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Tie broken in D1, Mahmood pulling away in D5

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The San Francisco Department of Elections moments ago released the results of an additional 29,917 ballots. That brings the grand total of processed ballots to 289,135 — 55.4 percent of the electorate. 

There are, perhaps, 117,000 ballots remaining. Today’s results are, clearly, not final — but they do provide a modicum of clarity. The ceiling on turnout appears to be about 77.8 percent, just a shade higher than the 77 percent historical average in presidential contests going back to 1916.

Clarity was not needed in the mayor’s race. Mayor London Breed conceded the race yesterday and Daniel Lurie today claimed victory. After today’s ballot drop and ranked-choice voting permutations, Lurie leads by 27,308 votes (55.8 percent to 44.2 percent). While Breed or even Aaron Peskin could, as a mathematical exercise, still prevail, this race — again — has been conceded.

With a new mayor, the dynamics between the occupant of Room 200 and the Board of Supervisors are yet to be determined. Depending on how the votes stack up, San Francisco could have its least experienced mayor and board come January … at a time when the city is facing grave crises from within and without.

On to the results. 

Thursday’s ballot drop resulted in the mathematical oddity of District 1 incumbent supervisor Connie Chan and challenger Marjan Philhour both having exactly 11,001 votes

After today’s additional ballots and following ranked-choice voting tabulations Chan now leads by a 12,117 to 11,855 tally (50.55 percent to 49.45 percent). While late-arriving votes tend to lean progressive — and this is an alchemy more than a science — in a race separated by 262 votes anything could happen down the stretch.  

Incidentally, the official method of settling a tied vote in a Board of Supervisors race is a “drawing of lots” — that is, drawing long or short straws. It now appears less likely this will come to pass in District 1. 

In District 5, Bilal Mahmood continues to outpace incumbent Dean Preston. While Preston actually has 19 more first-place votes than Mahmood, the secondary and tertiary votes from other candidates give Mahmood a 1,287 vote bulge. While a goodly number of votes are outstanding, every subsequent tranche of votes has not helped Preston cut into Mahmood’s lead. This pattern could reverse in the coming days, but there’s no logical reason to expect it should. Preston is running out of electorate with which to make up the gap. 



Source: missionlocal.org

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