Politics & Government
Robert Rodriguez Defends State Assembly Seat In District 68
New Yorkers headed to the polls Tuesday, braving poor weather and dysfunctional polling sites, to elect local state legislators.

NEW YORK, NY — Residents of State Assembly District 68 took to the polls Tuesday to vote for their representatives in the state legislature during this year's midterm election.
Democratic Incumbent Robert Rodriguez easily defeated Republican challenger Daby Carreras, according to New York City Board of Election results. With 98 percent of precincts reporting, Rodriguez captured 93 percent of the vote compared to Carreras' 6 percent, according to unofficial election night results.
The 68th State Assembly District spans the East Harlem and Wards Island neighborhoods. Rodriguez has represented the area in the assembly since 2011.
Find out what's happening in Harlemfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
City dwellers packed public schools, apartment lobbies and places of worship to form massive lines as they cast ballots in Tuesday's midterm elections. Reports from many polling sites indicated an unusually high turnout for a non-presidential election.
Lines in some places stretched around the buildings where voting booths were set up, even in neighborhoods with no contested elections. Voters waiting outside PS 163 on the Upper West Side lined a full block between Columbus and Amsterdam avenues, a video posted to Twitter shows.
Find out what's happening in Harlemfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Despite the high turnout, the scene at many poll sites was bleak due to horrible weather and a general sense of dysfunction in how the election was managed. New Yorkers encountered widespread problems with the machines used to record their votes in Tuesday's midterm elections, adding to long waits caused by unusually high turnout. City officials blamed wet ballots on a rainy Election Day for jamming up scanning machines at dozens of poll sites in at least four boroughs.
Lead image: Voting booths and crates of polling station supplies are seen in the Bronx in November 2016. Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images
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