Middletown Election Results 2020: Vote Totals For Every Race
News
Middletown CT
04 November, 2020
4:13 PM
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MIDDLETOWN, CT — The votes are still being counted in many places across the country but fortunately in Connecticut and in Middletown the votes have all been counted. On Election Day, former Vice President Joe Biden received 935,534 votes in Connecticut compared to 657,863 for President Donald Trump, according to the Secretary of State's Office. In Connecticut's five congressional districts the projected winners are all the incumbent Democrats: John Larson, Joe Courtney, Rosa L. DeLauro, Jim Himes, and Jahana Hayes. DeLauro and Hayes had the two strongest challenges as DeLauro won by about 40,000 votes or 14 percentage points, and Hayes won by about 10 percentage points or 30,000 votes. Here is how Middletown residents voted in the key races: (Note: These are the results for voters in Middletown, not the overall totals for races that involved multiple towns) President/Vice President Joe Biden/Kamala Harris (Democrat) 8,256 Donald Trump/Mike Pence (Republican) 5,997 Jo Jorgensen and Chip Cohen (Libertarian) 192 Howie Hawkins and Angela Walker (Green Party) 55 U.S. Congress U.S. House District 2 John B. Larson (Democrat) 878 Mary Fay (Republican) 716 Thomas E. McCormick (Green Party) 16 U.S. House District 3 Rosa DeLauro (Democrat) 6,924 Margaret Streicker (Republican) 5,214 Justin C. Paglino (Green Party) 227 Local State Senate Race 9th Senatorial District Matt Lesser (Democrat) 5,606 Richard Ruglio (Republican) 3,530 13th Senatorial District Mary Daugherty Abrams (Democrat) 2,358 Len Suzio (Republican) 2,438 Local State Representative Races 33rd House District Brandon Chafee (Democrat) 3,824 Linda Szynkowicz (Republican) 2,938 100th House District Quentin Phipps (Democrat) 3,992 Tony Gennaro (Republican) 3,033 The following referendum question was also on the ballot: 1. "Shall the $55,000,000 appropriation and bond authorization for the 21st Century Infrastructure Development Bond Program in the City of Middletown, that includes funding for public parking, riverfront redevelopment, the acquisition and rehabilitation of City-owned parcels and buildings, the creation of a recreation center, and citywide road paving be approved?" For more information about the question, visit here. UPDATE: The referendum question was approved, according to Mayor Ben Florsheim. "Thank you Middletown for overwhelmingly voting to support the 21st Century Infrastructure Bond!" Florsheim wrote in a post on Facebook. "This historic investment in our downtown, riverfront, and neighborhoods will pay dividends for the local economy in the years ahead. I'm looking forward to working with the Common Council and the whole community to implement these critical projects and move our city forward." The final results for the 21st Century Infrastructure Bond question were 16,275 in favor with 5,074 against. See also: Election Results: Keep Up-To-Date On Every Race In CT CT Presidential Election Results: Donald Trump Vs. Joe Biden CT Election Results: 5 Congressional House Races
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