SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Puerto Rico awaited election results late Tuesday that will be historic regardless of which of the two top candidates in the lead wins.
If Jenniffer González of the pro-statehood New Progressive Party wins Tuesday's election, it will mark the first time in the island's history that the party secures three consecutive terms.
If Juan Dalmau, who is running for Puerto Rico's Independence Party and Citizen Victory Movement, wins, it will be the first victory for a candidate outside of the two main parties that have dominated the island's politics for decades. If he comes in second, he will also make history as the first third-party candidate to do so.
As of late Tuesday, González had 40% of the votes and Dalmau had 32% with 73% of precincts reporting, according to partial results released by Puerto Rico's State Elections Commission.
''Until the last vote is counted, no one here can claim a victory,'' Dalmau said.
Trailing González and Dalmau was Jesús Manuel Ortiz, who conceded defeat as his Popular Democratic Party came in third for the first time in a general election.
Javier Jiménez of Project Dignity, a conservative party created in 2019, conceded earlier after coming in fourth.
Voters began celebrating certain results early, with some clutching brooms as they talked about ''cleaning house'' and others cheering around a car fitted with a coffin on top.