
Espaillat, saying Rangel needed to "yield to the next generation."
The New York Daily News endorsed Rangel as a "master legislator"
deserving of a "last hurrah."
(Reporting by Edith Honan; Editing by Eric Beech and Ron Popeski,
Larry King)
[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|