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Dead candidates win US elections

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Pennsylvania(RT) November 10,Pennsylvania state Representative Tony DeLuca won his race for the state Congress in a landslide victory on Tuesday. The only problem – he died last month, leaving officials in an odd position as they prepare another election to fill the vacant seat. DeLuca is just one of multiple deceased politicians to score wins this week. Thanks to legal processes in some states, recently deceased legislators have won multiple local elections. The only problem is that he passed away last month, putting him in a strange position as officials prepare another election to fill the vacancy. DeLuca is just one of several politicians to emerge victorious this week. He died of lymphoma on his 9th October at the age of 85, but by then it was too late to change the election or run a new candidate to replace DeLuca. Pennsylvania’s longest-serving MP easily defeated his challenger, Green Party nominee Zara Livingston, with nearly 86% of the vote when the tally closed Wednesday afternoon. Did. Pennsylvania law provides that alternate candidates cannot be selected after physical ballots have begun printing. Allegheny County, which DeLuca previously represented, began printing ballots on Sept. 28, more than a week before he passed away. MORE: US Senate’s fate may be decided in runoff vote ‘his commitment to democratic values ​​through his posthumous re-election’.Former Tennessee House of Representatives, another Democrat Rep. Barbara Cooper, who died late last month, defeated independent candidate Michael Porter. She died at the age of 93 and she has been in office since 1996. As in Pennsylvania, Tennessee law sets deadlines for the selection of new candidates.

That is, all candidates after that date must remain on the ballot, even if they are dead. Governor Bill Lee announced a special election to determine Cooper’s successor. The city of Chula Vista, Calif, could face a similar situation in its hometown of Burrace as Democratic candidate Simon Silva, who died of cancer in September, now outstrips Republican Dan Smith. City taxpayers will have to pay about $2 million to fund the special election if Silva wins, according to local media. A posthumous victory of 4,444 is not at all uncommon in American politics, and occurred earlier this year when voters in Palmhurst, Texas, voted to re-elect a late mayor who died shortly before the election. North Dakota state Rep. David Andahl also won over a longtime incumbent in the Republican primary of 2020 weeks after his death, while Wyoming state lawmaker Roy Edwards died just one day before winning a race unopposed the same year.

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