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Democrat Sacramento city councilwomanMai Vang— who has infuriated local residents byher refusal to say the Pledge of Allegiance while turning her back on the US flag— was trailing Tuesday night in her bid to unseat longtime Congresswoman Doris Matsui in a bitter primary fight.

Matsui led early Tuesday with 28,950 votes, or 32.6%, while Vang was in second with 22,821 votes, or 25.7%, according to the Associated Press.

Republican Zachariah Wooden was close behind in third with 20,079 votes, or 22.6%, leaving him within striking distance of Vang as the vote count continues.

Under California’s top-two primary system, the top two candidates advance to the November runoff regardless of party.

Vang’s progressive challenge to Matsui, 81, may have difficulty as conservative pockets such as Lodi, Placerville and El Dorado Hills were added to the congressional map by Proposition 50’s redistricting.

Vang, 41, had sought to cast the race as a generational changing of the guard against an entrenched Democratic incumbent who has held the Sacramento-area seat since 2005.

But the closing stretch of the campaign became consumed by criticism of Vang’s posture toward the American flag and Pledge of Allegiance.

Vang has refused to recite the Pledge of Allegiance and has turned her back on the flag at multiple public meetings and ceremonies, including a Veterans Day ceremony, Sacramento City Council meetings and district meetings.

She has defended the practice, writing on social media that she uses the moment to “ground” herself and reflect on “the injustices and harm that continue to affect so many, both locally and across the globe, under this nation’s influence.”

Source: California Post – Breaking California News, Photos & Videos