Montgomery County completes recount of Maryland legislative district 16 Democratic primary; Sara Love to be certified as victor

Tuesday, July 31, 2018

Maryland state election officials are set to certify the results of recounts in two particularly close Maryland Democratic primary-election races: In the race for a state legislative seat, attorney Sara Love defeated schoolteacher Samir Paul as Democratic nominee by a margin of 12 votes, and in the race for Montgomery county executive, county council member Marc Elrich beat businessman David Blair for the Democratic nomination by 77 votes. Before this, according to a county election board spokesperson, there had not been a recount in Montgomery County for 20 years. The primary-election winners will appear on the general election ballot November 6.

In Maryland’s 16th legislative district, which is in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area, eight Democrats and one Republican were running for three seats in the House of Delegates. Two of the incumbents, Marc Korman and Ariana Kelly, ran for re-election; the remaining candidates sought to fill the seat vacated by William Frick, outgoing Maryland house majority leader, who chose to run for County Executive instead. Delegates Korman and Kelly received the highest and second highest number of votes in the Democratic primary; former ACLU and NARAL official Sara Love and Montgomery Blair High School computer-science teacher Samir Paul received the third and fourth-highest numbers of votes, respectively, but were separated by a difference of 8 votes. Mr. Paul requested a re-count; under state law, when the margin of victory is less than 0.1%, the runner-up may petition for all ballots to be recounted at county expense. After the recount, Ms. Love’s margin of victory over Mr. Paul increased to 12 votes. Mr. Korman, Ms. Kelly, Ms. Love, and Republican Bill Day will face off in the November general election. Mr. Day was the only candidate in the Republican primary. Because of the Maryland closed primary system, Democrats and Republicans do not run against each other until November.

In the race for the state senate seat that represents the same district, incumbent Democrat state senator Susan Lee and Republican challenger Marcus Alzona were unopposed in the party primaries and will run against each other in the general election.

The full results of the Maryland 16th Legislative District House of Delegates Democratic primary election recount are as follows:

candidate votes (before recount) votes (after recount)
Marc Korman 13593 13598
Ariana Kelly 12189 12197
Sara Love 11294 11299
Samir Paul 11286 11287
Jordan Cooper 3613 3613
Nucchi Currier 2130 2131
Joseph Aloysius Hennessey 1184 1183
Marc Lande 563 563

Maryland has a bicameral legislature known as the General Assembly. The state is geographically divided into 47 legislative districts, each represented by 1 state senator and 3 delegates. The senate and delegate races are separate; that is to say, person runs for either house or senate in any given election, but not both. (Some districts are divided into sub-districts, but in districts such as the 16th that are not sub-divided, the top 3 vote-getters in each election for House of Delegates win, the same pattern applying during the party primaries and the general election.) The term of office for both houses of the General Assembly is four years.

In the Democratic primary race for County Executive, Marc Elrich, who currently serves on the county council, defeated businessman David Blair by a margin of 77 votes. This is a change of 2 votes from the 79-vote margin of victory after the initial official, automated count. Because the difference was greater than that which would have entitled Mr. Blair to request a recount at government expense, he requested and received only a partial recount. Mr. Elrich, the winner, will run against lawyer Robin Ficker and, possibly, councilmember Nancy Floreen in the general election. The county executive performs a similar role to that of a city mayor.

Maryland currently uses an optical-scan ballot system, in which voters mark paper ballots, then feed them into a machine; before the current system, the state used touch-screen electronic voting for several years, and before that, Montgomery County used punch-card paper ballots.

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