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  5. LIVE RESULTS: Republican Gov. Phil Scott wins Vermont's Election for Governor

LIVE RESULTS: Republican Gov. Phil Scott wins Vermont's Election for Governor

Oma Seddiq   

LIVE RESULTS: Republican Gov. Phil Scott wins Vermont's Election for Governor
Politics2 min read
  • Republican Gov. Phil Scott is projected to win re-election in Vermont against Lt. Gov. David Zuckerman, Decision Desk HQ.
  • Scott, a moderate, has one of the highest governor approval ratings in the country. He has previously served as lieutenant governor and as a state senator.
  • See the live coverage and full results from the most competitive US elections.
  • Experts rated the race as solid Republican in the months leading to the election.

Vermont Republican Gov. Phil Scot has won his race against Democratic challenger Lt. Gov. David Zuckerman for governor, according to Decision Desk HQ.

Polls in Vermont closed at 7 p.m. ET.

The candidates:

Both Scott and Zuckerman have been in their respective posts since 2017. In Vermont, votes for governor and lieutenant governor are cast on separate ballots, allowing a partisan split to exist in its executive branch, as is the case today.

Previously, Scott served as lieutenant governor for six years and as a state senator for 10 years before that. Zuckerman, also a longtime politician, had served in the state senate as well as the house.

Scott, 62, announced his reelection bid for a third term in May. He handily won the GOP primary election in August against four challengers.

A moderate Republican, Scott is one of the most popular governors in the country with a 65 percent approval rating. An overwhelming majority of Vermonters — 83 percent — also say they support his COVID-19 response, according to a recent Vermont Public Radio and Vermont PBS poll.

The governor has been a vocal opponent of President Donald Trump and announced that he will not be voting for him in 2020 in an apparent appeal to his state's left-leaning electorate.

Zuckerman is the state's first Progressive Party candidate to hold a statewide office. A champion of progressive policies like raising the minimum wage and legalizing marijuana, he endorsed fellow Vermonter Sen. Bernie Sanders in the 2020 presidential race.

Zuckerman, 49, jumped into the gubernatorial race in January and defeated former Education Secretary Rebecca Holcombe in the Democratic primary.

"As we look toward emerging from this crisis we must lead in a new way," Zuckerman said in his victory speech on his farm, which he has been running with his wife for around two decades. "We must lead in a creative way, we must lead in an inclusive and innovative way," he said.

The stakes:

Vermont is solidly blue on the national level, choosing the Democratic candidate for presidential, US Senate and US House races for the past recent election cycles. The governorship, however, is more of a mixed bag, alternating between both parties to represent the highest-ranked office in recent decades. Experts have said that Vermonters typically support the incumbent, as they did tonight.

The money race: Scott has raised $337,000 this campaign cycle, the bulk of which, $203,000, was collected in September. The governor has pledged to accept little resources for his reelection bid and instead prioritized his efforts on the coronavirus response. Zuckerman has raked in more money than Scott, with $568,000 total.

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