Democratic Primary — Council Member
14th Council District
· Bronx
· 2025
· Source: NYC BOE Cast Vote Records
Ballots in Contest
10,106
Elimination Rounds
1
Exhausted Ballots
0
(0.0% of contest ballots)
Winner
Pierina A. Sanchez
Final Round Share
66.6% of active
Margin of Victory
4,479
(44.3pts of active)
Pierina A. Sanchez won outright in the first round with 66.6% of contest ballots, clearing the 50% threshold without requiring any eliminations. The final margin of 4,479 votes (44.3 pts of active ballots) exceeded the 0 exhausted ballots (0.0%), making the result robust even against the exhaustion rate.
How to read this:
Ranked Choice Voting eliminates the last-place candidate each round, transferring their
ballots to each voter's next ranked choice still in the race.
Ballots in contest = voters who ranked at least one candidate here.
Active votes = ballots still assigned to a remaining candidate in a given round.
Exhausted ballots = ballots where all ranked choices have been eliminated.
Vote counts shown in each round reflect votes before that round's elimination.
Ties broken alphabetically by candidate ID (NYC BOE uses random draw; ties are rare at scale).
First-Choice Votes
| Candidate | First-Choice Votes | Share of Contest Ballots | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pierina A. Sanchez ✓ | 6,732 | 66.6% | Won |
| Fernando Cabrera | 2,253 | 22.3% | — |
| Bryan Hodge Vasquez | 1,121 | 11.1% | — |
Round-by-Round Results
Round 1
Final
10,106 active votes
| Candidate | Votes (before elimination) | Share of Active |
|---|---|---|
| Pierina A. Sanchez | 6,732 | 66.6% |
| Fernando Cabrera | 2,253 | 22.3% |
| Bryan Hodge Vasquez | 1,121 | 11.1% |
Candidate Summary
| Candidate | First Choice | Votes at Elimination / Final | Transfer Gain / Loss ⓘ | Eliminated |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pierina A. Sanchez ✓ Winner | 6,732 | 6,732 | 0 | — |
| Fernando Cabrera | 2,253 | 2,253 | 0 | — |
| Bryan Hodge Vasquez | 1,121 | 1,121 | 0 | — |
How Many Candidates Did Voters Choose to Rank?
NYC primary voters may rank up to 5 candidates in order of preference — but they are not required to.
This chart shows how many candidates each voter chose to rank (1 = ranked only their top choice; 5 = used all available rankings).
Voters who ranked only one candidate are more likely to exhaust — their ballot stops counting once that candidate is eliminated.
Ranked 1
5,707 (56.5%)
Ranked 2
1,259 (12.5%)
Ranked 3
2,969 (29.4%)
Ranked 4
171 (1.7%)
Ranked 5
0 (0.0%)