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County results Vacco: 40–50% 50–60% 60–70% Burstein: 50–60% 60–70% 70–80% | ||||||||||||||||||||
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The1994 New York Attorney General election took place on November 8, 1994. Republican nomineeDennis Vacco narrowly defeated Democratic nomineeKaren Burstein. As of 2023[update], this is the last time a Republican was electedAttorney General of New York.
Attorney GeneralRobert Abrams ran for United States Senate in 1992 but narrowly lost to incumbent RepublicanAl D'Amato. Abrams announced his resignation from the office of attorney general on September 8, 1993, to take effect on December 31.
The New York State Legislature appointed G. Oliver Koppel, an Assemblyman from the Bronx, to fill the office of Attorney General until a successor was elected at the regularly scheduled 1994 election.[1]
In the final month of the campaign, Staten Island Borough PresidentGuy Molinari publicly remarked that Burstein would be unqualified for office because she was a lesbian.
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | Dennis Vacco | 1,988,567 | 42.71% | |||
| Conservative | Dennis Vacco | 305,961 | 6.57% | |||
| Total | Dennis Vacco | 2,294,528 | 49.28% | |||
| Democratic | Karen Burstein | 2,097,083 | 45.04% | |||
| Liberal | Karen Burstein | 109,105 | 2.34% | |||
| Total | Karen Burstein | 2,206,188 | 47.38% | |||
| Right to Life | Alfred Skidmore | 85,649 | 1.84% | |||
| Independence | James Hartman | 37,500 | 0.81% | |||
| Libertarian | Daniel Conti | 19,202 | 0.41% | |||
| Socialist Workers | Nancy Rosenstock | 13,416 | 0.29% | |||
| Majority | 88,340 | 1.9% | ||||
| Turnout | 4,656,483 | |||||
| Republicangain fromDemocratic | ||||||
| Preceded by 1990 | New York Attorney General election 1994 | Succeeded by 1998 |
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