Ex
aide to Gabrielle Giffords trailing in vote count for U.S. House seat
Send a link to a friend
[November 12, 2014]
By Brad Poole
TUCSON Ariz. (Reuters) - An incumbent U.S.
Representative from Arizona and former aide to Gabrielle Giffords, who
was injured in a 2011 shooting rampage, was narrowly trailing a
Republican challenger in the vote count on Tuesday, a week after U.S.
mid-term elections.
|
With thousands of votes still left to count, preliminary results
show U.S. Representative Ron Barber behind Martha McSally, a former
Air Force combat pilot, by just a few hundred ballots in Arizona's
2nd Congressional District.
The race is a re-run of a close contest in 2012 when Barber, who was
also injured in the shooting the year before and was subsequently
endorsed by Giffords, narrowly prevailed over McSally, a pioneer of
women's combat aviation in the early 1990s.
The border district at stake, which covers the eastern half of
Tucson, is divided between Republican-heavy Cochise County and
Democrat-leaning eastern Pima County.
After Cochise County ballots were counted, McSally sought to halt
counting of remaining provisional ballots, thousands of them mail-in
ballots that voters dropped off at Pima County polling centers,
arguing that some may not have been signed by election authorities.
The Barber campaign celebrated after Pima County Superior Court
Judge James Marner rejected that request on Monday, meaning the
count will go on.
"Today was a win for democracy and a win for the people of southern
Arizona, who will make their voice heard at the ballot box – no
matter how hard McSally tries to silence us," Barber campaign
spokeswoman Ashley Nash-Hahn said.
McSally's campaign called the decision a blow to democracy and vowed
to continue fighting.
[to top of second column] |
"Southern Arizonans deserve to know that all procedures are being
followed to ensure ballots are valid and that rules aren't simply
being decided on a whim," McSally spokesman Patrick Ptak said.
Calls to the Pima County Elections Department went unanswered on
Tuesday, which is Veteran's Day.
Barber, who was shot in the face and leg in the attack that killed
six people and injured 13, is battling McSally for what many locals
still refer to as "Giffords' district," even though its boundaries
were redrawn after she resigned.
Giffords has since become a gun-owning advocate of gun control
legislation.
(Reporting by Brad Poole; Editing by Daniel Wallis and Sandra Maler)
[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|