Not that it matters now since you have a decision, but it is worth considering that you know a lot about the state of the vehicle you have, but fairly little about a vehicle you buy. Sure it is "new". Plenty of "new" cars end up with recalls.
Our new EV (added a second car, unfortunately) had a recall at less than 6 months old. It has so far been in the shop for just shy of 10% of the time we've owned it.
Oh and I know we'll be back in, because one of the last three times it was in, the tech got the headliner greasy and dirty as hell and broke minor plastic clips so covers fall off. The dealership is ordering parts to make it better, but that'll be another day or two for install once they come in.
That's not counting the letter from the manufacturer which should have been mailed to me on Monday, telling me to take it to the dealer for software updates, because the manufacturer flubbed the over the air updates and now our car can't self-update anymore. In an ideal case that's one day, but practically speaking I don't expect my dealership to notice they need to order specific parts (ethernet cable, usb cable, usb to ethernet adapter) to be able to do the update. So they'll schedule it, take the car, and then realize "oh crud we have to order stuff." So who knows how long that'll take. At least they don't have to take much off for the software update, so I can probably get them to give it back to me after they realize they can't do it for days as they order equipment.
So yeah. Just sayin'. Sometimes, you should stick with ol' reliable.
A warranty isn't a guarantee against trouble. It is a guarantee that the manufacturer thinks you paid them more for it than it will cost them to fix the inevitable problems that crop up, on average, across their fleet.