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2014 New York gubernatorial election

The 2014 New York gubernatorial election took place on November 4, 2014. Incumbent Democratic Governor Andrew Cuomo sought re-election to a second term in office, though incumbent Lieutenant Governor Robert Duffy did not seek re-election. Cuomo and his running mate, former U.S. Representative Kathy Hochul, won contested primaries, while Republican Rob Astorino, the Westchester County Executive, and his running mate (Chemung County Sheriff Chris Moss) were unopposed for their party's nomination. Astorino and Moss were also cross-nominated by the Conservative Party and the Stop Common Core Party.

2014 New York gubernatorial election

← 2010 November 4, 2014 2018 →
Turnout33.2% 2.2pp
 
Nominee Andrew Cuomo Rob Astorino
Party Democratic Republican
Alliance
Running mate Kathy Hochul Chris Moss
Popular vote 2,069,480 1,537,077
Percentage 54.3% 40.3%

Cuomo:      40–50%      50–60%      70–80%      80–90%      >90%
Astorino:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%

Democrat Andrew Cuomo, then serving as Attorney General of New York, was elected Governor in 2010. Cuomo defeated Republican businessman Carl Paladino by a nearly 2 to 1 margin, 63% to 33%. Cuomo succeeded retiring Democratic Governor David Paterson. Entering the 2014 campaign, Cuomo enjoyed high approval ratings and a large campaign war chest that totaled $33 million as of January 2014. The Cook Political Report, Daily Kos Elections, Governing, RealClearPolitics, The Rothenberg Political Report, and Sabato's Crystal Ball all rated the 2014 New York gubernatorial election as "Safe Democratic". On Election Day, Cuomo and Hochul defeated Astorino and Moss by a margin of 14 percentage points.[1]

Democrats flipped Erie County, and Republicans flipped the following counties: Cayuga, Chemung, Chenango, Columbia, Cortland, Delaware, Dutchess, Greene, Herkimer, Jefferson, Lewis, Livingston, Madison, Monroe, Montgomery, Oneida, Ontario, Orange, Oswego, Otsego, Putnam, Rensselaer, St. Lawerence, Saratoga, Schenectady, Schuyler, Seneca, Suffolk, Sullivan, Ulster, Warren, Washington, Wayne, and Yates.

This is the last gubernatorial election in which the counties of Clinton, Franklin, Essex, and Broome voted Democratic, and the last in which Monroe and Ulster voted Republican.

Democratic primary edit

Progressive minor parties saw an opportunity to make headway in the state due to Cuomo's relatively conservative stances on taxes and spending.[2][3] A poll commissioned by businessman and progressive political activist Bill Samuels in March 2014 indicated that even an unknown left-wing third-party challenger on the Working Families Party line could garner between 6% and 13% of the vote without threatening Cuomo's chances of winning re-election.[4] A later poll by the Siena Research Institute taken of 772 registered voters from April 12–17, 2014, with a margin of error of ± 3.5%, found Cuomo taking 39% to Republican candidate Rob Astorino's 24% and an unnamed Working Families Party candidate also at 24%.[5] A Quinnipiac poll conducted in May 2014 produced a similar result to Siena's, with Cuomo at 37%, Astorino at 24% and the third party candidate at 22%.[6] The Working Families Party nonetheless cross-endorsed Cuomo in a bitterly contested convention vote, leaving Howie Hawkins of the Green Party as the sole progressive challenger assured of a place on the ballot.[3]

In May 2014, after widespread speculation, Lieutenant Governor Robert Duffy confirmed that he would not run for a second term, expressing a desire to return to his home city of Rochester.[7] Byron Brown, the Mayor of Buffalo; Kathy Hochul, a former U.S. Representative; Steve Bellone, the current Suffolk County Executive; Kevin Law, the former deputy Suffolk County executive; and Republican Joanie Mahoney, the County Executive of Onondaga County; were considered to be potential replacements.[8][9][10] Within the Cuomo administration, potential names included Matt Driscoll, the former mayor of Syracuse; RoAnn Destito, a former Assemblywoman; and Cesar A. Perales, the Secretary of State of New York.[11] Hochul was revealed as Cuomo's running mate during the state Democratic convention on May 21, 2014.[12]

Candidates edit

Declared edit

Failed to qualify edit

  • Running mate: Nenad Bach

Polling edit

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Andrew
Cuomo
Zephyr
Teachout
Undecided
Public Policy Polling September 4–5, 2014 513 ± 4% 58% 26% 16%
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Kathy
Hochul
Tim
Wu
Undecided
Public Policy Polling September 4–5, 2014 513 ± 4% 45% 26% 29%

Results edit

Primary elections were held on September 9, 2014.[17]

 
Results by county:
  Cuomo—80–90%
  Cuomo—70–80%
  Cuomo—60–70%
  Cuomo—50–60%
  Cuomo—40–50%
  Teachout—40–50%
  Teachout—50–60%
  Teachout—60–70%
  Teachout—70–80%
Democratic Party gubernatorial primary results[18]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Andrew Cuomo (incumbent) 361,380 62.92%
Democratic Zephyr Teachout 192,210 33.47%
Democratic Randy Credico 20,760 3.61%
Total votes 574,350 100.00%
Democratic Party lieutenant gubernatorial primary results[18]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Kathy Hochul 329,089 60.20%
Democratic Tim Wu 217,614 39.80%
Total votes 546,703 100.00%

Republican primary edit

No Republican gubernatorial primary was held in 2014.

It was believed that the Republicans would nominate someone who was not up for re-election in 2014 and so did not have to give up their office to run, and who would use the campaign to raise their profile for a more competitive statewide bid in the future. Rob Astorino, the Westchester County Executive and the only Republican to enter the race, was not up for re-election until 2017.[19] Business magnate and television personality Donald Trump flirted with a run,[20][21] but decided against it, instead running for president as a Republican in 2016 and winning.[22] Other potential candidates who did not run were former U.S. Representative Vito Fossella,[23] Dutchess County Executive Marcus Molinaro[24] and businessman and 2010 candidate for New York State Comptroller Harry Wilson.[24]

Assemblywomen Jane Corwin and Nicole Malliotakis both declined overtures to be the party's nominee for lieutenant governor,[25] as did Rensselaer County Executive Kathleen M. Jimino and former United States Attorney for the Western District of New York Michael A. Battle.[26][27] On May 13, Astorino announced Chemung County Sheriff Chris Moss as his running mate.[28]

On May 15, 2014, the Republican Party nominated Astorino for Governor of New York and Moss for Lieutenant Governor of New York.[29]

Candidates edit

Declared edit

Declined edit

Major third parties edit

Besides the Democratic and Republican parties, the Conservative, Green, Independence and Working Families parties are qualified New York parties. These parties have automatic ballot access.

Conservative edit

Conservative Party chairman Michael R. Long endorsed Rob Astorino in February 2014.[14] Buffalo Public Schools Board of Education member and 2010 Republican gubernatorial nominee Carl Paladino originally stated he would seek the Conservative Party nomination if the Republicans nominated Astorino;[40] however, by March 2014, Paladino indicated that he would not run for governor in 2014 and would support Astorino if Donald Trump did not run.[34] On May 31, 2014, the Party nominated Astorino and Moss for governor and lieutenant governor, respectively.[41]

Nominee edit

Green edit

In contrast to the other qualified parties, the Green Party of New York traditionally endorses its own candidates. The party held its nominating convention on May 17, 2014.[42]

Nominee edit

Independence edit

The Independence Party of New York, which traditionally cross-endorses the candidate most likely to get them the most votes, was expected to nominate incumbent Governor Andrew Cuomo as it did in 2010. Republican Rob Astorino refused the line, and several members of the Democratic Party called on Cuomo to do the same.[44]

Despite the controversy, Cuomo accepted the nomination on May 22, 2014.[45]

Nominee edit

Working Families edit

The Working Families Party traditionally cross-endorses Democrats, but many of its members (most of which are labor unions) have expressed reservations over endorsing incumbent Governor Andrew Cuomo as they did in 2010.[46][47]

The WFP convention, held on May 31, chose Cuomo over professor Zephyr Teachout by a 59%–41% margin in a contentious floor vote. Cuomo's supporters negotiated an agreement in which the governor would support the party agenda in exchange for their vote, expressly attempting to keep the party line solely as a second line for the Democrats; this agreement was met with widespread and vocal skepticism from Teachout's supporters, who insisted the WFP hold to its principles and that Cuomo could not be trusted to hold up to his end of the bargain.[48]

Candidates edit

Nominee edit
Declared edit
Declined edit
  • Diane Ravitch, former Assistant Secretary of Education[51][52]
  • Bill Samuels, activist.[44] Samuels instead announced his intent to pursue the lieutenant governor line in the Democratic primary, a position he also considered pursuing in 2010.[53] Samuels dropped out of the race after Teachout lost the WFP nomination to Cuomo, thus implying that Samuels was planning to be Teachout's running mate.[54]

Minor third parties edit

Any candidate not among the six qualified New York parties (Democratic, Republican, Conservative, Green, Independence and Working Families) must petition their way onto the ballot; they do not face primary elections. Independent nominating petitions began collecting signatures on July 8 and were due to the state by August 19.[55]

Libertarian edit

The Libertarian Party of New York held its nominating convention on April 26, 2014. The nominating process required five rounds of voting, after which Michael McDermott was nominated.[56]

Candidates edit

Nominee edit
Unsuccessful edit
Declined edit

Sapient edit

  • Steven Cohn, Long Island attorney who attempted to run on a "Tea Party" line in the 2010 election but had his petitions rejected
    • Running mate: Bobby Kalotee

The party initially filed with Kendy Guzman as the running mate. As of August 26, Guzman had turned down the nomination and was replaced with Kalotee, the former chairman of the forcibly-dissolved Nassau County wing of the Independence Party.[59][60]

Cohn is the only candidate on the ballot who did not participate in the lone gubernatorial debate.[61]

Stop Common Core edit

The "Stop Common Core Party" (renamed after the election to the Reform Party) is a single-issue ballot line conceived by Republican nominee Rob Astorino.[62][63][64]

Nominee edit

Women's Equality edit

The Women's Equality Party is a political party created by Gov. Andrew Cuomo and his allies. The Party was designed to take advantage of New York's electoral fusion laws, which allow candidates to appear on multiple parties' lines in the same election. The Party is named after the Women's Equality Act, a bill that failed in the New York State Senate in 2013 and 2014 due to a stalemate over an abortion rights provision in the bill.[66][67]

The formation of the Party was particularly controversial among feminists (particularly Zephyr Teachout, Cuomo's primary opponent)[68] and was noted for its use of questionable campaign imagery, particularly a tour bus that bore a striking resemblance to a box of Tampax tampons.[69] Additionally, the Working Families Party asserted that the formation of the Women's Equality Party was an attempt to undermine the WFP as a viable party in New York politics.[70]

Nominee edit

Failed to make ballot edit

  • Socialist Workers Party: For the second straight election, the Socialist Workers Party waged a write-in candidacy for the governor's seat, with John Studer as the nominee.[71]
  • Constitution Party: Donna Mulvihill, a homeschooling activist from Honeoye Lake, sought petitions to run for governor on the Constitution Party line before abruptly withdrawing from the race the day before petitions were due, citing her father's death. This is the second consecutive election in which the party has failed to collect enough signatures for governor.[72]
  • Life and Justice Party: Disability rights activist Michael Carey submitted petitions to form a Life and Justice Party with himself as the gubernatorial candidate and with Republican lieutenant governor nominee Chris Moss listed as his running mate.[73] Moss did not accept his designation as the lieutenant governor candidate on the Life and Justice line.[74] The petitions were later ruled invalid.[74]
  • Liberal Party of New York: No candidate. The party openly discussed cross-endorsing incumbent governor Cuomo in an effort to regain ballot access but never did so.[75][76]
  • Rent Is Too Damn High Party: Perennial candidate Jimmy McMillan made a fourth attempt at running for governor on his self-created line, with Christialle Felix as his running mate.[77] His petitions were later challenged and invalidated after it was discovered McMillan had photocopied many of the petitions to give the appearance of more signatures.[78]

General election edit

In July 2014, Astorino called for New Jersey Governor Chris Christie to resign his position as chair of the Republican Governors Association due to his refusal to support Astorino's campaign, which Christie publicly characterized as a "lost cause."[79] Astorino claimed that Christie refused to support him due to Christie's relationship with Cuomo.[80]

Debates edit

  • Complete video of debate, October 22, 2014

Predictions edit

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[81] Solid D November 3, 2014
Sabato's Crystal Ball[82] Safe D November 3, 2014
Rothenberg Political Report[83] Safe D November 3, 2014
Real Clear Politics[84] Safe D November 3, 2014

Polling edit

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Andrew
Cuomo (D)
Rob
Astorino (R)
Howie
Hawkins (G)
Other Undecided
Zogby Analytics October 28–31, 2014 681 ± 3.8% 55% 34% 11%
Marist College October 26–28, 2014 503 ± 4.4% 56% 30% 6% 1% 7%
CBS News/NYT/YouGov October 16–23, 2014 4,506 ± 2% 56% 31% 1% 11%
October 16–20, 2014 748 ± 3.6% 54% 33% 9% 1% 4%
October 1–6, 2014 1,153 ± 2.9% 51% 31% 9% 1% 8%
55% 34% 2% 9%
CBS News/NYT/YouGov September 20–October 1, 2014 5,122 ± 2% 57% 30% 2% 11%
Rasmussen Reports September 22–23, 2014 825 ± 4% 49% 32% 7% 12%
September 18–23, 2014 809 ± 3.4% 56% 27% 7% 0% 10%
Marist College September 17–21, 2014 517 ± 4.3% 54% 29% 9% 1% 8%
CBS News/NYT/YouGov August 18–September 2, 2014 5,645 ± 2% 52% 28% 6% 13%
August 14–17, 2014 1,034 ± 3.1% 52% 27% 7% 14%
56% 28% 2% 15%
Marist College July 28–31, 2014 852 ± 3.4% 54% 23% 7% 1% 16%
CBS News/NYT/YouGov July 5–24, 2014 6,788 ± ? 56% 32% 3% 10%
July 13–16, 2014 774 ± 3.5% 60% 23% 6% 0% 11%
Marist College June 23–July 1, 2014 833 ± 3.4% 59% 24% 6% 1% 11%
June 8–12, 2014 835 ± 3.4% 57% 21% 4% 1% 16%
May 14–19, 2014 1,129 ± 2.9% 57% 28% 2% 14%
April 12–17, 2014 772 ± 3.5% 58% 28% 14%
Siena College[permanent dead link] March 16–20, 2014 813 ± 3.4% 61% 26% 13%
Marist College February 28–March 3, 2014 658 ± 3.8% 65% 25% 10%
Quinnipiac University 2014-02-14 at the Wayback Machine February 6–10, 2014 1,488 ± 2.5% 58% 24% 2% 16%
January 12–16, 2014 808 ± 3.4% 67% 19% 3% 11%
Quinnipiac University 2013-12-02 at the Wayback Machine November 20–24, 2013 1,337 ± 2.7% 56% 25% 2% 17%
Marist College November 18–20, 2013 675 ± 3.8% 65% 23% 12%
November 11–14, 2013 806 ± 3.5% 63% 24% 13%
Hypothetical polling
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Andrew
Cuomo (D)
Edward F.
Cox (R)
Other Undecided
November 11–14, 2013 806 ± 3.5% 62% 25% 13%
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Andrew
Cuomo (D)
Steven
McLaughlin (R)
Other Undecided
Marist College November 18–20, 2013 675 ± 3.8% 64% 24% 12%
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Andrew
Cuomo (D)
Carl
Paladino (R)
Other Undecided
Marist College February 28–March 3, 2014 658 ± 3.8% 68% 25% 7%
Marist College November 18–20, 2013 675 ± 3.8% 67% 24% 9%
November 11–14, 2013 806 ± 3.5% 65% 24% 11%
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Andrew
Cuomo (D)
Donald
Trump (R)
Other Undecided
Marist College February 28–March 3, 2014 658 ± 3.8% 70% 26% 4%
Quinnipiac University 2014-02-14 at the Wayback Machine February 6–10, 2014 1,488 ± 2.5% 63% 26% 2% 9%
January 12–16, 2014 808 ± 3.4% 70% 22% 4% 4%
Marist College November 18–20, 2013 675 ± 3.8% 70% 24% 7%

Results edit

Cuomo handily defeated Astorino by a 54.19%-40.25% margin,[1] although this margin was smaller than Cuomo's victory margin in 2010.[85] Cuomo won all five counties of New York City, along with Westchester, Rockland, and Nassau counties;[1][85] Hawkins's presence on the ballot had a spoiler effect that allowed Astorino to win some Hudson Valley counties that traditionally vote Democratic and carry the Upstate region as a whole.[86] Cuomo carried New York City 75.6% to 17.3% (730,088 votes to 168,460 votes), while narrowly losing the Upstate 44.1% to 47.4% (1,213,159 votes to 1,302,182 votes).

New York gubernatorial election, 2014[1]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Andrew Cuomo 1,811,672 47.52% -9.00%
Working Families Andrew Cuomo 126,244 3.31% -0.04%
Independence Andrew Cuomo 77,762 2.04% -1.13%
Women's Equality Andrew Cuomo 53,802 1.41% N/A
Total Andrew Cuomo/Kathy Hochul (incumbent) 2,069,480 54.28% -8.77%
Republican Rob Astorino 1,234,951 32.39% +4.45%
Conservative Rob Astorino 250,634 6.57% +1.54%
Stop Common Core Rob Astorino 51,492 1.35% N/A
Total Rob Astorino/Christopher Moss 1,537,077 40.31% +6.78%
Green Howie Hawkins/Brian Jones 184,419 4.84% +3.54%
Libertarian Michael McDermott/Chris Edes 16,769 0.44% -0.61%
Sapient Steven Cohn/Bobby Kalotee 4,963 0.13% N/A
Total votes 3,812,708 100.0% N/A
Democratic hold

Results by county edit

Cuomo Astorino Hawkins McDermott Cohn Scattering Total
County DEM WOR IND WEP Total REP CON SCC Total GRE LBT SAP - -
Albany 36.46%
(31,043)
3.42%
(2,916)
1.88%
(1,597)
1.04%
(882)
42.79%
(36,438)
32.21%
(27,426)
6.77%
(5,766)
1.38%
(1,176)
40.36%
(34,368)
12.47%
(10,619)
0.60%
(513)
0.14%
(117)
3.64%
(3,095)
85,150
Allegany 21.59%
(2,517)
0.81%
(95)
1.28%
(149)
0.41%
(48)
24.10%
(2,809)
58.16%
(6,780)
8.14%
(949)
2.51%
(293)
68.82%
(8,022)
2.99%
(348)
0.54%
(63)
0.10%
(12)
3.46%
(403)
11,657
Bronx 80.77%
(107,573)
3.02%
(4,017)
0.76%
(1,017)
0.57%
(762)
85.13%
(113,369)
9.00%
(11,991)
1.63%
(2,165)
0.19%
(258)
10.82%
(14,414)
2.06%
(2,741)
0.21%
(278)
0.05%
(66)
1.73%
(2,310)
133,178
Broome 43.23%
(21,510)
2.63%
(1,311)
2.37%
(1,181)
0.98%
(489)
49.22%
(24,491)
35.25%
(17,543)
5.39%
(2,680)
1.60%
(798)
42.24%
(21,021)
5.73%
(2,849)
0.51%
(255)
0.12%
(61)
2.18%
(1,084)
49,761
Cattaraugus 27.59%
(5,241)
1.10%
(209)
2.18%
(414)
0.41%
(77)
31.28%
(5,941)
48.48%
(9,209)
9.57%
(1,818)
2.05%
(389)
60.10%
(11,416)
2.65%
(504)
0.69%
(132)
0.24%
(45)
5.05%
(958)
18,996
Cayuga 37.25%
(7,687)
1.97%
(407)
1.68%
(346)
0.68%
(141)
41.59%
(8,581)
39.08%
(8,063)
7.91%
(1,633)
1.95%
(403)
48.94%
(10,099)
5.95%
(1,227)
0.41%
(84)
0.14%
(29)
2.98%
(614)
20,634
Chautauqua 31.72%
(10,541)
1.66%
(553)
3.07%
(1,021)
0.56%
(185)
37.01%
(12,300)
45.82%
(15,228)
8.97%
(2,982)
1.94%
(645)
56.74%
(18,855)
3.15%
(1,046)
0.48%
(160)
0.14%
(29)
2.98%
(614)
33,233
Chemung 32.61%
(7,182)
1.34%
(295)
1.60%
(352)
0.55%
(121)
36.10%
(7,950)
50.08%
(11,029)
6.44%
(1,418)
2.52%
(554)
59.04%
(13,001)
2.59%
(570)
0.33%
(73)
0.08%
(18)
1.86%
(410)
22,022
Chenango 30.69%
(3,536)
1.65%
(190)
1.79%
(206)
0.69%
(79)
34.81%
(4,011)
48.15%
(5,548)
5.45%
(628)
2.65%
(305)
56.25%
(6,481)
6.09%
(702)
0.62%
(72)
0.13%
(15)
2.09%
(410)
11,522
Clinton 45.41%
(8,584)
3.04%
(575)
3.42%
(646)
1.08%
(205)
52.95%
(10,010)
30.95%
(5,850)
5.58%
(1,055)
1.85%
(349)
38.37%
(7,254)
3.80%
(718)
0.48%
(91)
0.20%
(38)
4.20%
(793)
18,904
Columbia 31.18%
(6,115)
3.03%
(594)
2.83%
(555)
1.01%
(198)
38.05%
(7,462)
37.09%
(7,274)
8.25%
(1,618)
1.75%
(343)
47.09%
(9,235)
10.40%
(2,040)
0.56%
(109)
0.11%
(21)
3.79%
(744)
19,611
Cortland 31.60%
(3,568)
1.98%
(224)
1.63%
(184)
0.92%
(104)
36.14%
(4,080)
44.68%
(5,044)
7.19%
(812)
2.36%
(266)
54.22%
(6,122)
7.12%
(804)
0.65%
(73)
0.15%
(17)
1.72%
(194)
11,290
Delaware 28.48%
(3,483)
2.07%
(253)
1.49%
(182)
0.89%
(109)
32.92%
(4,027)
48.01%
(5,872)
6.93%
(847)
2.60%
(318)
57.53%
(7,037)
6.53%
(799)
0.68%
(83)
0.15%
(18)
2.18%
(267)
12,231
Dutchess 36.34%
(26,942)
2.85%
(2,113)
1.91%
(1,415)
1.56%
(1,154)
42.66%
(31,624)
38.42%
(28,483)
8.64%
(6,405)
2.08%
(1,545)
49.14%
(36,433)
4.95%
(3,667)
0.30%
(226)
0.26%
(195)
2.69%
(1,993)
74,138
Erie 43.57%
(102,546)
2.88%
(6,781)
3.50%
(8,243)
0.82%
(1,922)
50.77%
(119,492)
30.16%
(70,979)
10.58%
(24,891)
1.74%
(4,094)
42.48%
(99,964)
3.59%
(8,442)
0.51%
(1,208)
0.13%
(307)
2.52%
(5,927)
235,340
Essex 42.64%
(4,507)
2.37%
(251)
2.97%
(314)
1.15%
(122)
49.13%
(5,194)
33.61%
(3,553)
4.21%
(445)
1.56%
(165)
39.38%
(4,163)
4.97%
(525)
0.50%
(53)
0.12%
(13)
5.90%
(623)
10,571
Franklin 41.53%
(4,201)
1.59%
(161)
2.14%
(216)
0.90%
(91)
46.15%
(4,669)
37.62%
(3,806)
5.03%
(509)
1.55%
(157)
44.21%
(4,472)
4.84%
(490)
0.57%
(58)
0.16%
(16)
4.07%
(411)
10,116
Fulton 24.99%
(3,133)
1.01%
(126)
1.11%
(139)
0.53%
(67)
27.64%
(3,465)
54.26%
(6,802)
8.26%
(1,035)
2.47%
(310)
64.99%
(8,147)
4.44%
(556)
0.62%
(78)
0.13%
(16)
2.18%
(273)
12,535
Genesee 22.21%
(3,531)
0.99%
(157)
1.69%
(268)
0.53%
(84)
25.42%
(4,040)
53.98%
(8,581)
12.68%
(2,015)
2.64%
(420)
69.30%
(11,016)
2.32%
(369)
0.94%
(150)
0.10%
(16)
1.91%
(305)
15,896
Greene 25.57%
(3,777)
2.28%
(337)
1.96%
(289)
0.58%
(86)
30.39%
(4,489)
46.25%
(6,831)
10.18%
(1,504)
1.79%
(265)
58.23%
(8,600)
6.47%
(956)
0.37%
(54)
0.09%
(14)
4.44%
(656)
14,769
Hamilton 21.59%
(477)
1.18%
(26)
0.81%
(18)
0.91%
(20)
24.49%
(541)
57.63%
(1,273)
7.42%
(164)
1.81%
(40)
66.86%
(1,477)
4.57%
(101)
0.81%
(18)
0.14%
(3)
3.13%
(69)
2,209
Herkimer 30.64%
(4,490)
1.29%
(189)
1.45%
(212)
0.50%
(74)
33.88%
(4,965)
47.97%
(7,031)
6.94%
(1,017)
1.94%
(285)
56.86%
(8,333)
5.90%
(864)
0.71%
(104)
0.26%
(38)
2.40%
(352)
14,656
Jefferson 37.67%
(8,720)
1.98%
(459)
2.32%
(536)
0.73%
(169)
42.70%
(9,884)
41.07%
(9,506)
5.42%
(1,254)
1.79%
(414)
48.28%
(11,174)
3.94%
(913)
0.48%
(110)
0.18%
(41)
4.42%
(1,024)
23,146
Kings (Brooklyn) 67.58%
(196,069)
7.02%
(20,377)
1.12%
(3,258)
1.04%
(3,023)
76.77%
(222,727)
12.09%
(35,080)
2.41%
(6,996)
0.21%
(597)
14.71%
(42,673)
5.60%
(16,244)
0.31%
(907)
0.09%
(248)
2.53%
(7,331)
290,130
Lewis 29.56%
(1,953)
1.24%
(82)
1.71%
(113)
0.48%
(32)
32.99%
(2,180)
48.76%
(3,222)
7.78%
(514)
2.35%
(155)
58.88%
(3,891)
4.65%
(307)
0.58%
(38)
0.27%
(18)
2.63%
(174)
6,608
Livingston 23.43%
(4,355)
1.37%
(255)
1.09%
(202)
0.56%
(105)
26.45%
(4,917)
55.52%
(10,321)
9.69%
(1,802)
2.29%
(426)
67.50%
(12,549)
3.54%
(659)
0.52%
(97)
0.16%
(29)
1.83%
(340)
18,591
Madison 32.25%
(5,741)
1.98%
(352)
2.26%
(402)
1.11%
(198)
37.60%
(6,693)
40.82%
(7,266)
9.15%
(1,629)
2.00%
(356)
51.97%
(9,251)
7.44%
(1,325)
0.60%
(106)
0.16%
(29)
2.22%
(396)
17,800
Monroe 40.59%
(80,349)
2.19%
(4,330)
2.11%
(4,176)
1.00%
(1,985)
45.89%
(90,840)
36.63%
(72,508)
8.75%
(17,329)
2.00%
(3,949)
47.38%
(93,786)
4.18%
(8,276)
0.58%
(1,155)
0.12%
(228)
1.84%
(3,651)
197,936
Montgomery 29.48%
(3,711)
1.35%
(170)
1.66%
(209)
0.61%
(77)
33.10%
(4,167)
45.32%
(5,705)
10.24%
(1,289)
1.63%
(205)
57.18%
(7,199)
4.74%
(597)
0.63%
(79)
0.20%
(25)
4.15%
(522)
12,589
Nassau 45.92%
(142,959)
2.12%
(6,601)
1.50%
(4,660)
1.93%
(5,994)
51.46%
(160,214)
36.86%
(114,765)
5.54%
(17,259)
1.11%
(3,448)
43.51%
(135,472)
2.49%
(7,746)
0.25%
(766)
0.23%
(708)
2.06%
(6,440)
311,346
New York (Manhattan) 65.09%
(159,732)
8.39%
(20,607)
1.67%
(4,104)
2.83%
(6,936)
77.96%
(191,379)
11.20%
(27,503)
1.14%
(2,800)
0.16%
(392)
12.50%
(30,695)
6.83%
(16,770)
0.45%
(1,094)
0.06%
(146)
2.20%
(5,410)
245,494
Niagara 35.56%
(18,536)
1.96%
(1,021)
2.74%
(1,427)
0.59%
(309)
40.85%
(21,293)
39.16%
(20,411)
11.97%
(6,240)
1.91%
(998)
53.04%
(27,649)
2.45%
(1,276)
0.52%
(272)
0.13%
(68)
3.01%
(1,569)
52,127
Oneida 37.87%
(18,803)
1.68%
(836)
2.62%
(1,301)
0.74%
(369)
42.92%
(21,309)
39.19%
(19,459)
7.55%
(3,749)
1.70%
(843)
48.44%
(24,051)
5.68%
(2,820)
0.56%
(279)
0.14%
(68)
2.26%
(1,125)
49,652
Onondaga 44.80%
(58,579)
2.15%
(2,817)
2.52%
(3,290)
1.10%
(1,439)
50.57%
(66,125)
30.43%
(39,786)
7.13%
(9,323)
1.52%
(1,986)
39.07%
(51,095)
7.96%
(10,409)
0.32%
(420)
0.07%
(87)
2.02%
(2,631)
130,767
Ontario 29.82%
(9,324)
1.62%
(507)
1.69%
(529)
0.63%
(198)
33.77%
(10,558)
47.77%
(14,937)
9.21%
(2,880)
2.24%
(700)
59.22%
(18,517)
4.06%
(1,268)
0.52%
(163)
0.11%
(35)
2.34%
(728)
31,269
Orange 31.74%
(27,633)
1.91%
(1,661)
5.55%
(4,833)
2.09%
(1.816)
41.28%
(35,943)
39.21%
(34,141)
8.55%
(7,447)
2.21%
(1,923)
49.97%
(43,511)
3.51%
(3,056)
0.31%
(270)
0.12%
(108)
4.81%
(4,185)
87,073
Orleans 20.45%
(1,906)
1.14%
(106)
1.34%
(125)
0.45%
(42)
23.37%
(2,179)
55.78%
(5,200)
11.89%
(1,108)
2.38%
(222)
70.05%
(6,530)
2.39%
(223)
0.73%
(68)
0.16%
(15)
3.29%
(307)
9,322
Oswego 32.31%
(9,090)
1.61%
(454)
1.95%
(548)
0.80%
(224)
36.66%
(10,316)
44.19%
(12,432)
8.53%
(2,399)
2.11%
(595)
54.83%
(15,426)
5.70%
(1,603)
0.42%
(118)
0.10%
(28)
2.29%
(645)
28,136
Otsego 30.76%
(4,764)
2.66%
(412)
2.13%
(330)
1.10%
(171)
36.65%
(5,677)
40.18%
(6,223)
7.08%
(1,096)
2.14%
(332)
49.40%
(7,651)
10.05%
(1,557)
0.59%
(91)
0.17%
(27)
3.14%
(486)
15,489
Putnam 33.10%
8,803
3.06%
814
2.20%
584
1.77%
472
40.13%
10,673
42.76%
11,371
9.58%
2,547
1.74%
463
54.08%
14,381
3.47%
924
0.26%
68
0.09%
25
1.97%
523
26,594
Queens 67.24%
154,956
3.91%
9,001
1.34%
3,081
0.98%
2,262
73.46%
169,300
17.23%
39,719
3.26%
7,502
0.27%
627
20.76%
47,848
3.47%
8,000
0.36%
832
0.15%
350
1.79%
4,128
230,458
Rensselaer 28.13%
12,814
2.46%
1,119
2.58%
1,177
0.98%
446
34.15%
15,556
40.18%
18,304
10.40%
4,739
1.76%
804
52.35%
23,847
10.01%
4,561
0.55%
251
0.17%
78
2.77%
1,260
45,553
Richmond (Staten Island) 46.76%
36,104
3.18%
2,452
2.58%
1,991
0.99%
766
53.51%
41,313
35.15%
27,139
6.75%
5,210
0.62%
481
42.52%
32,830
1.91%
1,474
0.42%
324
0.07%
55
1.57%
1,211
77,207
Rockland 43.22%
31,296
2.34%
1,695
1.55%
1,125
2.27%
1,646
49.39%
35,762
35.78%
25,905
6.70%
4,852
1.35%
978
43.83%
31,735
2.79%
2,019
0.22%
159
0.09%
65
3.68%
2,663
72,403
Saratoga 30.13%
20,110
2.05%
1,371
2.14%
1,428
1.06%
707
35.39%
23,616
42.62%
28,442
8.93%
5,957
1.93%
1,287
53.47%
35,686
7.76%
5,182
0.59%
394
0.15%
99
2.64%
1,761
66,738
Schenectady 33.38%
14,381
2.23%
961
2.33%
1,004
0.88%
380
38.83%
16,726
36.65%
15,790
9.33%
4,019
1.82%
782
47.80%
20,591
9.22%
3,970
0.58%
248
0.13%
58
3.45%
1,487
43,080
Schoharie 22.68%
2,132
1.53%
144
1.71%
161
0.89%
84
26.82%
2,521
47.48%
4,464
12.50%
1,175
2.61%
245
62.59%
5,884
7.48%
703
0.76%
71
0.19%
18
2.17%
204
9,401
Schuyler 26.35%
1,511
2.06%
118
1.52%
87
0.61%
35
30.53%
1,751
49.24%
2,824
9.10%
522
2.23%
128
60.58%
3,474
6.22%
357
0.61%
35
0.17%
10
1.89%
108
5,735
Seneca 31.01%
2,743
1.65%
146
1.73%
153
0.70%
62
35.09%
3,104
47.69%
4,219
6.69%
592
2.55%
226
56.94%
5,037
5.44%
481
0.71%
63
0.23%
20
1.59%
141
8,846
St. Lawrence 30.13%
20,110
2.05%
1,371
2.14%
1,428
1.06%
707
35.39%
23,616
42.62%
28,442
8.93%
5,957
1.93%
1,287
53.47%
35,686
7.76%
5,182
0.59%
394
0.15%
99
2.64%
1,761
66,738
Steuben 25.93%
6,994
1.32%
355
1.50%
404
0.47%
128
29.22%
7,881
55.16%
14,877
6.35%
1,714
3.12%
842
64.63%
17,433
2.53%
682
0.44%
119
0.13%
35
3.05%
823
26,973
Suffolk 39.30%
126,358
2.23%
7,181
2.08%
6,681
1.99%
6,395
45.60%
146,615
36.55%
117,514
8.19%
26,331
2.02%
6,490
46.76%
150,335
3.10%
9,964
0.36%
1,172
0.12%
385
4.05%
13,018
321,489
Sullivan 28.43%
4,747
1.93%
323
1.53%
255
1.87%
312
33.76%
5,637
45.27%
7,559
9.21%
1,537
2.35%
393
56.83%
9,489
5.19%
867
0.37%
61
0.13%
21
3.73%
622
16,697
Tioga 32.12%
4,228
1.53%
202
1.60%
211
0.77%
102
36.03%
4,743
47.41%
6,241
6.21%
818
2.16%
284
55.78%
7,343
5.30%
698
0.74%
97
0.08%
11
2.07%
273
13,165
Tompkins 43.09%
10,707
5.67%
1,410
1.52%
377
1.73%
429
52.00%
12,923
24.08%
5,983
3.72%
925
1.17%
290
28.97%
7,198
16.39%
4,074
0.52%
128
0.10%
24
2.03%
503
24,850
Ulster 31.85%
16,031
4.49%
2,260
1.90%
957
2.15%
1,080
40.39%
20,328
35.14%
17,685
8.06%
4,055
2.04%
1,025
45.23%
22,765
10.71%
5,389
0.50%
253
0.13%
67
3.05%
1,532
50,334
Warren 29.34%
5,301
1.41%
255
2.09%
378
0.97%
176
33.82%
6,110
45.74%
8,264
7.15%
1,292
1.71%
309
54.60%
9,865
8.15%
1,473
0.56%
101
0.16%
29
2.71%
490
18,068
Washington 26.49%
3,860
1.50%
218
1.93%
281
0.80%
116
30.71%
4,475
45.91%
6,690
8.62%
1,256
1.83%
267
56.36%
8,213
8.08%
1,178
0.54%
78
0.14%
20
4.18%
609
14,573
Wayne 24.45%
5,874
1.20%
289
1.27%
306
0.59%
141
27.51%
6,610
51.86%
12,460
11.27%
2,709
2.67%
642
65.80%
15,811
3.40%
818
0.70%
169
0.15%
37
2.43%
583
24,028
Westchester 46.87%
100,079
3.09%
6,601
1.37%
2,930
2.31%
4,923
53.64%
114,533
34.48%
73,630
5.11%
10,917
0.91%
1,946
40.51%
86,493
2.63%
5,619
0.19%
406
0.06%
121
2.97%
6,357
213,529
Wyoming 18.14%
2,035
1.03%
116
1.03%
115
0.37%
41
20.57%
2,307
60.77%
6,817
11.71%
1,314
1.67%
187
74.15%
8,318
2.11%
237
0.57%
64
0.10%
11
2.50%
281
11,218
Yates 26.51%
1,634
1.57%
97
1.59%
98
0.71%
44
30.39%
1,873
51.21%
3,156
8.24%
508
2.77%
171
62.23%
3,835
4.67%
288
0.55%
34
0.11%
7
2.05%
126
11,218
Totals 45.91%
1,706,483
3.24%
120,446
1.97%
73,266
1.37%
51,052
54.19%
1,951,247
31.77%
1,181,134
6.44%
239,266
1.35%
50,242
40.25%
1,470,642
4.74%
176,269
0.41%
15,215
0.12%
4,626
2.67%
99,367
3,717,366

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican edit

Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic edit

By congressional district edit

Cuomo won 18 of 27 congressional districts. Both candidates won two districts held by the other party.[87]

District Cuomo Astorino Representative
1st 45.0% 47.1% Lee Zeldin
2nd 45.0% 48.5% Peter T. King
3rd 51.0% 42.8% Steve Israel
4th 53.1% 41.7% Kathleen Rice
5th 82.8% 13.3% Gregory Meeks
6th 64.9% 28.4% Grace Meng
7th 78.4% 10.6% Nydia Velázquez
8th 82.6% 10.9% Hakeem Jeffries
9th 79.5% 11.6% Yvette Clarke
10th 72.3% 16.9% Jerry Nadler
11th 55.1% 40.0% Dan Donovan
12th 72.1% 17.9% Carolyn Maloney
13th 86.6% 6.1% Charles Rangel
14th 73.3% 20.1% Joe Crowley
15th 90.9% 5.7% Jose E. Serrano
16th 64.2% 30.3% Eliot Engel
17th 50.9% 42.3% Nita Lowey
18th 42.9% 49.0% Sean Patrick Maloney
19th 36.2% 51.5% Chris Gibson
20th 40.5% 44.7% Paul Tonko
21st 39.4% 50.2% Elise Stefanik
22nd 42.1% 48.9% Richard Hanna
23rd 36.1% 55.2% Tom Reed
24th 46.0% 44.2% John Katko
25th 46.6% 46.4% Louise Slaughter
26th 57.2% 5.3% Brian Higgins
27th 34.0% 59.9% Chris Collins

Aftermath edit

The Green Party took Row D on the ballot,[86] surpassing the Independence and Working Families Parties (both of whom lost significant vote share but still qualified for automatic ballot status through 2018) but not surpassing the Conservative Party, which retained Row C with 6 percent of the vote. The Libertarian Party, after a 2010 showing in which it narrowly fell short of the 50,000 votes needed for automatic ballot access, missed that measure by a wide margin in 2014; the Party's candidate earned less than 17,000 votes. The Sapient Party was a non-factor with fewer than 5,000 votes.[1] Two new political parties—the Women's Equality Party and the Stop Common Core Party—surpassed the 50,000-vote threshold and attained automatic ballot status.[88]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e "NYS Board of Elections Governor/Lt. Governor Election Returns November 4, 2014" (PDF). Retrieved September 5, 2018.
  2. ^ Alan Greenblatt (September 5, 2014). "Andrew Cuomo Is Going to Win but Not with the Landslide He Wants". Governing. Retrieved September 20, 2014.
  3. ^ a b Zach C. Cohen (September 8, 2014). "Gov. Cuomo Suffers Discomfort Even as N.Y. Democrats' Power Swells". National Journal. Retrieved September 25, 2014.
  4. ^ Lovett, Kenneth (March 24, 2014). Third-party leftist candidate hurts Cuomo election win — poll. New York Daily News. Retrieved March 24, 2014.
  5. ^ Blain, Glenn (April 22, 2014). Liberal candidate could slice Gov. Cuomo's lead in re-election bid by half: Siena Poll. New York Daily News. Retrieved April 22, 2014.
  6. ^ Katz, Celeste (May 21, 2014). Liberal could woo voters, but Gov. Cuomo still positioned to win: Quinnipiac. New York Daily News. Retrieved May 21, 2014.
  7. ^ Brian Sharp (May 7, 2014). "Bob Duffy: 'I made my decision'". Democrat & Chronicle. Retrieved May 8, 2014.
  8. ^ Dems to hold their state convention in Melville. Newsday. Retrieved April 6, 2014.
  9. ^ Teri Weaver (May 7, 2014). "Report: NY Lt. Gov. Robert Duffy won't seek re-election on ticket with Cuomo". syracuse.com. Retrieved May 8, 2014.
  10. ^ Joseph Spector (May 7, 2014). "Duffy insists he's not being forced out". Democrat & Chronicle. Retrieved May 8, 2014.
  11. ^ Spector, Joseph (May 8, 2014). Will Cuomo look inside administration for lieutenant governor?. Gannett. Retrieved May 8, 2014.
  12. ^ a b Lovett, Ken (May 21, 2014). Gov. Cuomo selects former Buffalo-area Rep. Kathy Hochul as running mate. New York Daily News. Retrieved May 21, 2014.
  13. ^ Kaplan, Thomas (April 30, 2011). "'Cuomo 2014' Gifts Announce His Intentions". The New York Times.
  14. ^ a b Dicker, Fredric U. (February 10, 2014). Conservative Party boss says Rob Astorino to run for gov. New York Post. Retrieved February 10, 2014.
  15. ^ a b Fischler, Jacob (June 13, 2014). "Exclusive: Progressive Ticket Will Challenge Andrew Cuomo And His Running Mate In New York Primary". BuzzFeed. Retrieved June 16, 2014.
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External links edit

  • New York gubernatorial election, 2014 at Ballotpedia
  • Campaign contributions at FollowTheMoney.org

2014, york, gubernatorial, election, took, place, november, 2014, incumbent, democratic, governor, andrew, cuomo, sought, election, second, term, office, though, incumbent, lieutenant, governor, robert, duffy, seek, election, cuomo, running, mate, former, repr. The 2014 New York gubernatorial election took place on November 4 2014 Incumbent Democratic Governor Andrew Cuomo sought re election to a second term in office though incumbent Lieutenant Governor Robert Duffy did not seek re election Cuomo and his running mate former U S Representative Kathy Hochul won contested primaries while Republican Rob Astorino the Westchester County Executive and his running mate Chemung County Sheriff Chris Moss were unopposed for their party s nomination Astorino and Moss were also cross nominated by the Conservative Party and the Stop Common Core Party 2014 New York gubernatorial election 2010 November 4 2014 2018 Turnout33 2 2 2pp Nominee Andrew Cuomo Rob AstorinoParty Democratic RepublicanAlliance Parties IndependenceWomen s EqualityWorking Families Parties ConservativeStop Common CoreRunning mate Kathy Hochul Chris MossPopular vote 2 069 480 1 537 077Percentage 54 3 40 3 County resultsCongressional district resultsCuomo 40 50 50 60 70 80 80 90 gt 90 Astorino 40 50 50 60 60 70 70 80 Governor before electionAndrew CuomoDemocratic Elected Governor Andrew CuomoDemocraticDemocrat Andrew Cuomo then serving as Attorney General of New York was elected Governor in 2010 Cuomo defeated Republican businessman Carl Paladino by a nearly 2 to 1 margin 63 to 33 Cuomo succeeded retiring Democratic Governor David Paterson Entering the 2014 campaign Cuomo enjoyed high approval ratings and a large campaign war chest that totaled 33 million as of January 2014 The Cook Political Report Daily Kos Elections Governing RealClearPolitics The Rothenberg Political Report and Sabato s Crystal Ball all rated the 2014 New York gubernatorial election as Safe Democratic On Election Day Cuomo and Hochul defeated Astorino and Moss by a margin of 14 percentage points 1 Democrats flipped Erie County and Republicans flipped the following counties Cayuga Chemung Chenango Columbia Cortland Delaware Dutchess Greene Herkimer Jefferson Lewis Livingston Madison Monroe Montgomery Oneida Ontario Orange Oswego Otsego Putnam Rensselaer St Lawerence Saratoga Schenectady Schuyler Seneca Suffolk Sullivan Ulster Warren Washington Wayne and Yates This is the last gubernatorial election in which the counties of Clinton Franklin Essex and Broome voted Democratic and the last in which Monroe and Ulster voted Republican Contents 1 Democratic primary 1 1 Candidates 1 1 1 Declared 1 1 2 Failed to qualify 1 2 Polling 1 3 Results 2 Republican primary 2 1 Candidates 2 1 1 Declared 2 1 2 Declined 3 Major third parties 3 1 Conservative 3 1 1 Nominee 3 2 Green 3 2 1 Nominee 3 3 Independence 3 3 1 Nominee 3 4 Working Families 3 4 1 Candidates 3 4 1 1 Nominee 3 4 1 2 Declared 3 4 1 3 Declined 4 Minor third parties 4 1 Libertarian 4 1 1 Candidates 4 1 1 1 Nominee 4 1 1 2 Unsuccessful 4 1 1 3 Declined 4 2 Sapient 4 3 Stop Common Core 4 3 1 Nominee 4 4 Women s Equality 4 4 1 Nominee 4 5 Failed to make ballot 5 General election 5 1 Debates 5 2 Predictions 5 3 Polling 5 4 Results 5 5 Results by county 5 5 1 Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican 5 5 2 Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic 5 6 By congressional district 6 Aftermath 7 References 8 External linksDemocratic primary editProgressive minor parties saw an opportunity to make headway in the state due to Cuomo s relatively conservative stances on taxes and spending 2 3 A poll commissioned by businessman and progressive political activist Bill Samuels in March 2014 indicated that even an unknown left wing third party challenger on the Working Families Party line could garner between 6 and 13 of the vote without threatening Cuomo s chances of winning re election 4 A later poll by the Siena Research Institute taken of 772 registered voters from April 12 17 2014 with a margin of error of 3 5 found Cuomo taking 39 to Republican candidate Rob Astorino s 24 and an unnamed Working Families Party candidate also at 24 5 A Quinnipiac poll conducted in May 2014 produced a similar result to Siena s with Cuomo at 37 Astorino at 24 and the third party candidate at 22 6 The Working Families Party nonetheless cross endorsed Cuomo in a bitterly contested convention vote leaving Howie Hawkins of the Green Party as the sole progressive challenger assured of a place on the ballot 3 In May 2014 after widespread speculation Lieutenant Governor Robert Duffy confirmed that he would not run for a second term expressing a desire to return to his home city of Rochester 7 Byron Brown the Mayor of Buffalo Kathy Hochul a former U S Representative Steve Bellone the current Suffolk County Executive Kevin Law the former deputy Suffolk County executive and Republican Joanie Mahoney the County Executive of Onondaga County were considered to be potential replacements 8 9 10 Within the Cuomo administration potential names included Matt Driscoll the former mayor of Syracuse RoAnn Destito a former Assemblywoman and Cesar A Perales the Secretary of State of New York 11 Hochul was revealed as Cuomo s running mate during the state Democratic convention on May 21 2014 12 Candidates edit Declared edit Andrew Cuomo incumbent Governor 13 Running mate Kathy Hochul former U S Representative 12 Randy Credico comedian activist Libertarian nominee for the U S Senate in 2010 and Tax Wall Street nominee for Mayor of New York City in 2013 14 No running mate Zephyr Teachout associate professor of law at Fordham University 15 Running mate Tim Wu professor of law at Columbia University 15 Failed to qualify edit Raquel McPherson removed from ballot 16 Sam Sloan chess player publisher Libertarian candidate for governor in 2010 and War Veterans nominee for Mayor of New York City in 2013 removed from ballot 16 Running mate Nenad BachPolling edit Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror AndrewCuomo ZephyrTeachout UndecidedPublic Policy Polling September 4 5 2014 513 4 58 26 16 Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror KathyHochul TimWu UndecidedPublic Policy Polling September 4 5 2014 513 4 45 26 29 Results edit Primary elections were held on September 9 2014 17 nbsp Results by county Cuomo 80 90 Cuomo 70 80 Cuomo 60 70 Cuomo 50 60 Cuomo 40 50 Teachout 40 50 Teachout 50 60 Teachout 60 70 Teachout 70 80 Democratic Party gubernatorial primary results 18 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Andrew Cuomo incumbent 361 380 62 92 Democratic Zephyr Teachout 192 210 33 47 Democratic Randy Credico 20 760 3 61 Total votes 574 350 100 00 Democratic Party lieutenant gubernatorial primary results 18 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Kathy Hochul 329 089 60 20 Democratic Tim Wu 217 614 39 80 Total votes 546 703 100 00 Republican primary editNo Republican gubernatorial primary was held in 2014 It was believed that the Republicans would nominate someone who was not up for re election in 2014 and so did not have to give up their office to run and who would use the campaign to raise their profile for a more competitive statewide bid in the future Rob Astorino the Westchester County Executive and the only Republican to enter the race was not up for re election until 2017 19 Business magnate and television personality Donald Trump flirted with a run 20 21 but decided against it instead running for president as a Republican in 2016 and winning 22 Other potential candidates who did not run were former U S Representative Vito Fossella 23 Dutchess County Executive Marcus Molinaro 24 and businessman and 2010 candidate for New York State Comptroller Harry Wilson 24 Assemblywomen Jane Corwin and Nicole Malliotakis both declined overtures to be the party s nominee for lieutenant governor 25 as did Rensselaer County Executive Kathleen M Jimino and former United States Attorney for the Western District of New York Michael A Battle 26 27 On May 13 Astorino announced Chemung County Sheriff Chris Moss as his running mate 28 On May 15 2014 the Republican Party nominated Astorino for Governor of New York and Moss for Lieutenant Governor of New York 29 Candidates edit Declared edit Rob Astorino Westchester County Executive 30 Running mate Chris Moss Sheriff of Chemung County 28 Declined edit John Catsimatidis businessman and candidate for Mayor of New York City in 2013 31 Chris Collins U S Representative and former Erie County Executive 32 Edward F Cox lawyer chairman of the New York Republican State Committee and candidate for the U S Senate in 2006 33 34 Greg Edwards Chautauqua County Executive and nominee for Lieutenant Governor of New York in 2010 35 Chris Gibson U S Representative 36 Christopher Jacobs Erie County Clerk and former Secretary of State of New York 37 Steven McLaughlin New York State Assemblyman 38 39 Carl Paladino Buffalo Public Schools Board of Education member and nominee for governor in 2010 34 40 Donald Trump business magnate and television personality 22 Major third parties editBesides the Democratic and Republican parties the Conservative Green Independence and Working Families parties are qualified New York parties These parties have automatic ballot access Conservative edit Conservative Party chairman Michael R Long endorsed Rob Astorino in February 2014 14 Buffalo Public Schools Board of Education member and 2010 Republican gubernatorial nominee Carl Paladino originally stated he would seek the Conservative Party nomination if the Republicans nominated Astorino 40 however by March 2014 Paladino indicated that he would not run for governor in 2014 and would support Astorino if Donald Trump did not run 34 On May 31 2014 the Party nominated Astorino and Moss for governor and lieutenant governor respectively 41 Nominee edit Rob Astorino Republican nomineeGreen edit In contrast to the other qualified parties the Green Party of New York traditionally endorses its own candidates The party held its nominating convention on May 17 2014 42 Nominee edit Howie Hawkins labor activist and Green Party nominee for governor in 2010 43 Running mate Brian Jones teacher activist and actor from New York City 42 Independence edit The Independence Party of New York which traditionally cross endorses the candidate most likely to get them the most votes was expected to nominate incumbent Governor Andrew Cuomo as it did in 2010 Republican Rob Astorino refused the line and several members of the Democratic Party called on Cuomo to do the same 44 Despite the controversy Cuomo accepted the nomination on May 22 2014 45 Nominee edit Andrew Cuomo incumbent governorWorking Families edit The Working Families Party traditionally cross endorses Democrats but many of its members most of which are labor unions have expressed reservations over endorsing incumbent Governor Andrew Cuomo as they did in 2010 46 47 The WFP convention held on May 31 chose Cuomo over professor Zephyr Teachout by a 59 41 margin in a contentious floor vote Cuomo s supporters negotiated an agreement in which the governor would support the party agenda in exchange for their vote expressly attempting to keep the party line solely as a second line for the Democrats this agreement was met with widespread and vocal skepticism from Teachout s supporters who insisted the WFP hold to its principles and that Cuomo could not be trusted to hold up to his end of the bargain 48 Candidates edit Nominee edit Andrew Cuomo incumbent governorDeclared edit Howie Hawkins presumptive Green Party nominee 49 Zephyr Teachout law professor at Fordham University 50 Declined edit Diane Ravitch former Assistant Secretary of Education 51 52 Bill Samuels activist 44 Samuels instead announced his intent to pursue the lieutenant governor line in the Democratic primary a position he also considered pursuing in 2010 53 Samuels dropped out of the race after Teachout lost the WFP nomination to Cuomo thus implying that Samuels was planning to be Teachout s running mate 54 Minor third parties editAny candidate not among the six qualified New York parties Democratic Republican Conservative Green Independence and Working Families must petition their way onto the ballot they do not face primary elections Independent nominating petitions began collecting signatures on July 8 and were due to the state by August 19 55 Libertarian edit The Libertarian Party of New York held its nominating convention on April 26 2014 The nominating process required five rounds of voting after which Michael McDermott was nominated 56 Candidates edit Nominee edit Michael McDermott real estate broker and nominee for New York s 3rd congressional district in 2012 56 Running mate Chris Edes nominee for the U S Senate in 2012 57 Unsuccessful edit Richard Cooper resident of Westbury 58 Randy Credico comedian activist Libertarian nominee for the U S Senate in 2010 and Tax Wall Street nominee for Mayor of New York City in 2013 56 Nathan Lebron information technology specialist and perennial candidate 58 Declined edit Kristin M Davis former madam and Anti Prohibition Party nominee for governor in 2010 57 Bill Schmidt 57 Sapient edit Steven Cohn Long Island attorney who attempted to run on a Tea Party line in the 2010 election but had his petitions rejected Running mate Bobby KaloteeThe party initially filed with Kendy Guzman as the running mate As of August 26 Guzman had turned down the nomination and was replaced with Kalotee the former chairman of the forcibly dissolved Nassau County wing of the Independence Party 59 60 Cohn is the only candidate on the ballot who did not participate in the lone gubernatorial debate 61 Stop Common Core edit The Stop Common Core Party renamed after the election to the Reform Party is a single issue ballot line conceived by Republican nominee Rob Astorino 62 63 64 Nominee edit Rob Astorino Republican nominee 65 Women s Equality edit The Women s Equality Party is a political party created by Gov Andrew Cuomo and his allies The Party was designed to take advantage of New York s electoral fusion laws which allow candidates to appear on multiple parties lines in the same election The Party is named after the Women s Equality Act a bill that failed in the New York State Senate in 2013 and 2014 due to a stalemate over an abortion rights provision in the bill 66 67 The formation of the Party was particularly controversial among feminists particularly Zephyr Teachout Cuomo s primary opponent 68 and was noted for its use of questionable campaign imagery particularly a tour bus that bore a striking resemblance to a box of Tampax tampons 69 Additionally the Working Families Party asserted that the formation of the Women s Equality Party was an attempt to undermine the WFP as a viable party in New York politics 70 Nominee edit Andrew Cuomo incumbent governorFailed to make ballot edit Socialist Workers Party For the second straight election the Socialist Workers Party waged a write in candidacy for the governor s seat with John Studer as the nominee 71 Constitution Party Donna Mulvihill a homeschooling activist from Honeoye Lake sought petitions to run for governor on the Constitution Party line before abruptly withdrawing from the race the day before petitions were due citing her father s death This is the second consecutive election in which the party has failed to collect enough signatures for governor 72 Life and Justice Party Disability rights activist Michael Carey submitted petitions to form a Life and Justice Party with himself as the gubernatorial candidate and with Republican lieutenant governor nominee Chris Moss listed as his running mate 73 Moss did not accept his designation as the lieutenant governor candidate on the Life and Justice line 74 The petitions were later ruled invalid 74 Liberal Party of New York No candidate The party openly discussed cross endorsing incumbent governor Cuomo in an effort to regain ballot access but never did so 75 76 Rent Is Too Damn High Party Perennial candidate Jimmy McMillan made a fourth attempt at running for governor on his self created line with Christialle Felix as his running mate 77 His petitions were later challenged and invalidated after it was discovered McMillan had photocopied many of the petitions to give the appearance of more signatures 78 General election editIn July 2014 Astorino called for New Jersey Governor Chris Christie to resign his position as chair of the Republican Governors Association due to his refusal to support Astorino s campaign which Christie publicly characterized as a lost cause 79 Astorino claimed that Christie refused to support him due to Christie s relationship with Cuomo 80 Debates edit Complete video of debate October 22 2014Predictions edit Source Ranking As ofThe Cook Political Report 81 Solid D November 3 2014Sabato s Crystal Ball 82 Safe D November 3 2014Rothenberg Political Report 83 Safe D November 3 2014Real Clear Politics 84 Safe D November 3 2014Polling edit Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror AndrewCuomo D RobAstorino R HowieHawkins G Other UndecidedZogby Analytics October 28 31 2014 681 3 8 55 34 11 Marist College October 26 28 2014 503 4 4 56 30 6 1 7 CBS News NYT YouGov October 16 23 2014 4 506 2 56 31 1 11 Siena College October 16 20 2014 748 3 6 54 33 9 1 4 Quinnipiac University October 1 6 2014 1 153 2 9 51 31 9 1 8 55 34 2 9 CBS News NYT YouGov September 20 October 1 2014 5 122 2 57 30 2 11 Rasmussen Reports September 22 23 2014 825 4 49 32 7 12 Siena College September 18 23 2014 809 3 4 56 27 7 0 10 Marist College September 17 21 2014 517 4 3 54 29 9 1 8 CBS News NYT YouGov August 18 September 2 2014 5 645 2 52 28 6 13 Quinnipiac University August 14 17 2014 1 034 3 1 52 27 7 14 56 28 2 15 Marist College July 28 31 2014 852 3 4 54 23 7 1 16 CBS News NYT YouGov July 5 24 2014 6 788 56 32 3 10 Siena College July 13 16 2014 774 3 5 60 23 6 0 11 Marist College June 23 July 1 2014 833 3 4 59 24 6 1 11 Siena College June 8 12 2014 835 3 4 57 21 4 1 16 Quinnipiac University May 14 19 2014 1 129 2 9 57 28 2 14 Siena College April 12 17 2014 772 3 5 58 28 14 Siena College permanent dead link March 16 20 2014 813 3 4 61 26 13 Marist College February 28 March 3 2014 658 3 8 65 25 10 Quinnipiac University Archived 2014 02 14 at the Wayback Machine February 6 10 2014 1 488 2 5 58 24 2 16 Siena College January 12 16 2014 808 3 4 67 19 3 11 Quinnipiac University Archived 2013 12 02 at the Wayback Machine November 20 24 2013 1 337 2 7 56 25 2 17 Marist College November 18 20 2013 675 3 8 65 23 12 Siena College November 11 14 2013 806 3 5 63 24 13 Hypothetical pollingPoll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror AndrewCuomo D Edward F Cox R Other UndecidedSiena College November 11 14 2013 806 3 5 62 25 13 Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror AndrewCuomo D StevenMcLaughlin R Other UndecidedMarist College November 18 20 2013 675 3 8 64 24 12 Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror AndrewCuomo D CarlPaladino R Other UndecidedMarist College February 28 March 3 2014 658 3 8 68 25 7 Marist College November 18 20 2013 675 3 8 67 24 9 Siena College November 11 14 2013 806 3 5 65 24 11 Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror AndrewCuomo D DonaldTrump R Other UndecidedMarist College February 28 March 3 2014 658 3 8 70 26 4 Quinnipiac University Archived 2014 02 14 at the Wayback Machine February 6 10 2014 1 488 2 5 63 26 2 9 Siena College January 12 16 2014 808 3 4 70 22 4 4 Marist College November 18 20 2013 675 3 8 70 24 7 Results edit Cuomo handily defeated Astorino by a 54 19 40 25 margin 1 although this margin was smaller than Cuomo s victory margin in 2010 85 Cuomo won all five counties of New York City along with Westchester Rockland and Nassau counties 1 85 Hawkins s presence on the ballot had a spoiler effect that allowed Astorino to win some Hudson Valley counties that traditionally vote Democratic and carry the Upstate region as a whole 86 Cuomo carried New York City 75 6 to 17 3 730 088 votes to 168 460 votes while narrowly losing the Upstate 44 1 to 47 4 1 213 159 votes to 1 302 182 votes New York gubernatorial election 2014 1 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Andrew Cuomo 1 811 672 47 52 9 00 Working Families Andrew Cuomo 126 244 3 31 0 04 Independence Andrew Cuomo 77 762 2 04 1 13 Women s Equality Andrew Cuomo 53 802 1 41 N ATotal Andrew Cuomo Kathy Hochul incumbent 2 069 480 54 28 8 77 Republican Rob Astorino 1 234 951 32 39 4 45 Conservative Rob Astorino 250 634 6 57 1 54 Stop Common Core Rob Astorino 51 492 1 35 N ATotal Rob Astorino Christopher Moss 1 537 077 40 31 6 78 Green Howie Hawkins Brian Jones 184 419 4 84 3 54 Libertarian Michael McDermott Chris Edes 16 769 0 44 0 61 Sapient Steven Cohn Bobby Kalotee 4 963 0 13 N ATotal votes 3 812 708 100 0 N ADemocratic holdResults by county edit Cuomo Astorino Hawkins McDermott Cohn Scattering TotalCounty DEM WOR IND WEP Total REP CON SCC Total GRE LBT SAP Albany 36 46 31 043 3 42 2 916 1 88 1 597 1 04 882 42 79 36 438 32 21 27 426 6 77 5 766 1 38 1 176 40 36 34 368 12 47 10 619 0 60 513 0 14 117 3 64 3 095 85 150Allegany 21 59 2 517 0 81 95 1 28 149 0 41 48 24 10 2 809 58 16 6 780 8 14 949 2 51 293 68 82 8 022 2 99 348 0 54 63 0 10 12 3 46 403 11 657Bronx 80 77 107 573 3 02 4 017 0 76 1 017 0 57 762 85 13 113 369 9 00 11 991 1 63 2 165 0 19 258 10 82 14 414 2 06 2 741 0 21 278 0 05 66 1 73 2 310 133 178Broome 43 23 21 510 2 63 1 311 2 37 1 181 0 98 489 49 22 24 491 35 25 17 543 5 39 2 680 1 60 798 42 24 21 021 5 73 2 849 0 51 255 0 12 61 2 18 1 084 49 761Cattaraugus 27 59 5 241 1 10 209 2 18 414 0 41 77 31 28 5 941 48 48 9 209 9 57 1 818 2 05 389 60 10 11 416 2 65 504 0 69 132 0 24 45 5 05 958 18 996Cayuga 37 25 7 687 1 97 407 1 68 346 0 68 141 41 59 8 581 39 08 8 063 7 91 1 633 1 95 403 48 94 10 099 5 95 1 227 0 41 84 0 14 29 2 98 614 20 634Chautauqua 31 72 10 541 1 66 553 3 07 1 021 0 56 185 37 01 12 300 45 82 15 228 8 97 2 982 1 94 645 56 74 18 855 3 15 1 046 0 48 160 0 14 29 2 98 614 33 233Chemung 32 61 7 182 1 34 295 1 60 352 0 55 121 36 10 7 950 50 08 11 029 6 44 1 418 2 52 554 59 04 13 001 2 59 570 0 33 73 0 08 18 1 86 410 22 022Chenango 30 69 3 536 1 65 190 1 79 206 0 69 79 34 81 4 011 48 15 5 548 5 45 628 2 65 305 56 25 6 481 6 09 702 0 62 72 0 13 15 2 09 410 11 522Clinton 45 41 8 584 3 04 575 3 42 646 1 08 205 52 95 10 010 30 95 5 850 5 58 1 055 1 85 349 38 37 7 254 3 80 718 0 48 91 0 20 38 4 20 793 18 904Columbia 31 18 6 115 3 03 594 2 83 555 1 01 198 38 05 7 462 37 09 7 274 8 25 1 618 1 75 343 47 09 9 235 10 40 2 040 0 56 109 0 11 21 3 79 744 19 611Cortland 31 60 3 568 1 98 224 1 63 184 0 92 104 36 14 4 080 44 68 5 044 7 19 812 2 36 266 54 22 6 122 7 12 804 0 65 73 0 15 17 1 72 194 11 290Delaware 28 48 3 483 2 07 253 1 49 182 0 89 109 32 92 4 027 48 01 5 872 6 93 847 2 60 318 57 53 7 037 6 53 799 0 68 83 0 15 18 2 18 267 12 231Dutchess 36 34 26 942 2 85 2 113 1 91 1 415 1 56 1 154 42 66 31 624 38 42 28 483 8 64 6 405 2 08 1 545 49 14 36 433 4 95 3 667 0 30 226 0 26 195 2 69 1 993 74 138Erie 43 57 102 546 2 88 6 781 3 50 8 243 0 82 1 922 50 77 119 492 30 16 70 979 10 58 24 891 1 74 4 094 42 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5 90 864 0 71 104 0 26 38 2 40 352 14 656Jefferson 37 67 8 720 1 98 459 2 32 536 0 73 169 42 70 9 884 41 07 9 506 5 42 1 254 1 79 414 48 28 11 174 3 94 913 0 48 110 0 18 41 4 42 1 024 23 146Kings Brooklyn 67 58 196 069 7 02 20 377 1 12 3 258 1 04 3 023 76 77 222 727 12 09 35 080 2 41 6 996 0 21 597 14 71 42 673 5 60 16 244 0 31 907 0 09 248 2 53 7 331 290 130Lewis 29 56 1 953 1 24 82 1 71 113 0 48 32 32 99 2 180 48 76 3 222 7 78 514 2 35 155 58 88 3 891 4 65 307 0 58 38 0 27 18 2 63 174 6 608Livingston 23 43 4 355 1 37 255 1 09 202 0 56 105 26 45 4 917 55 52 10 321 9 69 1 802 2 29 426 67 50 12 549 3 54 659 0 52 97 0 16 29 1 83 340 18 591Madison 32 25 5 741 1 98 352 2 26 402 1 11 198 37 60 6 693 40 82 7 266 9 15 1 629 2 00 356 51 97 9 251 7 44 1 325 0 60 106 0 16 29 2 22 396 17 800Monroe 40 59 80 349 2 19 4 330 2 11 4 176 1 00 1 985 45 89 90 840 36 63 72 508 8 75 17 329 2 00 3 949 47 38 93 786 4 18 8 276 0 58 1 155 0 12 228 1 84 3 651 197 936Montgomery 29 48 3 711 1 35 170 1 66 209 0 61 77 33 10 4 167 45 32 5 705 10 24 1 289 1 63 205 57 18 7 199 4 74 597 0 63 79 0 20 25 4 15 522 12 589Nassau 45 92 142 959 2 12 6 601 1 50 4 660 1 93 5 994 51 46 160 214 36 86 114 765 5 54 17 259 1 11 3 448 43 51 135 472 2 49 7 746 0 25 766 0 23 708 2 06 6 440 311 346New York Manhattan 65 09 159 732 8 39 20 607 1 67 4 104 2 83 6 936 77 96 191 379 11 20 27 503 1 14 2 800 0 16 392 12 50 30 695 6 83 16 770 0 45 1 094 0 06 146 2 20 5 410 245 494Niagara 35 56 18 536 1 96 1 021 2 74 1 427 0 59 309 40 85 21 293 39 16 20 411 11 97 6 240 1 91 998 53 04 27 649 2 45 1 276 0 52 272 0 13 68 3 01 1 569 52 127Oneida 37 87 18 803 1 68 836 2 62 1 301 0 74 369 42 92 21 309 39 19 19 459 7 55 3 749 1 70 843 48 44 24 051 5 68 2 820 0 56 279 0 14 68 2 26 1 125 49 652Onondaga 44 80 58 579 2 15 2 817 2 52 3 290 1 10 1 439 50 57 66 125 30 43 39 786 7 13 9 323 1 52 1 986 39 07 51 095 7 96 10 409 0 32 420 0 07 87 2 02 2 631 130 767Ontario 29 82 9 324 1 62 507 1 69 529 0 63 198 33 77 10 558 47 77 14 937 9 21 2 880 2 24 700 59 22 18 517 4 06 1 268 0 52 163 0 11 35 2 34 728 31 269Orange 31 74 27 633 1 91 1 661 5 55 4 833 2 09 1 816 41 28 35 943 39 21 34 141 8 55 7 447 2 21 1 923 49 97 43 511 3 51 3 056 0 31 270 0 12 108 4 81 4 185 87 073Orleans 20 45 1 906 1 14 106 1 34 125 0 45 42 23 37 2 179 55 78 5 200 11 89 1 108 2 38 222 70 05 6 530 2 39 223 0 73 68 0 16 15 3 29 307 9 322Oswego 32 31 9 090 1 61 454 1 95 548 0 80 224 36 66 10 316 44 19 12 432 8 53 2 399 2 11 595 54 83 15 426 5 70 1 603 0 42 118 0 10 28 2 29 645 28 136Otsego 30 76 4 764 2 66 412 2 13 330 1 10 171 36 65 5 677 40 18 6 223 7 08 1 096 2 14 332 49 40 7 651 10 05 1 557 0 59 91 0 17 27 3 14 486 15 489Putnam 33 10 8 803 3 06 814 2 20 584 1 77 472 40 13 10 673 42 76 11 371 9 58 2 547 1 74 463 54 08 14 381 3 47 924 0 26 68 0 09 25 1 97 523 26 594Queens 67 24 154 956 3 91 9 001 1 34 3 081 0 98 2 262 73 46 169 300 17 23 39 719 3 26 7 502 0 27 627 20 76 47 848 3 47 8 000 0 36 832 0 15 350 1 79 4 128 230 458Rensselaer 28 13 12 814 2 46 1 119 2 58 1 177 0 98 446 34 15 15 556 40 18 18 304 10 40 4 739 1 76 804 52 35 23 847 10 01 4 561 0 55 251 0 17 78 2 77 1 260 45 553Richmond Staten Island 46 76 36 104 3 18 2 452 2 58 1 991 0 99 766 53 51 41 313 35 15 27 139 6 75 5 210 0 62 481 42 52 32 830 1 91 1 474 0 42 324 0 07 55 1 57 1 211 77 207Rockland 43 22 31 296 2 34 1 695 1 55 1 125 2 27 1 646 49 39 35 762 35 78 25 905 6 70 4 852 1 35 978 43 83 31 735 2 79 2 019 0 22 159 0 09 65 3 68 2 663 72 403Saratoga 30 13 20 110 2 05 1 371 2 14 1 428 1 06 707 35 39 23 616 42 62 28 442 8 93 5 957 1 93 1 287 53 47 35 686 7 76 5 182 0 59 394 0 15 99 2 64 1 761 66 738Schenectady 33 38 14 381 2 23 961 2 33 1 004 0 88 380 38 83 16 726 36 65 15 790 9 33 4 019 1 82 782 47 80 20 591 9 22 3 970 0 58 248 0 13 58 3 45 1 487 43 080Schoharie 22 68 2 132 1 53 144 1 71 161 0 89 84 26 82 2 521 47 48 4 464 12 50 1 175 2 61 245 62 59 5 884 7 48 703 0 76 71 0 19 18 2 17 204 9 401Schuyler 26 35 1 511 2 06 118 1 52 87 0 61 35 30 53 1 751 49 24 2 824 9 10 522 2 23 128 60 58 3 474 6 22 357 0 61 35 0 17 10 1 89 108 5 735Seneca 31 01 2 743 1 65 146 1 73 153 0 70 62 35 09 3 104 47 69 4 219 6 69 592 2 55 226 56 94 5 037 5 44 481 0 71 63 0 23 20 1 59 141 8 846St Lawrence 30 13 20 110 2 05 1 371 2 14 1 428 1 06 707 35 39 23 616 42 62 28 442 8 93 5 957 1 93 1 287 53 47 35 686 7 76 5 182 0 59 394 0 15 99 2 64 1 761 66 738Steuben 25 93 6 994 1 32 355 1 50 404 0 47 128 29 22 7 881 55 16 14 877 6 35 1 714 3 12 842 64 63 17 433 2 53 682 0 44 119 0 13 35 3 05 823 26 973Suffolk 39 30 126 358 2 23 7 181 2 08 6 681 1 99 6 395 45 60 146 615 36 55 117 514 8 19 26 331 2 02 6 490 46 76 150 335 3 10 9 964 0 36 1 172 0 12 385 4 05 13 018 321 489Sullivan 28 43 4 747 1 93 323 1 53 255 1 87 312 33 76 5 637 45 27 7 559 9 21 1 537 2 35 393 56 83 9 489 5 19 867 0 37 61 0 13 21 3 73 622 16 697Tioga 32 12 4 228 1 53 202 1 60 211 0 77 102 36 03 4 743 47 41 6 241 6 21 818 2 16 284 55 78 7 343 5 30 698 0 74 97 0 08 11 2 07 273 13 165Tompkins 43 09 10 707 5 67 1 410 1 52 377 1 73 429 52 00 12 923 24 08 5 983 3 72 925 1 17 290 28 97 7 198 16 39 4 074 0 52 128 0 10 24 2 03 503 24 850Ulster 31 85 16 031 4 49 2 260 1 90 957 2 15 1 080 40 39 20 328 35 14 17 685 8 06 4 055 2 04 1 025 45 23 22 765 10 71 5 389 0 50 253 0 13 67 3 05 1 532 50 334Warren 29 34 5 301 1 41 255 2 09 378 0 97 176 33 82 6 110 45 74 8 264 7 15 1 292 1 71 309 54 60 9 865 8 15 1 473 0 56 101 0 16 29 2 71 490 18 068Washington 26 49 3 860 1 50 218 1 93 281 0 80 116 30 71 4 475 45 91 6 690 8 62 1 256 1 83 267 56 36 8 213 8 08 1 178 0 54 78 0 14 20 4 18 609 14 573Wayne 24 45 5 874 1 20 289 1 27 306 0 59 141 27 51 6 610 51 86 12 460 11 27 2 709 2 67 642 65 80 15 811 3 40 818 0 70 169 0 15 37 2 43 583 24 028Westchester 46 87 100 079 3 09 6 601 1 37 2 930 2 31 4 923 53 64 114 533 34 48 73 630 5 11 10 917 0 91 1 946 40 51 86 493 2 63 5 619 0 19 406 0 06 121 2 97 6 357 213 529Wyoming 18 14 2 035 1 03 116 1 03 115 0 37 41 20 57 2 307 60 77 6 817 11 71 1 314 1 67 187 74 15 8 318 2 11 237 0 57 64 0 10 11 2 50 281 11 218Yates 26 51 1 634 1 57 97 1 59 98 0 71 44 30 39 1 873 51 21 3 156 8 24 508 2 77 171 62 23 3 835 4 67 288 0 55 34 0 11 7 2 05 126 11 218Totals 45 91 1 706 483 3 24 120 446 1 97 73 266 1 37 51 052 54 19 1 951 247 31 77 1 181 134 6 44 239 266 1 35 50 242 40 25 1 470 642 4 74 176 269 0 41 15 215 0 12 4 626 2 67 99 367 3 717 366Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican edit Cayuga largest municipality Auburn Chemung largest municipality Elmira Chenango largest municipality Norwich Columbia largest municipality Hudson Cortland largest municipality Cortland Delaware largest municipality Sidney Dutchess County Seat Poughkeepsie Greene largest municipality Catskill Herkimer largest municipality German Flatts Jefferson largest municipality Le Ray Lewis largest municipality Lowville Livingston largest municipality Geneseo Madison largest municipality Oneida Monroe largest municipality Rochester Montgomery largest municipality Amsterdam Nassau largest municipality Hempstead Oneida largest municipality Utica Ontario largest municipality Geneva Orange largest municipality Kiryas Joel Oswego largest municipality Oswego Otsego largest municipality Oneonta Putnam largest municipality Lake Carmel Rensselaer County Seat Troy St Lawrence largest municipality Massena Saratoga largest municipality Saratoga Springs Schenectady largest municipality Schenectady Schuyler largest municipality Watkins Glen Seneca largest municipality Seneca Falls Suffolk largest municipality Brookhaven Sullivan largest municipality Monticello Ulster largest municipality Kingston Warren largest municipality Glens Falls Washington largest municipality Hudson Falls Wayne largest municipality Newark Yates largest municipality Penn Yan Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic edit Erie largest municipality Buffalo By congressional district edit Cuomo won 18 of 27 congressional districts Both candidates won two districts held by the other party 87 District Cuomo Astorino Representative1st 45 0 47 1 Lee Zeldin2nd 45 0 48 5 Peter T King3rd 51 0 42 8 Steve Israel4th 53 1 41 7 Kathleen Rice5th 82 8 13 3 Gregory Meeks6th 64 9 28 4 Grace Meng7th 78 4 10 6 Nydia Velazquez8th 82 6 10 9 Hakeem Jeffries9th 79 5 11 6 Yvette Clarke10th 72 3 16 9 Jerry Nadler11th 55 1 40 0 Dan Donovan12th 72 1 17 9 Carolyn Maloney13th 86 6 6 1 Charles Rangel14th 73 3 20 1 Joe Crowley15th 90 9 5 7 Jose E Serrano16th 64 2 30 3 Eliot Engel17th 50 9 42 3 Nita Lowey18th 42 9 49 0 Sean Patrick Maloney19th 36 2 51 5 Chris Gibson20th 40 5 44 7 Paul Tonko21st 39 4 50 2 Elise Stefanik22nd 42 1 48 9 Richard Hanna23rd 36 1 55 2 Tom Reed24th 46 0 44 2 John Katko25th 46 6 46 4 Louise Slaughter26th 57 2 5 3 Brian Higgins27th 34 0 59 9 Chris CollinsAftermath editThe Green Party took Row D on the ballot 86 surpassing the Independence and Working Families Parties both of whom lost significant vote share but still qualified for automatic ballot status through 2018 but not surpassing the Conservative Party which retained Row C with 6 percent of the vote The Libertarian Party after a 2010 showing in which it narrowly fell short of the 50 000 votes needed for automatic ballot access missed that measure by a wide margin in 2014 the Party s candidate earned less than 17 000 votes The Sapient Party was a non factor with fewer than 5 000 votes 1 Two new political parties the Women s Equality Party and the Stop Common Core Party surpassed the 50 000 vote threshold and attained automatic ballot status 88 References edit a b c d e NYS Board of Elections Governor Lt Governor Election Returns November 4 2014 PDF Retrieved September 5 2018 Alan Greenblatt September 5 2014 Andrew Cuomo Is Going to Win but Not with the Landslide He Wants Governing Retrieved September 20 2014 a b Zach C Cohen September 8 2014 Gov Cuomo Suffers Discomfort Even as N Y Democrats Power Swells National Journal Retrieved September 25 2014 Lovett Kenneth March 24 2014 Third party leftist candidate hurts Cuomo election win poll New York Daily News Retrieved March 24 2014 Blain Glenn April 22 2014 Liberal candidate could slice Gov Cuomo s lead in re election bid by half Siena Poll New York Daily News Retrieved April 22 2014 Katz Celeste May 21 2014 Liberal could woo voters but Gov Cuomo still positioned to win Quinnipiac New York Daily News Retrieved May 21 2014 Brian Sharp May 7 2014 Bob Duffy I made my decision Democrat amp Chronicle Retrieved May 8 2014 Dems to hold their state convention in Melville Newsday Retrieved April 6 2014 Teri Weaver May 7 2014 Report NY Lt Gov Robert Duffy won t seek re election on ticket with Cuomo syracuse com Retrieved May 8 2014 Joseph Spector May 7 2014 Duffy insists he s not being forced out Democrat amp Chronicle Retrieved May 8 2014 Spector Joseph May 8 2014 Will Cuomo look inside administration for lieutenant governor Gannett Retrieved May 8 2014 a b Lovett Ken May 21 2014 Gov Cuomo selects former Buffalo area Rep Kathy Hochul as running mate New York Daily News Retrieved May 21 2014 Kaplan Thomas April 30 2011 Cuomo 2014 Gifts Announce His Intentions The New York Times a b Dicker Fredric U February 10 2014 Conservative Party boss says Rob Astorino to run for gov New York Post Retrieved February 10 2014 a b Fischler Jacob June 13 2014 Exclusive Progressive Ticket Will Challenge Andrew Cuomo And His Running Mate In New York Primary BuzzFeed Retrieved June 16 2014 a b Candidate Petition List elections ny gov Archived from the original on May 12 2012 Retrieved September 26 2014 Janison Dan June 8 2014 Much of New York headed for slow primary day The New York Times a b 2014 State Local Primary Results PDF New York State Board Of Elections Retrieved October 25 2014 Jessica Bakeman November 5 2013 With suburban wins Republicans see hope for 2014 Capital New York McCalmont Lucy December 4 2013 Pol Donald Trump mulls gubernatorial bid Politico Glenn Blain December 29 2013 Donald Trump I m Ready To Run For NY Gov But I Want Clear Path To GOP Nomination New York Daily News a b Trump says he s not running for governor The Leader March 15 2014 Barkan Ross July 7 2013 Vito Fossella Not Inspired by Eliot Spitzer and Anthony Weiner Politicker a b Kriss Erik April 1 2013 GOP licking chops at gov s poll slide New York Post Retrieved April 1 2013 Vielkind Jimmy May 7 2014 The Republican search for an Astorino running mate Capital New York Retrieved May 7 2014 Spector Joseph May 7 2014 Rensselaer County executive approached to run with Astorino Archived 2014 05 30 at the Wayback Machine Gannett Retrieved May 7 2014 Michael Battle opts against running for lieutenant governor on GOP ticket The Buffalo News May 7 2014 Archived from the original on May 17 2014 Retrieved May 8 2014 a b Gormley Michael May 13 2014 GOP s Astorino picks upstate sheriff reformer for running mate Newsday Retrieved May 13 2014 Campbell Jonathan May 15 2014 Astorino Moss to head state GOP ticket LoHud com Retrieved September 5 2018 Ken Lovett March 3 2014 Westchester County Executive Rob Astorino Tells Advisors He s Running For Governor Sources NY Daily News Retrieved March 3 2014 Katz Celeste September 26 2013 John Catsimatidis defiant on mayoral primary loss still has an appetite New York Daily News Reisman Nick January 27 2013 Collins Run For Governor Is Off The Table Capital Tonight Archived from the original on June 7 2013 Retrieved January 29 2013 Kenneth Lovett November 11 2013 State Republican Chairman Ed Cox could tap himself to face Gov Andrew Cuomo NY Daily News a b c Astorino candidacy react o mat Times Union Retrieved March 5 2014 Reisman Nick April 26 2013 Edwards Won t Run For Re Election Or Governor Capital Tonight Archived from the original on May 4 2013 Retrieved April 29 2013 Vielkind Jimmy April 14 2013 Gibson says he s not running for governor in 2014 Albany Times Union Retrieved April 15 2013 Benjamin Elizabeth August 12 2013 Chris Jacobs Thanks but no thanks on DiNapoli challenge Archived 2014 03 07 at the Wayback Machine YNN Retrieved August 12 2013 Dicker Fredric U June 17 2013 Pol gunning for gov New York Post Retrieved June 17 2013 Benjamin Liz November 6 2014 When the Governor has no heir Capital New York Retrieved November 6 2014 a b McCarthy Robert July 5 2013 Could Paladino make another run for governor Archived 2013 10 02 at the Wayback Machine The Buffalo News Retrieved July 5 2013 Brodsky Robert May 31 2014 Astorino endorsed by state Conservative Party at LI convention newsday com Retrieved January 22 2022 a b Yusko Dennis May 18 2014 In Troy Hawkins gets Green Party nod Times Union Retrieved May 18 2014 Howie Hawkins January 14 2014 Hawkins seeking Green nomination to run against Governor 1 Green Party Retrieved February 2 2014 a b Dicker Fred March 24 2014 Second Dem calls on Cuomo to refuse Independence backing The New York Post Retrieved March 24 2014 NYS Independence Party quietly nominates Gov Cuomo says accepted New York Daily News Retrieved April 23 2014 WFP s Cantor For Governor Archived 2014 03 13 at the Wayback Machine February 17 2014 The Working Families Party s Cuomo dilemma March 24 2014 Nahmias Laura May 31 2014 1 Capital New York Retrieved June 1 2014 Seiler Casey April 9 2014 Gov candidate Hawkins pitches Green New Deal Archived 2014 05 15 at the Wayback Machine Times Union Albany NY Retrieved April 10 2014 Charter school critic may take on Gov Cuomo for Working Families Party endorsement NY Daily News May 29 2014 Retrieved May 30 2014 Lovett Kenneth May 28 2014 Working Families Party eyeing Diane Ravitch as possible challenger against Gov Cuomo New York Daily News Retrieved May 28 2014 Diane Ravitch Says She s Not A Candidate NY State of Politics May 29 2014 Archived from the original on May 31 2014 Retrieved May 30 2014 Gormley Michael May 27 2014 Liberal activist Samuels considers forcing his way onto Cuomo s ticket Newsday Retrieved May 27 2014 Spector Joseph June 2 2014 Samuels won t run for lieutenant governor Gannett Retrieved June 3 2014 Candidate petition list Archived 2018 08 23 at the Wayback Machine from the New York State Board of Elections Retrieved August 25 2014 a b c Odato James April 26 2014 Libertarians unite behind Suffolk County real estate broker Times Union Albany NY Retrieved April 29 2014 a b c 2014 NY Libertarian Rumors Independent Political Report November 29 2012 Retrieved September 27 2013 a b Carleo Evangelist Jordan February 28 2014 Colonie s Nate Lebron wants Libertarian nod for governor Times Union Retrieved February 28 2014 Nassau figure Bobby Kumar Kalotee resurfaces with alternative party Newsday August 27 2014 Archived from the original on October 29 2014 Retrieved October 23 2014 Sapient Party s Bobby K Kalotee Runs for Lt Gov of NY India West September 18 2014 Archived from the original on July 3 2016 Retrieved October 23 2014 New York gubernatorial debates insufficient Democrat amp Chronicle October 20 2014 Retrieved October 23 2014 Astorino files petitions to create Stop Common Core ballot line in NY governor race syracuse Associated Press August 13 2014 Bakeman Jessica Astorino hopes Stop Common Core line will draw Dem votes Politico PRO February 19 Matthew Hamilton on AM 2015 at 11 49 February 19 2015 Astorino discusses renamed Reform Party Capitol Confidential a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Spector Joseph July 8 2014 Astorino starts Stop Common Core ballot line Archived 2014 07 11 at archive today Gannett Retrieved July 9 2014 Women s Equality Party pushes for women s rights on the ballot MSNBC com October 9 2014 Campbell Jon Quinn on 50k The Women s Equality Party has made history The Journal News Lovett Kenneth July 17 2014 Zephyr Teachout blasts as cynical ploy Gov Cuomo s creation of Women s Equality Party line New York Daily News Retrieved July 22 2014 Karni Annie October 12 2014 Separated at birth Gov Cuomo s campaign bus and a Tampax box New York Daily News Retrieved October 12 2014 Goldberg Michelle October 24 2014 The Women s Equality Party Is a Joke via www thenation com a href Template Cite magazine html title Template Cite magazine cite magazine a Cite magazine requires magazine help Socialist Workers candidates raise fighting demands for working class The Militant May 12 2014 Retrieved October 24 2014 Wachtler Mark May 25 2014 Donna Mulvihill heats up New York Governors Race Archived 2014 05 28 at the Wayback Machine Opposition News Retrieved May 27 2014 Karlin Rick August 15 2014 Michael Carey launches new ballot line Times Union Retrieved August 17 2014 a b Seiler Casey September 4 2014 Election enforcer at table Retrieved September 8 2018 Liberal Party buries the hatchet eyes Cuomo re election New York Post February 21 2014 Retrieved March 7 2014 Catsimatidis vows to help revive the Liberal Party New York Post March 24 2014 Retrieved March 26 2014 Glenn Blain August 27 2014 Jimmy McMillan prepares to run for governor again on Rent is 2 Damn High ticket NY Daily News Retrieved September 19 2014 Spector Joseph September 26 2014 The ballot s no damn good Jimmy McMillan tossed from governor s race Gannett Retrieved September 26 2014 Haberman Maggie July 21 2014 Christie RGA won t fund lost causes POLITICO Hayes Mellissa July 22 2014 N Y GOP candidate for governor questions lack of support from Christie Retrieved July 22 2014 2014 Governor Race Ratings for November 3 2014 The Cook Political Report Retrieved September 3 2018 The Crystal Ball s Final 2014 Picks Sabato s Crystal Ball November 3 2014 Retrieved September 3 2018 2014 Gubernatorial Ratings Senate Ratings The Rothenberg Political Report Retrieved September 3 2018 2014 Elections Map 2014 Governors Races Real Clear Politics Retrieved September 3 2018 a b NY election results maps Cuomo loses Upstate syracuse November 5 2014 a b Hamilton Matthew Third party s profile rises Times Union Retrieved November 29 2014 NYS Board of Elections November 4 2014 Governor Vote by Congressional District PDF Retrieved June 19 2023 Janison Dan November 12 2014 Leading GOP ers eye setup for new Stop Common Core party Newsday Archived from the original on September 6 2018 Retrieved September 5 2018 External links editNew York gubernatorial election 2014 at Ballotpedia Campaign contributions at FollowTheMoney org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2014 New York gubernatorial election amp oldid 1182845244, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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