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Progressive congresswoman Rashida Tlaib defeats primary challenger in 'Squad' win

Protesters rally against the death in Minneapolis police custody of George Floyd, in Detroit

DETROIT (Reuters) - U.S. Representative Rashida Tlaib, one of the most visible progressive Democrats in Congress, claimed victory Wednesday in the Democratic primary election against challenger Detroit City Council President Brenda Jones.

County elections results showed Tlaib with 63,650 votes to Jones' 32,582 with 89.9% of precincts reporting in the nomination contest.

Tlaib, a member of the "Squad" of four progressive congresswomen first elected in 2018, has so far declined to endorse the party's presumptive nominee, former Vice President Joe Biden, for his November face-off with Republican President Donald Trump.

"Voters sent a clear message that they're done waiting for transformative change, that they want an unapologetic fighter who will take on the status quo and win," Tlaib said in a statement.

The race for the district, which contains Detroit and some of its suburbs, had been a rematch of a close 2018 election that Jones lost by fewer than 1,000 votes.

Tlaib, 44, born to Palestinian immigrants, was one of the first two Muslim women elected to Congress.

Tlaib had a fundraising and polling edge over Jones going into the election. But Jones, 60, a prominent politician in the predominantly Black city of Detroit who has endorsed Biden, had the backing of numerous local leaders and the state's Democratic Black caucus.

The primary had been seen as a test of whether the Democratic contender for the House seat would stay with the more progressive side of the party or steer closer to its political center.

Tlaib's fellow "Squad" member Ilhan Omar, congresswoman from Minnesota's 5th District, faces a primary next week.

In New York, a progressive who sought to unseat a veteran congresswoman, Representative Carolyn Maloney, declined to concede after Maloney declared victory Tuesday in her Democratic primary in late June. Challenger Suraj Patel noted that counting had still not finished in the race.

A Manhattan judge on Monday ruled officials must still count around 1,000 mail-in ballots that did not have postmarks; the state Board of Elections has appealed the ruling, while the city Board of Elections certified Maloney as the winner on Tuesday.

The mail-in ballots are not expected to change the outcome of the June 23 election in Maloney's favor, but Patel wrote on Twitter on Tuesday that those voters had been "disenfranchised through no fault of their own" and deserved to be heard.

(Reporting by Michael Martina; Editing by Scott Malone and Jonathan Oatis)