AOC-backed candidate Tiffany Cabán concedes defeat in Queens DA race
Queens district attorney candidate Tiffany Cabán conceded defeat Tuesday night — six weeks after the Democratic primary election that pitted her against the establishment-backed Queens Borough President Melinda Katz. “We terrified the Democratic establishment,” Cabán told her supporters at a party in Astoria. “We
showed [that] you can run on a boldly decarceral platform,” she added
referring to her criminal justice reforms. “You don’t have to play by
the old rules.”
In this June 26 file photo, Democratic primary candidate for
Queens district attorney Tiffany Cabán responds to questions during an
interview in the Queens borough of New York. Cabán told supporters
Tuesday, Aug. 6 that she is calling it quits in her race for Queens
district attorney that gained national attention.
In a back-and-forth race that saw both
candidates declare victory, the insurgent lawyer fought to the very end
challenging dozens of invalidated affidavit ballots in court that she
said were improperly excluded. But after several attempts to claw
back — including at a judicial hearing earlier Tuesday — she bowed out
after it became clear she’d be unable to erase the 60-vote gap
separating her and Katz. “There’s still so, so much work to be done here in Queens — and you better believe I’m going to keep fighting,” Cabán said. The
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez-backed candidate shocked the city on June
25 when she appeared to beat Katz, a veteran Queens politician, by
1,100 votes on primary night. But the tables flipped when the Board of
Elections tallied the absentee ballots and many of the provisionally
cast ballots, giving Katz the lead. Last
Monday, the Board of Elections declared Katz the victor. The certified
results showed Katz winning 34,920 votes, a razor-thin edge over Cabán’s
34,860. Katz now becomes the heavy favorite to win the job in the
November general election in the increasingly left-leaning borough.
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