Democrats Lose 88-Year Run on NY-9 Seat – First Republican Win In NY District Since 1923!!

The Democrats took another damaging blow after losing the special election for the 9th Congressional District held in the New York district formerly held by disgraced “Weiner-Boy”, Anthony Weiner, who held the seat for 7 years himself. Republican Bob Turner was declared the winner of the special election for the 9th Congressional District after gaining 54 percent of the vote, against the 46 percent for Turner’s challenger David Weprin.

The mouthpieces on the left started building up the Democrat lies and spin even before the special election results were made public. Displaying how much of a lying skank she really is, Democratic National Committee chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz said that the NY-9 district in New York is “..a very difficult district for Democrats”, even though this is the first Republican to win in that district in 88 years, since Democrats have held the NY-9 district seat since March 1923. How does 88 years in Democrat hands make the claim that “It’s a very difficult district for Democrats” true? It doesn’t. It’s just another bald-faced lie by the disgusting Democratic National Committee chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz, and the Obama Lie Machine.

Democrats suffered a significant setback early Wednesday with the party losing a New York district it had held for almost a century — in an upset result seen as a rebuke of President Barack Obama’s (dangerous) policies ahead of the 2012 election.

Republican Bob Turner was called as the winner of the special election for the 9th Congressional District, held to replace disgraced former Democratic Rep. Anthony Weiner, who resigned in June after admitting he sent sexually-charged messages to women he met online.

Democrats have held the seat since March 1923 — and Turner’s challenger David Weprin was early Wednesday refusing to concede.

With 86 percent of precincts reporting, Turner had 54 percent of the vote and Weprin 46 percent, with about 4700 votes separating the pair, WNYC reported.

After the votes had been seemingly too close to call throughout the night, a number of media organizations declared Turner the victor.

Around midnight, Weprin spoke briefly to his supporters, saying he wasn’t yet ready to give in. “This is not over yet. It’s going to be a long night, there’s still a lot of votes to be counted,” Weprin told supporters, according to The Wall Street Journal.

After being introduced as Congressman Turner — while Frank Sinatra’s “New York, New York” played in the background — the retired media executive and political novice told his supporters at the Roma View restaurant in Howard Beach, Queens, that he was ready to get to work.

As his supporters chanted, “Yes we can!” — a jab at Obama’s 2008 campaign slogan — Turner told the crowd, “It’s still me up here,” WNYC reported.

“Maybe we started something. I sure hope so,” he said.

“We’ve been told this is a referendum and we’re ready to say, ‘Mr. President, we are on the wrong track,” he said, according to the New York Daily News.

“We’ve been asked by the people of this district to send a message to Washington and I hope they hear it loud and clear. We only hope that our voices are heard. We can start putting things right again.”

Democrats were once seemingly assured of an easy victory in the race but were forced to scramble ahead of the election because of what Republicans claimed was widespread voter dissatisfaction with Obama, The Wall Street Journal reported.

The district is overwhelmingly Democratic — by a ratio of three to one — yet Weprin, a state Assemblyman, trailed by six percent in two polls prior to the election.

Polls in the district also showed that a majority of voters have an unfavorable view of Obama.

Democratic party leaders insisted the loss wasn’t a harbinger of things to come. “It’s a very difficult district for Democrats,” said Democratic National Committee chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz, noting its Democratic margins there tend to be the second lowest of all the districts in New York City.

But House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio), dismissed that idea.

“This is a very seriously Democrat district,” Boehner said. “This is not a district that Republicans have any right to believe we could win.”

Turner worked hard to nationalize — and internationalize — the race. Turner had argued voters in the heavily Jewish district should choose him over Weprin as a way to send a message to Obama of their displeasure that he isn’t more friendly to Israel. Turner is a Roman Catholic while Weprin is an Orthodox Jew.

And some conservative Jewish groups attacked Weprin, a state legislator, over his vote earlier this year in favor of gay marriage.

New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg dismissed the suggestion the outcome has national implications.

“It’s not the end of the Obama administration and the Republican resurgence,” the mayor said. “These tend to be local races.”

The result of the election is also expected to be mostly symbolic and short-lived. New York is required to lose two congressional seats to congressional redistricting, and officials in both parties expect the former Weiner seat to be one of them.

http://www.myfoxny.com/dpp/news/us-house-race-in-new-york-weprin-turner-20110913-apx#ixzz1Xx1wXhA2

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