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What the Pennsylvania Primary Results Mean for the Cruz Campaign
DE votes only for president Tuesday.
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A proposed constitutional amendment about whether to extend the state’s mandatory retirement age for judges from 70 to 75 was delayed from the primary to the November 8 general election, although it will likely appear on the ballot in many parts of the state, if not most.
Polls close at 8 p.m. today, but Brown said those still in line at their polling place are still allowed to vote after closing time.
They open at 7 a.m. and close at 8 p.m.in Rhode Island – except for the state’s least populated municipality of New Shoreham on Block Island, where they open at noon and close at 8 p.m.
In Hamburg, Laura Seyler, a 63-year-old buyer for a direct marketer, voted for Trump because he’s a “bully” and “will take the bat and straighten things out”. Ted Cruz and Ohio Gov. John Kasich.
For the Democratic Party Hillary Clinton leads Bernie Sanders 1946 – 1192 (2,382 are needed to win).
Republican front-runner Donald Trump and Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton have led opinion polls heading into the election, and Clinton will remain in Philadelphia on Tuesday night to await returns.
Pollsters expected a record Republican voter turnout. Clinton won Pennsylvania by about 200,000 votes.
This primary is the state’s first competitive Republican presidential contest in decades and it is touted as the biggest prize out of the five northeast states voting on Tuesday. Rather, the delegate candidates who are elected – three in each of Pennsylvania’s 18 congressional districts – can vote for whomever they want at the convention.
384 are up for grabs on the Democratic side, when Pennsylvania, Maryland, Connecticut, Delaware and Rhode Island vote on Tuesday.
Check out the current delegate count for both the Republican and Democratic Party for the presidential election 2016.
The opposite is true of the Republican race, where a majority of Pennsylvania voters said on Tuesday that the campaign had done more to pull the party apart.
For U.S. Senate, four Democrats competed for the right to challenge Republican incumbent Pat Toomey in November. But as Election Day approached, it came down to a race between party-endorsed Katie McGinty and former U.S. Rep. Joe Sestak, who lost to Toomey by 2 percentage points in 2010 but was spurned by the party establishment because he is seen as a maverick.
The Democratic Party recruited McGinty, with many years as a state and national environmental policy official, and poured millions of dollars into her campaign, which benefited from a surge of TV advertising. The fall contest could help determine control of the U.S. Senate.
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The candidates are vying to succeed Democrat Kathleen Kane, who didn’t seek re-election amid criminal charges that she unlawfully leaked grand jury information and then lied about it. Kane denies wrongdoing. Three Democrats and two Republicans are looking to replace her. Incumbent Congressman Mike Fitzpatrick is not seeking re-election; his brother Brian Fitzpatrick, a former Federal Bureau of Investigation special agent from Middletown, is in a three-way race for the GOP nomination against neuropsychologist Marc Duome, of Plumstead, and former Bucks County commissioner Andrew Warren, of Middletown.