Photo: Felix Firenze announces the closing of the polls at Precinct 2 (Town Hall) on Nov. 5, 2024
If Democratic Presidential candidate Kamala Harris was able to carry Belmont, Michigan (6 percent) and the rest of the Great Lakes State by the same margin she did Belmont, Massachusetts (55 percent) in the presidential election on Tuesday night, Nov. 5, media outlets would have had to rewrite their Wednesday morning headlines.
But while there was no “Blue Wall” in western Michigan where Belmont is located – or anywhere else – Harris can take a small amount of solace knowing she won the Town of Homes in a landslide. With exactly 75 percent of registered voters casting ballots, Belmont, as expected, came out in droves for the vice president casting 10,565 votes (75.6 percent) for Harris. Runner up was the GOP-backed candidate former president Donald Trump. The self-described Republican and recently convicted felon took home 2,828 votes (20.2 percent). Harris’s support in Belmont outpaced her tally statewide where she collected 62 percent of the electorate.
As Belmont voters endorsed the winners of the individual races for US Senate (Elizabeth Warren), US House (Kathleen Clark), State Senate (Will Brownsberger), and State Rep. (Dave Rogers), the same could be said with four of the five ballot questions.
Belmont joined voters state-wide supporting the audit of the state legislature (Question 1), allowing ride-share drivers to join unions (Question 3), rejecting raising the minumum wage for tipped workers, although the margin was tight in Belmont (53 to 47) as opposed to the state (64-36). Belmont also voted down the sale and taxing of psychedelic (mu)shrooms (Question 4).
Where Belmont voters buck their fellow Bay State voters was to retain the requirement high school seniors pass the state’s MCAS competency exam for graduation (Question 2). Local voters voted down the measure, 46 percent to 54 percent, while state-wide the question passed by a healthy margin, 59-41.
While there was a strong voter turnout with 13,971 casting ballots (out of 18,864 registered voters), Belmont Town Clerk Ellen Cushman said she was expecting a participation rate on par with the last four presidential elections between 80 and 84 percent.
Voters continue to rely on advance voting options as Cushman said 7,621 ballots were cast via early in-person voting and mail-in ballots. Cushman told the Belmontonian she wanted to give a loud shoutout to the employees of the US Postal Service who “went above and beyond” to deliever ballots in an efficient manner over the past weeks.
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