
It’s Primary Day, and the Mayor’s Race Has Never Been Closer
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Diverging Reports Breakdown
What Zohran Mamdani Got Right About Running for Mayor
Zohran Mamdani, the young democratic-socialist state assemblyman, has waged a surprisingly strong campaign for mayor of New York City. Julian Zelizer: A mayoral campaign today that doesn’t have a plan for “good videos” is likely doomed. In politics today, one can feed off the other, Zelizer writes. Zelizer says that a candidate who can tell their story creatively on the internet is at an electoral advantage, in New York and pretty much anywhere in the world. The Lede: The idea of dismissing a political candidate for ‘just’ being good at social media is almost a joke in itself. It’s not difficult to understand his opponents’ frustration. Most have spent years carefully plotting their mayoral runs, building their résumés, political connections, and fund-raising networks. Now the kid with the nice eyebrows is running circles around them, writes Zelizer. It’s not easy to understand their frustration, but it’S not difficult.
The Lede
Reporting and commentary on what you need to know today.
In 2025, the idea of dismissing a political candidate for “just” being good at social media is almost a joke in itself. We have known for many years now that a candidate who can tell their story creatively on the internet is at an electoral advantage, in New York City and pretty much anywhere in the world. Social media is where many voters decide if a politician is what the Tammany Hall bosses a hundred years ago used to call “regular”—whether they can be counted on. It’s an authenticity test. A mayoral campaign today that doesn’t have a plan for “good videos”—ones in which the candidate can make their case and an implicit compact with their audience—is likely doomed. It’s not difficult to understand Mamdani’s opponents’ frustration. Most have spent years carefully plotting their mayoral runs, building their résumés, political connections, and fund-raising networks. Now the kid with the nice eyebrows is running circles around them.
When I had coffee with Mamdani a few months ago, he proudly told me that his thousands of campaign volunteers—the people he’d converted to his side, partly with “good videos”—would, before primary day, knock on a million doors on his behalf. I was skeptical. Which million, I asked. Mamdani flashed me another one of those damned smiles. At the time, I had been thinking of recent debates over the effectiveness of political canvassing and other ground-game techniques. I was reminded particularly of the former congressman Beto O’Rourke, who excited his supporters around the country with a pledge to knock on more than a million doors in Texas in his run for Senate, in 2018, only to come up short against Ted Cruz. Texas is big—two hundred and sixty-nine thousand square miles—and has resisted canvassing efforts for decades. But New York City’s four hundred and sixty-nine square miles might present an even harder challenge to door knocking: Who in this town answers the door to a stranger with an open mind? Who even opens the door?
What I hadn’t considered is that, even if knocking on a million doors isn’t the most efficient use of campaign resources in New York City, it makes for great content. The story of Mamdani’s door-knocking campaign and other old-fashioned efforts reached millions of people online, gave the campaign shape, and helped it become a movement. Ding-dong and TikTok. In politics today, one can feed off the other.
Mamdani has a movement behind him, but he has spent the closing days of the primary race struggling to build a coalition. Even in the polls that look best for him, Mamdani comes up short to Andrew Cuomo, the disgraced former governor who has led every ranked-choice poll since he entered the race. In one poll, conducted on behalf of a super PAC that supports Mamdani (in 2025, even socialists have super PACs), he comes out just two points behind Cuomo in the final round of ranked-choice voting. The cross tabs of that poll showed why. Among Black voters, Mamdani lost by more than forty points. Among Hispanic voters, he lost by nearly ten. Mamdani’s voters trended younger than Cuomo’s—no big surprise there—but also whiter, better educated, and more male. That he has aspired to speak for the city’s downtrodden but has done best drawing out the work-from-home creative class is a contradiction that he wasn’t able to resolve before primary day.
That same poll showed Mamdani leading among Asian voters. There are 1.5 million residents of Asian descent in the city, but that’s still less than twenty per cent of the city’s population. Mamdani, the son of Mahmood Mamdani, a Ugandan Indian political scientist, and Mira Nair, an Indian American filmmaker, has also made a representation pitch to the city’s more than seven hundred thousand Muslims. But forming a coalition requires reaching voters beyond what might be considered a politician’s natural base, stitching together unlikely factions, communities, and blocs. In the race’s closing days, Mamdani’s campaign became fixated on “momentum,” reaching for the figurative in lieu of the numerical. (E-mail subject line, June 17th: “AS MOMENTUM REACHES A FEVER PITCH, BERNIE SANDERS ENDORSES ZOHRAN MAMDANI FOR MAYOR.”) When the votes get counted, though, coalitions trump momentum every time.
Mamdani has been stymied for several reasons that were apparent before primary day. For one thing, he is undeniably young, and he never found a way to reassure voters that he was truly up for the job of managing the city’s agencies, its hundred-billion-dollar budget, and its three-hundred-thousand-person workforce. In trying to become the youngest mayor since John Purroy Mitchel—the idealistic “Boy Mayor” who was elected at thirty-four, in 1914, and got crushed by Tammany’s man John Francis (Red Mike) Hylan three years later—Mamdani never explained how he might avoid Mitchel’s fate. The new program of public spending he has proposed is predicated on increasing taxes on the wealthy and corporations, taxes that would have to be approved in Albany. If the big shots in Albany—never a good bet for anything, politically—refuse him, what would become of Mayor Mamdani? No one can say.
Some voters are turned off by the socialist label, though most of Mamdani’s policies are hardly revolutionary. He’s calling for free buses (they have some free bus lines in Boston) and freezing the rent on rent-regulated apartments (which Bill de Blasio did three times in his eight years as mayor—and rents still kept rising in the city over all). Mamdani has backed off some of the language that he’d espoused during his activist days in college and the years after—“I will not defund the police,” he said, at the final Democratic primary debate—but he has not fully explained what changed his mind, besides the fact that he is running for mayor.
Mamdani’s critics and opponents have cornered him for his views on Israel—a line of questioning that his supporters say is unfair. They’re right that outlets like the New York Post and the Free Press have tried to make him a bogeyman, and that attack ads funded by Cuomo and his allies have relied on Islamophobic tropes and racism. (“Less Safe. Too Radical,” read one mailer that arrived in my mailbox, next to what must be one of the only unflattering photographs of Mamdani in existence.) But part of the reason that reporters have kept asking Mamdani about Israel is because his answer isn’t very convincing. “I believe Israel has the right to exist as a state with equal rights,” he says. For a guy who exudes authenticity, that sounds suspiciously like a line he arrived at not personally but after a series of increasingly frustrating meetings. There are nearly a million Jews living in New York City, many of them ardently Zionist, and the next mayor is going to have to speak on this issue. (Think of the protests at Columbia, and of the ongoing federal response to them.) This was a challenge for Mamdani, and not one he has yet met.
In the primary campaign’s closing days, Mamdani has shown signs of casting about for ways to win—he’s shown signs, in other words, of being a normal politician. He’s reached for the strains of liberalism and radicalism that have expressed themselves in the city in recent years, sometimes reaching for more than one at once. “Government must deliver an agenda of abundance that puts the ninety-nine per cent over the one per cent,” he told a huge rally crowd at the Manhattan music venue Terminal 5, serving up Occupy-tinged red meat with a side of centrist-slogan salad. He made a surprising overture to the city’s Orthodox Jewish communities, which were stung a few years ago by a Times investigation that revealed neglect and academic underperformance in Hasidic yeshivas. “The issue of your education is something I will listen to your leaders [about],” Mamdani told a Hasidic newspaper a few weeks ago. Were these the shrewd moves of a wunderkind on the doorstep of a historic election upset? Or were they compromises made by a precocious political talent seeing the numbers close in around him?
No one has ever accused Andrew Cuomo of being “regular.” For more than a decade, he has loomed over New York politics like the Prince of Darkness. The son of a legendary former New York governor, Mario Cuomo, he is the closest thing in living memory that the state has to political royalty. Cuomo, who legalized same-sex marriage in New York and spearheaded major infrastructure projects such as the bridge across the Hudson River named for his father, is among the handful of paternalistic local leaders in history—like Peter Stuyvesant, who told the residents of New Amsterdam that he would rule over them “like a father,” Nelson Rockefeller, and Michael Bloomberg—whose legacies, good and bad, will endure for centuries.
The question is: what is he doing running for mayor? Four years out from a sexual-harassment and abuse-of-power scandal that forced him from office as governor, Cuomo is clearly running to redeem himself, if only in his own eyes. He has plodded through the race, parking his Dodge Charger wherever he pleases and apologizing for nothing and no one, making no promises to avoid the bullying, recalcitrance, handsiness, and tolerance of corruption that he was known for in the governor’s office. In fact, he’s avoided promises of any kind about what he’d do as mayor. Instead of focussing on policy pledges, Cuomo has made the campaign a demonstration of political might, garnering endorsements from elected officials—including many who called for him to resign four years ago—from labor union leaders (though DC 37, which represents most city workers, backed Mamdani over him), and from religious leaders in Black and Jewish communities. The power plays have at times been breathtaking. In June, a group of Orthodox leaders in South Brooklyn announced their support for Adrienne Adams, the speaker of the City Council. A few days later, they announced that they had changed their minds and had decided to back Cuomo instead.
Cuomo doesn’t make good videos, but he knows that he doesn’t need to. Say what you will about the cynical old operator, he has spent the campaign stitching together a coalition. In 2013, Bill de Blasio won the mayoral election with a potent mix of Black votes plus liberals of various creeds and colors. In 2021, Eric Adams succeeded de Blasio with a potent mix of Black votes plus moderates of various creeds and colors. Cuomo is now attempting to re-create Adams’s formula. Sunday after Sunday, he has sat in the pews at Black churches. He has called the rise in antisemitism the “most important” issue in the election, and, though this is transparent pandering (most voters say affordability and public safety are top of mind for them), it has not blunted its political effectiveness. When Mamdani has wobbled on provocative slogans like “Globalize the intifada,” he has played right into Cuomo’s hands. The former governor’s chances of being a disaster as mayor are at least as high as Mamdani’s, but many rich and powerful New Yorkers appear willing to ignore that risk. (Bloomberg contributed more than eight million dollars to a super PAC backing Cuomo.) He simply might have the votes.
Since Mamdani gained on Cuomo in the last weeks of the spring, the Democratic primary has mostly looked like a two-man contest. But there was a moment last week when everyone was talking about Brad Lander, the city’s comptroller, who has spent much of the race polling at a distant third place. Within a matter of days, Lander was sort of endorsed by the Times and got himself detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers while trying to escort a man out of immigration court. “I’m going to be just fine,” Lander told reporters after his release. “I lost a button.” The real issue, he said, was what happened to the man he was trying to help, who was now trapped somewhere in the country’s immigration-detention gulag. It was a good performance from a veteran of local government who hopes to lead a city of immigrants through a period of anti-immigrant terror. And, though the sight of masked plainclothes officers manhandling the city’s second-highest-ranking elected official was a terrifying omen for Trump’s encroachment on New York, it also made, not incidentally, for good videos.
Lander is a candidate who might have once hoped for an endorsement from the Times’ editorial board, and who was dismayed last year when the paper announced it would stop endorsing in local races. Everyone remembers the primary in 2021, when a Times endorsement helped propel Kathryn Garcia, the camera-shy former sanitation commissioner, within a few thousand votes of the front-runner, Eric Adams. This month, the paper’s opinion section relented in its determination to stay out of the mayoral race, sort of, and released a survey of fifteen notable New Yorkers, seven of whom picked Lander as their first-choice candidate. (No other candidates received the support of more than two respondents.)
Then, a few days later, the paper published an unsigned editorial that admonished New Yorkers not to vote for Mamdani; described Lander as competent but uninspiring; and reluctantly supported Cuomo, despite “serious objections to his ethics and conduct.” The piece was bizarre. It glossed de Blasio’s eight years as mayor as the source of the city’s current decline, while making almost no mention of the pandemic’s devastation, the shoddy scandals of the Adams administration, or the hostility that the current President displays for the politics and people of his home town. But in its weird, jumpy antagonism, the editorial captured a mix of sentiments that a certain swath of New Yorkers, particularly the wealthy and the powerful, do feel: that the city is less nice and less safe than it was not so long ago, that they’d rather go with a disgraced establishment politician like Cuomo than risk it with more progressive alternatives, and that the thirty-three-year-old socialist upstart with the good videos is a joke. The punch line is he’s still making them nervous. ♦
NYC Democratic mayoral candidates make last push ahead of primary as early voting ends
NYC Democratic mayoral candidates make last push ahead of primary as early voting ends. Nearly 385,000 people have cast a ballot in the eight days of early voting. New Yorkers can choose up to five candidates and rank them in order of preference. No fewer than four mayoral candidates appeared at the National Action Network in Harlem on Saturday morning, posing with the Rev. Al Sharpton. The New York Working Families Party determined Cuomo does make a comeback and is supporting progressives like Zohran Mamdani and City Comptroller Brad Lander. It’s because of ranked voting for the primary that New Yorkers are able to vote for more than one candidate in the same race at the same time for the same office. The primary election will be held on Tuesday, June 26. The winner will face either New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio or former Governor Andrew Cuomo for the Democratic presidential nomination in the 2016 election.
Lucy Yang has more from Crown Heights.
Lucy Yang has more from Crown Heights.
Lucy Yang has more from Crown Heights.
Lucy Yang has more from Crown Heights.
NEW YORK (WABC) — Sunday was the final day for early voting ahead of Tuesday’s primary election in New York.
According to the NYC Board of Elections, nearly 385,000 people have cast a ballot in the eight days of early voting.
While New Yorkers cast their ballots over the weekend, leading Democratic candidates were out making their final pitch to voters.
Crown Heights was fired up on Sunday night at the Get Out The Vote rally. There were big cheers for up-and-coming 33-year-old Zohran Mamdani, a Democratic socialist.
“This city can actually be affordable. This city deserves a mayor who will freeze the rent, make buses fast and free and make universal healthcare,” Mamdani said.
He is also campaigning on free childcare and non-profit grocery stores. It is not clear who will pay for all of this, but his message is resonating.
Mamdani polled at 1% when he first entered the race as a little-known state assemblyman. Now, he’s on the heels of the front runner: Former Governor Andrew Cuomo
“We lost 500,000 people in New York City since COVID, 500,000 disproportionately the wealthiest, because they left because of the taxes,” Cuomo said.
Except the exodus started under his watch. The 67-year-old lifelong politician had to step down from Albany in disgrace after numerous women accused him of sexual harassment. Plus, there was his scandalous handling of COVID.
The New York Working Families Party determined Cuomo does make a comeback. They are supporting progressives like Mamdani and City Comptroller Brad Lander
“We’ve got a City Hall so corrupt it’s going to need to be cleaned out with a power washer. Working families bring a power washer. Andrew Cuomo just brings in more corruption,” Lander said.
“I live for working families because I come from a working family,” she said.
So how can one progressive party support so many candidates? It’s because of ranked voting for the primary. New Yorkers can choose up to five candidates and rank them in order of preference.
No fewer than four mayoral candidates appeared at the National Action Network in Harlem on Saturday morning, posing with the Rev. Al Sharpton.
Also there was Spike Lee, telling everyone to vote regardless of the weather.
“I know it’s gonna be 100 degrees Tuesday. That’s do the right thing, hot,” he said.
Joe Torres has the latest on the New York City mayoral race.
It was Council Speaker Adrienne Adams’ only appearance of the day.
“I know what it feels like to be a mother. I know what it feels like to be a mother in pain, and I know what it feels like to want more for your children than the city is offering right now,” she said.
Still in his suit, Queens Assemblyman Councilman Zohran Mamdani hit the streets to meet voters and get the endorsement of several politicians in his home borough.
“He has been our assembly member fighting for land use projects, fighting for historical amounts of affordable housing,” Councilwoman Julia Wan said.
“This is an ever-expanding movement. This is a coalition,” Mamdani said.
Comptroller Brad Lander, who has aligned himself with Mamdani, appeared with one of Andrew Cuomo’s accusers, Lindsay Boylan.
“I often talk about Andrew Cuomo’s abuse of women as a symptom of his deeper abuse of power,” Boylan said.
“He wants to redeem himself by pounding his fist,” Lander added.
Cuomo appeared with the mother of teen murder victim, Junior Feliz Guzmanan.
“We need more police. New Yorkers don’t feel safe now. It’s time for leadership with experience,” she said.
“One of the top priorities has to be public safety. That, in my mind, is the foundation,” Cuomo said.
NYC PRIMARY ELECTION RESOURCES
NYC mayoral primary race enters final weekend, last chance for early voters
NYC mayoral primary race enters final weekend, last chance for early voters. Polls will be open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., early voting ends Sunday. While early voters cast their ballots, the candidates were out stumping for voters. Andrew Cuomo appeared with the mother of teen murder victim, Junior Feliz Guzmanan, in New York City on Saturday.. Queens Assemblyman Councilman Zohran Mamdani hit the streets to meet voters and get the endorsement of several politicians in his home borough.. Council Speaker Adrienne Adams’ only appearance of the day was with the Rev. Al Sharpton.
Joe Torres has the latest on the New York City mayoral race.
Joe Torres has the latest on the New York City mayoral race.
Joe Torres has the latest on the New York City mayoral race.
Joe Torres has the latest on the New York City mayoral race.
NEW YORK (WABC) — This weekend marks the last for candidates to make their pitch and early voters to cast their ballots before Tuesday’s primary.
For voters wanting to hit the polls ahead of election day, early voting ends Sunday. Polls will be open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Officials are urging voters to cast their ballots over the weekend or during cooler hours of the day as temperatures are expected to climb into three-digits.
While early voters cast their ballots, the candidates were out stumping for voters.
No fewer than four mayoral candidates appeared at the National Action Network in Harlem on Saturday morning, posing together with the Rev. Al Sharpton.
Also there was Spike Lee, telling everyone to vote regardless of the weather.
“I know it’s gonna be 100 degrees Tuesday. That’s do the right thing, hot,” he said.
It was Council Speaker Adrienne Adams’ only appearance of the day.
“I know what it feels like to be a mother. I know what it feels like to be a mother in pain, and I know what it feels like to want more for your children than the city is offering right now,” she said.
Still in his suit, Queens Assemblyman Councilman Zohran Mamdani hit the streets to meet voters and get the endorsement of several politicians in his home borough.
“He has been our assembly member fighting for land use projects, fighting for historical amounts of affordable housing,” Councilwoman Julia Wan said.
“This is an ever-expanding movement. This is a coalition,” Mamdani said.
Comptroller Brad Lander, who has aligned himself with Mamdani, appeared with one of Andrew Cuomo’s accusers, Lindsay Boylan.
“I often talk about Andrew Cuomo’s abuse of women as a symptom of his deeper abuse of power,” Boylan said.
“He wants to redeem himself by pounding his fist,” Lander added.
Cuomo appeared with the mother of teen murder victim, Junior Feliz Guzmanan.
“We need more police. New Yorkers don’t feel safe now. It’s time for leadership with experience,” she said.
“One of the top priorities has to be public safety. That, in my mind, is the foundation,” Cuomo said.
NYC PRIMARY ELECTION RESOURCES
Brad Lander heads back to immigration court; Andrew Cuomo, Zohran Mamdani spar as campaign nears end
Brad Lander heads back to immigration court; Andrew Cuomo, Zohran Mamdani spar as campaign nears end. Early voting ends June 22 and the primary is June 24. Former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo has held onto his lead. City Council President and mayoral candidate Adrienne Adams is also telling her supporters, many of whom are black and from Queens, to rank any of the Working Families Party candidates and not Cuomo. The race is expected for the race up, but expected to be a scorcher on June 24, the day of the primary.. Lauren Glassberg has more on the New York City mayoral primary election on WBC-TV at 10 p.m. and 11 a.m., and on CNN.com/Saturday at 10 and 11:30 a.M. and Sunday at 9 a. m. and 4 p.M., respectively. For more, go to www.wccb.com.
New York City’s mayoral candidates are making their final rounds as the June primary enters its final stage. Lauren Glassberg has more.
New York City’s mayoral candidates are making their final rounds as the June primary enters its final stage. Lauren Glassberg has more.
New York City’s mayoral candidates are making their final rounds as the June primary enters its final stage. Lauren Glassberg has more.
New York City’s mayoral candidates are making their final rounds as the June primary enters its final stage. Lauren Glassberg has more.
NEW YORK (WABC) — With the hotly contested New York City mayoral primary election just days away, the candidates are in the final stretch of making their arguments amid record early voting turnout.
Polls show former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo has held onto his lead, with Queens state Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani closing in, but still in second place.
City Comptroller Brad Lander and Mamdani teamed up in Brooklyn Friday afternoon to shore up support.
They arrived at Grand Army Plaza to canvas voters, riding Citi Bikes side by side in the Prospect Park West bike lane.
Lander said the bike ride is representative of ranked-choice voting, adding it’s “a joyful form of politics, instead of a bitter, sour, backwards-looking form of poltics. And of course gathering all of our voters together, that’s a majority of New Yorkers on Tuesday.”
They’re asking voters to rank one first and the other second for mayor.
The goal is to freeze out Cuomo, whom both candidates are trying to stop.
“I hope he will call on his superpac to take those hideous ads down,” Lander said.
The super PAC acknowledged it had lengthened and darkened Mamdani’s beard on a flyer, which was never distributed.
On Friday, Mamdani said there’s a direct link between that ads by the super PAC and the death threats he and family members have received.
“If you design mailers that lengthen and darken my beard, if you paint me as a radical, it is not a surprise to see the kind of threats that come,” Mamdani said.
Mamdani is also lobbying the Campaign Finance Board to lift the fundraising cap, saying the system isn’t working, giving Cuomo a huge advantage.
“We raised $8.3 million from 20,000 people over donations of less than $70, a total of 8.3 million,” Mamdani said.
Mamdani is also taking issue with how much money Cuomo’s super PAC has raised and the way he has relied on some very big donors like the former Mayor Michael Bloomberg.
Meanwhile, the City Council President and mayoral candidate Adrienne Adams is also telling her supporters, many of whom are black and from Queens, to rank any of the Working Families Party candidates and not Cuomo.
But an endorsement by U.S. Rep. James Clyburn of South Carolina on Friday could work in Cuomo’s favor.
On Friday morning, mayoral candidate and City Comptroller Brad Lander also entered a federal courthouse in lower Manhattan to observe immigration court proceedings, just as he did a few days ago.
But the last time he attempted to do that, he was taken into custody by federal agents during an immigration hearing for allegedly obstructing federal agents when escorting an immigrant out of court.
He was released a few hours later and appeared with Gov. Kathy Hochul who said the charges against him had been dropped.
Lander says he’ll keep standing with immigrant communities.
“When I was sitting at the detention center on Tuesday, there was a sign asking if you’ve been separated from your child. We’ve normalized family separations. That’s why I’ll continue to fight and return to Federal Plaza to help more families,” Lander said.
Day six of early voting ends with more than 250,00 votes cast. Early voting ends June 22 and the primary is June 24.
As we look ahead to Election Day, the race itself is heating up, but for Tuesday, it is expected to be a scorcher. The Board of Elections say they’re prepared with fans.
NYC PRIMARY ELECTION RESOURCES
Mamdani, Lander cross-endorse each other in bid to defeat Cuomo in New York City mayor’s race
Mamdani, Lander cross-endorse each other in bid to defeat Cuomo in New York City mayor’s race. Mamdani and Lander hope their combined efforts will defeat Cuomo. Former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo remains the front runner in polls for the New York Democratic mayoral primary. The primary is Tuesday, June 24, with early voting set to begin on Monday, June 11.. The two opposing politicians are amassing endorsements and gathering momentum as the election nears. The Cuomo campaign said they are not surprised by the cross- endorsement and they still. believe Cuomo has the most experience to run New York. City Mayor Mike Bloomberg, meanwhile, is backing Cuomo and just donated $5 million to a super PAC supporting Cuomo. The race is getting closer and closer, says Trip Yang, a Democratic strategist not affiliated with any campaign, and says the race isGetting closer and. closer, Yang says. If you have a breaking news tip or an idea for a story we should cover, send it to Eyewitness News using the form below.
CeFaan Kim reports on Mamdani and Lander forming an alliance to topple Cuomo.
CeFaan Kim reports on Mamdani and Lander forming an alliance to topple Cuomo.
CeFaan Kim reports on Mamdani and Lander forming an alliance to topple Cuomo.
CeFaan Kim reports on Mamdani and Lander forming an alliance to topple Cuomo.
NEW YORK (WABC) — Former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo remains the front runner in polls for the New York Democratic mayoral primary, but Zohran Mamdani is nipping at Cuomo’s political heels.
Now, with the relatively new ranked choice voting system, we are seeing another new phenomenon emerge of candidate alliances and cross endorsements.
Just the day before early voting is set to begin in the New York City primary election, Mamdani and Brad Lander announced they will cross-endorse each other on Friday.
Both candidates hope their combined efforts will defeat Cuomo, who most polls put as the frontrunner in the race. The primary is Tuesday, June 24.
“I’m proud to stand here and say that I ask my supporters to rank me number one and to rank Brad Lander number two,” Mamdani said.
The assemblymember and city comptroller stood side by side for a news conference on Friday.
“I believe it will help me to win, he believes it will help him to win and we both believe it will help us together to stop Andrew Cuomo,” Lander said.
In 2021, Andrew Yang endorsed Kathryn Garcia but she did not return the favor.
Yang’s support helped deliver a second-place finish for Garcia, behind Mayor Eric Adams.
“One of the worst mayors in history was elected largely because the other top two contenders in the race, Kathryn Garcia and Mia Wiley, failed to cross-endorse each other. We are not going to make that mistake again,” Lander said.
Cuomo, Momdani and Lander engaged in political combat in Thursday night’s debate sponsored by Spectrum NY1 News, WNYC Gothamist and The City.
Cuomo argued only he is tough enough and has the experience to stand up to President Donald Trump.
“He’s never dealt with the City Council, he’s never dealt with the Congress, he’s never dealt with the State Legislature. He’s never negotiated with a union. H’s never built anything,” Cuomo said.
Mamdani countered: “I have never had to resign in disgrace. I have never cut Medicaid. I have never stolen hundreds of millions of dollars from the MTA. I have never hounded the 13 women who credibly accused me of sexual harassment.”
Former Mayor Mike Bloomberg, meanwhile, is backing Cuomo and just donated $5 million to a super PAC supporting Cuomo.
The Cuomo campaign said they are not surprised by the cross-endorsement and they still believe Cuomo has the most experience to run New York City.
Trip Yang is a Democratic strategist not affiliated with any campaign, and says the race is getting tighter.
“Andrew Cuomo probably has a 60 percent chance of winning today. If it was last week, it was probably 80%. So this race is getting closer and closer,” Yang said.
Yang said he wouldn’t be surprised if by next week it’s a 50/50 split because in a lot of polling, many Lander supporters rank Cuomo second.
The city’s Democratic mayoral primary, on June 24, has in some ways narrowed into a contest between Cuomo and Mamdani, with the two opposing politicians amassing endorsements and gathering momentum as the election nears.
Mamdani has run an energetic campaign centered on lowering the city’s astronomical cost of living, proposing a bold slate of populist ideas that have turned him into a liberal darling and won him the endorsement of progressive star U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
Cuomo, who is in the midst of a political comeback after resigning as governor over a sexual-harassment scandal, has long been the favorite, bringing fundraising prowess, the power of a political dynasty and a long record of accomplishments to the contest.
(The Associated Press contributed to this report.)
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Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/24/nyregion/nyc-primary-day.html