Home Andrew Payton got within 1 percent in HD 34: Recount territory?
Local

Andrew Payton got within 1 percent in HD 34: Recount territory?

Chris Graham
Andrew Payton
Andrew Payton. Photo: paytonfordelegate.com

The Election Night returns had Andrew Payton, the Democratic Party nominee in the 34th House District, which represents Harrisonburg and Rockingham County, coming up short by 1,309 votes, 4.8 points, in his bid to unseat Republican incumbent Tony Wilt.

The final numbers tightened up dramatically.

Wilt ended up winning by a mere 257 votes from among the nearly 29,000 cast in the election, or 0.89 percent.

Because the election was within a 1 percent difference, Payton would be entitled, under state law, to file for a recount, with the proviso that, because the margin was greater than half a percentage point, the Payton campaign would have to pay the costs of the recount.

I reached out to Payton to see if he was planning to request a recount.

The answer: no.

“We are not considering a recount. We missed the state-funded recount threshold by 80-some votes. There was also a very low spoil rate on the provisional ballots (less than 2% in Harrisonburg), so we don’t expect a recount would alter the outcome of the race,” Payton replied, by email.

Damn.

So close.

That district should get outsized attention from the Ds in the 2027 cycle.

Support AFP




Chris Graham

Chris Graham

Chris Graham is the founder and editor of Augusta Free Press. A 1994 alum of the University of Virginia, Chris is the author and co-author of seven books, including Poverty of Imagination, a memoir published in 2019. For his commentaries on news, sports and politics, go to his YouTube page, TikTok, BlueSky, or subscribe to Substack or his Street Knowledge podcast. Email Chris at [email protected].

Latest News

newspapers
Local

Podcast: Are we about to lose the other of our local newspapers?

downtown staunton dining
Local

Staunton: Business owners share concerns about proposed downtown project

The City of Staunton has launched a month-long demonstration project in Downtown Staunton to give residents and business owners a look and feel for an idea percolating in City Hall to expand pedestrian space in the central business district.

virginia tech football
Football

Virginia Tech announces $75M gift, most of which is going to athletics

Virginia Tech announced on Thursday that an anonymous family of Tech alums has made a $75 million gift to athletics and to one of the school’s academic programs.

sean reeves
Local

Media generates controversy over Albemarle County police chief being out on medical leave

lou gehrig day
Baseball

Lou Gehrig Day: MLB community rallies round to raise awareness of ALS

Blue Ridge Area Food Bank
Local

Stamp Out Hunger will provide 120K meals for local people, families facing food insecurity

lions NFL football field lights
Football

Detroit Lions 2026 NFL Draft Recap: How the Lions addressed their biggest needs