Democrats seek to regain US House seat vacated by Santos, erode
Republicans' majority
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[February 13, 2024]
By Makini Brice
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Democrats will try to whittle away Republicans'
razor-thin majority in the U.S. House of Representatives in a New York
special election on Tuesday to fill the vacancy created by Republican
George Santos' ouster from the chamber.
Mazi Melesa Pilip, an Ethiopian-born Republican county legislator who
served in the Israeli military, and Tom Suozzi, a Democratic former
congressman, county executive and mayor, are seeking the seat
representing a small corner of New York City and some of its eastern
suburbs.
Republicans hold a narrow, unruly 219-212 House majority that has proven
hard to manage, illustrated by the chamber's failure last week to pass a
measure to impeach President Joe Biden's top border official, Alejandro
Mayorkas, which fell short by one vote. The House plans to vote on that
measure again, hoping the return of No. 2 Republican Steve Scalise from
cancer treatment will get the measure over the line.
Santos was expelled by the House in a historic vote after a nearly
11-month tenure, when his fellow lawmakers ejected him over criminal
corruption charges and allegations of misspending campaign money.
Early voting in the race began on Feb. 3. Though the district supported
Biden in the 2020 election, Republicans in the New York area are
considered to have a formidable turnout operation and swept a number of
congressional seats there two years ago.
A large winter storm bearing down on the region could hamper voter
turnout on Tuesday.
A central issue in this election has been immigration, as it has been
elsewhere in the country ahead of an expected rematch between Biden and
former President Donald Trump in November.
Pilip has repeatedly hammered Suozzi and the Democratic Party on the
issue, accusing them of failing to control crossings at the southern
border with Mexico. Pilip was endorsed by a labor union for Border
Patrol officers.
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Republican congressional candidate for New York's 3rd district, Mazi
Melesa Pilip, arrives for early voting at a polling station in
Massapequa, New York, U.S., February 9, 2024. REUTERS/Shannon
Stapleton
"I kept migrants from being sent to Nassau and will secure the
border when I get to Congress," Pilip wrote in a Facebook post,
referring to Nassau County.
Suozzi has called Pilip's attacks against him misleading and has
said she has been short of specifics on how she would address border
security. He has touted his own bipartisan immigration compromise
and criticized Republicans for rejecting a bipartisan border
security deal negotiated in the Senate, which collapsed after Trump
urged Republicans to spurn it.
"Ms. Pilip points out there's a problem, there's a problem, there's
a problem. She has no solutions," Suozzi said in the election's only
debate.
Neither candidate's campaign responded to requests for comment.
Lawrence Levy, the executive dean at Hofstra University's National
Center for Suburban Studies, said the special election could play a
key role in determining both parties' strategies in the suburbs
ahead of elections in November.
"This race could be a bellwether for swing suburban districts around
the country that are going to decide who controls the gavels of
Congress," he said.
(Reporting by Makini Brice and Joseph Ax; Editing by Scott Malone
and Jonathan Oatis)
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