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Newcomer Andy Kim beats GOP’s Tom MacArthur in New Jersey, widens Democrats’ House edge

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Democrat Andy Kim, a political newcomer and former national security aide in the Obama administration, defeated Republican Rep. Tom MacArthur in a tight race in which the incumbent’s vote to roll back the Affordable Care Act was a hot issue.

Kim upset MacArthur in the hotly contested southern New Jersey district, widening the Democrats’ edge in the House.

He declared victory last week, but MacArthur did not concede as mail-in and provisional ballots continued to be counted. The Associated Press called the race Wednesday.

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The U.S. House historian’s database shows he is the first Asian-American elected from New Jersey. Kim has never run for or served in elected office before.

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“This from the very beginning was always about the people,” Kim told supporters at his office in Mount Laurel when he declared victory. “I will be part of that new generation of leaders that will step up and do what’s best for the American people. That’s what we need right now.”

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MacArthur had said earlier that he was waiting for votes to be counted and did not concede.

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“This has been a hard fought campaign and like Andy Kim, I’m ready to see it come to an end,” MacArthur said in a statement last week.

Messages was left Wednesday with spokesmen seeking comment.

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The district last elected a Democrat in 2008.

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MacArthur was an ally of President Donald Trump but stressed his independence, as well.

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He was the only New Jersey congressman to vote for the 2017 tax overhaul and backed repeal of the Affordable Care Act. He faced jeers and insults from constituents during an at-times raucous town hall about health care last year.

He authored an amendment to allow states to get federal waivers to the requirement that insurers charge healthy and sick customers the same premiums. The change, which didn’t pass the Senate, would have been for people who let their coverage lapse. MacArthur had said those people would be covered by high-risk pools.

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In a recent interview, Kim said that was a turning point.

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“The moment that was most important in this district over the last two years was the health care vote and the town hall that MacArthur did,” he said. “That was what got me into the race, that’s what just turned this district on its head and why people got so fired up.”

Kim largely stayed away from invoking the president, despite his unpopularity in New Jersey.

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AP VoteCast found that most said that Trump was a factor in their vote, while a majority also said the country is headed in the wrong direction. Health care was the top issue facing the nation for most New Jersey voters, followed by the economy and immigration.

AP VoteCast is a new nationwide survey of about 138,000 voters and nonvoters — including 3,800 voters and 664 nonvoters in the state of New Jersey — conducted for The Associated Press by NORC at the University of Chicago.

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Kim said he will make it a priority to get a post on the House Armed Services Committee because the southern New Jersey district, which includes Burlington and Ocean counties, also has Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst.

Kim and Democratic Rep.-elect Tom Malinowski ousted incumbent Republicans, while Democratic Reps.-elect Mikie Sherrill and Jeff Van Drew won open Republican seats.

New Jersey will have just one Republican out of 12 seats in the next Congress. Before the election, Republicans controlled five seats, and heading into the 2016 election the delegation was split six to six.

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