A controversial far-left prosecutor in Virginia who’s received enormous backing from liberal billionaire George Soros has been defeated despite significantly outspending her opponent.Loudoun County Commonwealth’s Attorney Buta Biberaj, whom Soros has backed with nearly $1 million since 2019, lost to her Republican opponent, Bob Anderson, by 300 votes in a race that wrapped up counting its remaining ballots from last week’s election on Tuesday evening, Fox 5 DC reported.”We are finished. We are waiting for the certification. Our electoral board is working on signing abstracts, and reviewing paperwork,” a Loudoun County election official told Fox 5.GEORGE SOROS CIRCLES BACK TO VIRGINIA TO AID FAR-LEFT PROSECUTORS FACING DEM CHALLENGERS, FILINGS SHOW Left-wing billionaire George Soros has spent over $900,000 backing Buta Biberaj from the Justice and Public Safety PAC. (Simon Dawson/Bloomberg via Getty Images)Anderson ultimately garnered 68,080 votes while Biberaj received 67,768, Fox 5 reported.”This is the closest Commonwealth’s Attorney’s race in Loudoun history. Following the canvass process, Buta trails by just 300 votes out of more than 136,000 votes cast,” Shannon Sankey, Biberaj’s campaign manager, told the Fox affiliate. “This 0.22% deficit puts our campaign well within the margin for a recount in Virginia. Our campaign is reviewing the results and we expect to make a decision shortly on our next steps. Buta remains committed to protecting democratic rights and ensuring that every Loudoun resident’s vote is counted.”Anderson, who previously served in the position from 1996 to 2003, emerged victorious despite being significantly outspent by Biberaj. Virginia Public Access Project data shows that Biberaj dropped $1.1 million on the race – nearly 16 times more than the $70,356 Anderson had spent. Throughout the race, the progressive prosecutor received help from outside groups such as the Working Families Party National PAC and the Soros-backed Justice and Public Safety PAC.Biberaj has been among the many nationwide candidates boosted by cash from Soros in his bid to overhaul the criminal justice system.SOROS FAMILY AND OTHER HIGH-PROFILE MEGADONORS HELPED FUEL THE POLITICAL CAREER OF NEW YORK AG SUING TRUMP Buta Biberaj is on the verge of being ousted from her prosecutor position. (FOX 5)Since 2019, the Justice and Public Safety PAC has spent $926,000 backing her candidacy, which has gone into ad buys, literature and polling services. Between 2019 and 2022, Soros moved more than $2.4 million into the Justice & Public Safety PAC from his name and his Democracy PAC.The Soros-fueled PAC has also spent significant sums backing other Virginia prosecutor candidates in recent years, two of which handily won re-election on Tuesday, including the unopposed Parisa Dehghani-Tafti in Arlington County and Steve Descano in Fairfax County, who faced a write-in challenge but ultimately won by nearly 149,000 votes.Biberaj’s office has repeatedly faced controversy since she started the job in 2020. Biberaj has faced controversy since entering office. (Loudoun.gov)Last year, she was hit with a bar complaint after a circuit court judge booted her office from a criminal case for “deliberately misleading the Court and the public.”A Virginia judge also dismissed Biberaj from an appeal case in 2022, citing “concerns” over “impartiality.” The case involved a Virginia father who was arrested while speaking out at a school board meeting after his daughter was sexually assaulted in a public school bathroom by a male student. Biberaj has also faced allegations of using her office to target political opponents and came under fire for hiring a convicted sex offender as a paralegal.CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APPA spokesperson for George Soros did not respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment. Get the latest updates from the 2024 campaign trail, exclusive interviews and more at our Fox News Digital election hub. Fox News Digital’s Emma Colton contributed to this report. Joe Schoffstall is a politics producer/reporter for Fox News Digital. Story tips can be sent to Joe.Schoffstall@Fox.com and on Twitter: @joeschoffstall