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Residents vote for county executive and District 5 council seat in Prince George’s Co. Tuesday

BREAKING: At a watch party for special election results Tuesday, Democrat Aisha Braveboy declared victory in the Prince George鈥檚 County executive race with unofficial tallies showing she received over 89% of the votes.

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Prince George鈥檚 County鈥檚 year of cascading special elections is almost over.

had dropped off mail-in ballots as of Friday, ahead of Tuesday鈥檚 special election to choose a new county executive and a new District 5 council member, a county election official said.

In-person turnout was light 鈥 just 307 voters on Wednesday, the first day of early voting and 396 on Thursday 鈥 but county Election Administrator Wendy Honesty-Bey attributed that to the week鈥檚 rainy weather. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been expected,鈥 she said Friday.

There was another day of early voting Monday, before Election Day Tuesday. The voting caps a year of upheaval in the county, where the election of a new U.S. senator and the criminal conviction of a sitting council member created openings that had a domino effect, as county officials moved in to new positions.

The parade of elections began with the conviction last year of former At-large Council Member Jamel 鈥淢el鈥 Frankin, who was convicted in a campaign theft scheme, setting up an August primary and a November election.

When District 5 Council Member Jolene Ivey won Franklin鈥檚 seat and County Executive Angela Alsobrooks won a U.S. Senate seat in November, it set up a March primary and Tuesday鈥檚 general election for those seats.

In the executive鈥檚 race, voters are choosing between State鈥檚 Attorney Aisha Braveboy, the Democrat, and Republican nominee Jonathan White to fill out the remaining two years of Alsobrooks鈥 term, who stepped down in December to take her Senate seat.

The county鈥檚 chief administrative officer, Tara H. Jackson, who has been acting county executive since Alsobrooks stepped down, chose not to seek the seat.

Braveboy, who was endorsed by Gov. Wes Moore (D), easily won a March primary over a field of nine Democrats, including former County Executive Rushern L. Baker III, who had the endorsement of state treasurer and county resident Dereck Davis (D), and At-Large Council Member Calvin Hawkins, who was endorsed by Alsobrooks.

Ivey was briefly a candidate in the executive鈥檚 race but withdrew before the primary 鈥 and still managed to finish fourth. By withdrawing, Ivey spared county residents the prospect of another special election for her at-large council seat.

Should Braveboy win the executive鈥檚 race, the county鈥檚 circuit court judges will to serve out the remaining two years of her term.

In heavily Democratic Prince George鈥檚 County, Braveboy is the favorite to win. In a victory party after her March 4 primary win, acknowledged as much when she told the crowd, 鈥淚 can鈥檛 wait to serve as your next county executive.鈥

Voters in council District 5, which includes Bladensburg, Cheverly and Glenarden, are also choosing between former school board member Shayla Adams-Stafford, a Democrat, and Republican Fred Price Jr. to replace Ivey.

Adams-Stafford, a former school board member, won the Democratic nomination by slightly more than 2,000 votes against four other candidates. A fifth Democratic challenger, former Cheverly Mayor who lost reelection in last month鈥檚 city election, dropped out the County Council race.

As with Braveboy, Adams-Stafford is the likely favorite in the heavily Democratic county.

The council make up could become more progressive with Adams-Stafford on the council, who also received support from Council Chair Edward Burroughs III and Vice Chair Krystal Oriadha. About three weeks after Braveboy won the special primary, became the youngest chair in the county鈥檚 history at age 32.

Honesty-Bey said counting ballots for Tuesday鈥檚 special general election should be completed by June 13.

The winners in both races are scheduled to be sworn in June 19, the federal holiday of Juneteenth, also observed by and , when government offices will be closed.

for more information on where to drop off mail-in ballots and nine of the vote center locations. Election Day polls, which opened Tuesday at 7 a.m., close at 8 p.m.

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