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Use the buttons above to jump to either state SenateĀ or Assembly races.

Polls close at 9 p.m. In recent elections, the state and county boards of elections began reporting vote count information about 15 minutes after the polls closed. It’s possible that we will not know all of the results on Feb. 3: While there are only four races on ballots,Ā it may take several hours to count all the votes, and even longer to collect mailed ballots. All results are unofficial until they’ve been certified.

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New York Senate

Vote counts are from the state board of elections. Results are unofficial until they’ve been certified.

Senate District 47

Electing one; it is an unexpired term. The districtĀ is located in Manhattan. It has been vacant since Brad Hoylman-Sigal resigned on Jan. 1 to serve as Manhattan borough president.

Senate District 61

Electing one; it is an unexpected term. The district includes Genesee County andĀ parts of Erie and Monroe counties. The seat has been vacant since Sean Ryan resigned on Jan. 1 to serve as Buffalo’s mayor.

New York Assembly

Vote counts are from the state board of elections. Results are unofficial until they’ve been certified.

Assembly District 36

Electing one; it is an unexpired term. The district is located in Queens. It has been vacant since Zohran MamdaniĀ resigned on Dec. 31 to serve as New York City’s mayor.

Assembly District 74

Electing one; it is an unexpired term. The districtĀ is located in Manhattan. It has been vacant since Harvey Epstein resigned on Dec. 4 to serve on the New York City Council.

Methodology

The Associated Press gathers vote totals from state and county boards of elections. All results are unofficial until they’ve been certified.

The Times Union will only declare a winner when no scenario would allow the trailing candidates to close the gap. If a race has not been called, we will continue to cover any newsworthy developments, such as candidate concessions or declarations of victory, and will make clear that we have not declared a winner and explain why.

In New York, an automatic recount is triggered in races with more than 1 million votes if the margin of victory is fewer than 5,000 votes. For smaller races, the automatic recount is triggered if the margin of victory is either 0.5% or less, or within 20 votes.

This article originally published at Live: New York special election results.