Dominican President Leonel Fernandez was re-elected to his third term in the country’s presidential election on May 16, boosted by New York voters.
Fernandez won 54 percent of the vote, election officials told the Associated Press. His Dominican Liberation Party defeated Miguel Maldonado of the Dominican Revolutionary Party, who won 40 percent.
Fernandez, a progressive liberal who grew up in Washington Heights, faces hurdles with poverty and finishing the country’s first subway line in the capital of Santo Domingo.
Dominicans living abroad have been able to vote in elections since 2004. Figures have not yet been released on the number of abroad voters, but there were 55,992 eligible voters in New York State. There were more than 30 polling sites in New York City, with at least one in the Bronx in University Heights.
Dominican City Councilman Miguel Martinez (D-Washington Heights) said there will be “minimal change” with the re-election. “Usually when there is a change in government, many families move back to the Dominican Republic,” Martinez said. “Now everything will stay at its normal pace.”
Martinez speculated that Dominicans in New York may be appointed to a cabinet position or be appointed to the Dominican Consulate.
As of 2000, there were 554,638 Dominicans living in New York City, with about a third living in the Bronx, according to a 2003 report published by the CUNY Dominican Studies Institute.

