Altschuler concedes to Bishop in suburban N.Y. race

Randy Altschuler conceded the congressional election in a suburban New York district to incumbent Rep. Tim Bishop.

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WASHINGTON (JTA) — Randy Altschuler conceded the congressional election in a suburban New York district to incumbent Rep. Tim Bishop.

Altschuler, a Republican, is trailing the Democrat Bishop by 263 votes, unofficial counts show in the eastern Long Island district.

In his concession Wednesday, Altschuler said he concluded that a hand recount of 200,000 ballots was unlikely to change the result and would be overly burdensome on district taxpayers. Altschuler would have joined Rep. Eric Cantor (R-Va.), the incoming majority leader, as the second Republican Jewish lawmaker in Congress.

"I plan to stay active in politics and continue to speak out on the issues that affect the residents of Suffolk County, our state and our nation," Altschuler said in a statement Wednesday. "Those issues include high taxes, runaway spending and an ever-growing deficit."

Altschuler had spent $2.8 million of his own money on the race.

It was the last contested result in an election in which Democrats lost the U.S. House of Representatives to Republicans, who hold a 63-seat margin over Democrats in the 435-member House. 

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