The November general election results are coming in.

Here is what we know so far:

Harris won blue New York, but by smaller margin than past Democrats

Vice President Kamala Harris extended Democrats' decades-long hold on New York on Tuesday, winning the state’s 28 electoral votes in the presidential election. 

However, her margin of victory was significantly lower than in recent years. 

According to unofficial results from the Associated Press, with 96% of the estimated vote counted, Harris won New York with 55% of the vote to former President Donald Trump’s 45%, a margin of victory of just 11 points.

The 11-point margin marks a sharp decrease from four years ago, when Joe Biden carried the state by 23 points. 

Read more here

Gillibrand reelected to a third full term in the U.S. Senate, AP declares

Democratic U.S. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand will be reelected to a third full term representing New York in Capitol Hill's upper chamber, the Associated Press declared.

According to the AP, with approximately 96.21% of the expected vote tallied as of 5 a.m. Wednesday, Gillibrand had 58.1% of the vote, while the Republican candidate, Michael Sapraicone, had 41.5% of the vote. 

Read more here.

New Yorkers vote 'yes' on equal protection amendment

New Yorkers voted “Yes” on an amendment that would expand statewide civil rights protections, the Associated Press declared Tuesday evening.

According to the AP, with 33.5% of the expected vote calculated, “Yes” had 72.1% of the vote and “No” had 27.9% of the vote as of 9:53 p.m. Tuesday.

Read more here.

New York City residents vote 'yes' on ballot proposals 2, 3, 4 and 5

The results of four of the five New York City ballot proposals have been declared by the AP, with city residents voting in favor of ballot proposals 2, 3, 4, and 5. Election results for ballot proposal 6 were still being tabulated as of 1:30 p.m. Wednesday.

See a breakdown of the results for each ballot proposal here.

Read more about each of the ballot proposals here.

Congressional incumbents in races across the city won reelection

Democratic Rep. and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries was reelected to Congressional District 8, covering much of eastern and southern Brooklyn.

Democratic Rep. Ritchie Torres was reelected to Congressional District 15, covering much of the Bronx.

Democratic Rep. Gregory Meeks was reelected to Congressional District 5, covering southern Queens.

Democratic Rep. Adriano Espaillat was reelected to Congressional District 13, covering Upper Manhattan and some of the Bronx.

Democratic Rep. Jerrold Nadler was reelected to Congressional District 12, covering much of Manhattan, including Midtown and the Upper West Side.

Republican Rep. Nicole Malliotakis was reelected to Congressional District 11, covering Staten Island and part of South Brooklyn.

Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez was reelected to Congressional District 14, covering part of northern Queens and the Bronx.

Democratic Rep. Daniel Goldman was reelected to Congressional District 10, covering Lower Manhattan and northern Brooklyn.

Democratic Rep. Grace Meng was reelected to Congressional District 6, covering much of central Queens, including Forest Hills and Flushing.

Democratic Rep. Nydia Velázquez was reelected to Congressional District 7, covering parts of northern Brooklyn and Queens.

Democratic Westchester County Executive George Latimer was elected to Congressional District 16, covering part of the northern Bronx and southern Westchester County.

There were some close matchups in House races outside the city

Democratic Rep. Pat Ryan has been reelected to a second full term in Congressional District 18, representing parts of the Hudson Valley. Ryan held off a challenge from Republican Alison Esposito, the Associated Press declared.

Republican Rep. Mike Lawler has also won a second term in Congress, the Associated Press declared Wednesday morning. Congressional District 17 includes Westchester, Rockland, Putnam and southern Dutchess counties.