County-by-county election results map for New York. How did my county vote in the 2024 presidential race?
Vice President Kamala Harris won the popular vote in New York over former President Donald Trump in the 2024 presidential race, and with it, the state's 28 electoral votes, CBS News projects.
CBS News also projects Trump won the race on the national level and will become the 47th President of the United States.
CBS New York is tracking the results in each New York county, and you can see how your area voted below.
Democrats losing ground in New York City, data shows
In New York, Trump trailed Harris by more than 900,000 votes – a smaller margin of victory than Biden had over Trump in 2020.
According to the CBS News Data Team, Democrats have been losing ground in the Bronx, Brooklyn, Manhattan and Queens since 2016.
While Harris may have beat Trump in New York City, she did it with a 37-point margin of victory, compared to Biden's 53-point margin in 2020 and Hillary Clinton's 62-point margin in 2016.
"Latinos voted in larger number for President Trump, not only nationally but in New York City. When you combine that with the new Asian groups that are voting for Republicans ... that's where it's at moving forward," political strategist J.C. Polanco said.
Political strategists say such as the trend nationally, many New York voters were driven this year by the economy and immigration, especially after Texas Gov. Greg Abbott started bussing migrants to New York two years ago.
"If you have Democrats in charge of the state, Democrats in charge of the city and Democrats in charge of the country, if you're not happy, you kind of go to the Republican candidate," said Boris Heersink, a political science professor at Fordham University.
Democratic Congressman Ritchie Torres, of the Bronx, who won his reelection, posted on X in part, "Donald Trump has no greater friend than the far left ... The working class is not buying the ivory-towered nonsense that the far left is selling."
"I don't think this vote means that people are fundamentally more conservative," said Grace Mausser, co-chair of the New York City chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America. "I think it means that they recognize that the Democratic establishment has abandoned them."
"Do you see New York City moving more and more to the right in future elections?" CBS News New York's Ali Bauman asked Polanco.
"I see New York City moving more and more to the middle," Polanco said.
That's something Polanco says New York may see in next year's mayoral election.
"Now they have shown you that they're able to vote Republican and they want more centrist candidates," Polanco said.