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Results by municipality González: 30-40% 40-50% 50-60% Dalmau: 30–40% 40–50% | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Elections in Puerto Rico |
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Gubernatorial elections were held on Tuesday, November 5, 2024, to elect the governor of Puerto Rico, concurrently with the election of the Resident Commissioner, the Senate, the House of Representatives, and the mayors of the 78 municipalities. This election is historic as it marks the first time since 1952 in which a candidate from the Puerto Rican Independence Party came runner-up in a gubernatorial race, the first time since 1964 in which the incumbent governing party was re-elected after two terms in office, the second time Puerto Rico has elected a female governor, with the first time being in 2000 with Sila María Calderón. This election also saw the Popular Democratic Party lose control of the Legislative Assembly of Puerto Rico and finish third for the first time in its entire history in a gubernatorial election, albeit retaining a majority of mayoral races and its candidate for Resident Commissioner, Pablo Hernández Rivera, won in a landslide.[1]
Two parties filed to hold a primary election: the New Progressive Party and the Popular Democratic Party. Incumbent New Progressive Party Governor Pedro Pierluisi Urrutia ran for re-election to a second term in office, but lost the PNP primary to Resident Commissioner Jenniffer Gonzalez Colon.[2] The Popular Democratic Party nominated Jesús Manuel Ortíz, a member of the House of Representatives of Puerto Rico. The Puerto Rican Independence Party and Citizens' Victory Movement formed an electoral alliance, with both parties agreeing to support former member of the Senate of Puerto Rico, Juan Dalmau. However, since all registered parties are required to nominate a candidate for governor, Movimiento Victoria Ciudadana nominated dummy candidate Javier Córdova Iturregui. Project Dignity nominated San Sebastián mayor Javier Jiménez. The election was held under first-past-the-post voting.
According to results released by the Puerto Rico State Electoral Commission, Jennifer Gonzalez obtained 40% of the votes, compared to 32% for Juan Dalmau, after 73% of the polling stations had been counted.[2] After the 100% vote count, the electoral commission released the final results, Jenniffer González won 39%, or 447,962 votes, Juan Dalmau, candidate of the Puerto Rico Independence Party and the Citizens' Victory Movement, who came in second, won 33% of the vote, or 370,904 votes, making him the first candidate from a party other than the two main parties in Puerto Rico to finish second in the general election.[1]