More stories

  • in

    Ed Gainey Poised to Become Pittsburgh's First Black Mayor

    Ed Gainey won the Democratic primary in a city that is roughly a quarter Black. The incumbent, Bill Peduto, is the first Pittsburgh mayor to lose a bid to stay in office since 1933.PITTSBURGH — Ed Gainey, a five-term Pennsylvania state representative, is poised to become the first Black mayor of Pittsburgh, having won the Democratic primary for mayor on Tuesday night by defeating a two-term incumbent on a campaign of unequivocal progressivism.“A city is changed when we all come together to improve the quality of life for everybody,” Mr. Gainey told his supporters, sounding a theme he has focused on for months. “That’s why I ran for mayor, because I believe we can have a city for all.”In a city that is roughly a quarter Black, Mr. Gainey won 46 percent of the vote. The incumbent, Bill Peduto, an outspoken liberal with a national profile, trailed with 39 percent, the first Pittsburgh mayor to lose a bid to stay in office since 1933. There is no declared Republican candidate for the general election in November.Though Pittsburgh routinely shows up on various lists as one of the country’s “most livable” cities, the mayoral campaign was fought largely around one short question: Livable for whom?Mr. Gainey’s thoughts on that question were not drastically different from Mr. Peduto’s; both talked of addressing racial inequities and building more affordable housing. But Mr. Gainey, who is less known for his profile in the legislature than for his easy and avuncular rapport with constituents, pointed out that Mr. Peduto had already had two terms to do these things, and said he had fallen short.Bill Peduto is the first Pittsburgh mayor to lose a bid to stay in office since 1933.Andrew Rush/Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, via Associated PressWhen Mr. Peduto won the mayor’s office in 2013, talking aggressively of fighting climate change and pursuing criminal justice reform, he also emphasized the continued reinvention of Pittsburgh, once Steel City, into a tech and health care town. But highlighting the presence of companies like Google and Uber, as well as the hometown medical giant, UPMC, made Pittsburgh’s disparities appear harsher in contrast.Nearly 7,000 Black people left the city from 2014 to 2018, leading to a broad debate about whether rapid gentrification might be driving the exodus. A city-commissioned report found that, on certain metrics, including employment rates and maternal health, Black people in Pittsburgh, and Black women in particular, had a lower quality of life than Black people in nearly all U.S. cities. Pittsburgh police officers, who are overwhelmingly white, have been routinely found to arrest Black residents at starkly disproportionate rates.As inequities like these were drawing scrutiny, George Floyd was killed in Minneapolis and a summer of protest broke out. The protests in Pittsburgh were mostly peaceful, but the police cracked down hard on several occasions, firing tear gas and projectiles and at one point forcibly pulling one man into an unmarked van. The protests became in part about the police tactics in response, and on several nights demonstrators crowded in front of Mr. Peduto’s house demanding his resignation.As with many mayors who were in office in 2020, Mr. Peduto’s attempts to respond to the concerns of protesters but also support the city’s police proved an unwieldy political task. Indeed, local measures banning no-knock warrants and restricting the use of solitary confinement passed by overwhelming margins.In his concession speech, Mr. Peduto called Mr. Gainey’s win “a historic night for the city of Pittsburgh,” and pledged to support him.Western Pennsylvania may be synonymous with Trump Country to many, but Pittsburgh has been an electric hub for grass-roots progressivism. Activists have campaigned for races from the White House to the school board, battling for Republican-held legislative seats in the outer-ring suburbs and ousting establishment Democrats in upsets around Allegheny County.In 2018, Summer Lee and Sara Innamorato, both first-time candidates endorsed by the Democratic Socialists of America, won state legislative seats, beating older male incumbents with dynastic Democratic roots. Two years later, Ms. Lee, the first Black woman to represent a southwestern Pennsylvania district in the legislature, faced coordinated opposition from old-line Pittsburgh Democrats when she ran for re-election — and she won by an even bigger margin.Many of these new, avowedly progressive political figures backed Mr. Gainey’s campaign, seeing him as a better fit for an electorate impatient for change.“You’re not going to find anyone who says Pittsburgh is perfect just the way it is,” said Bethany Hallam, an Allegheny county councilor who was first elected last year. This, she said, “does not spell good news for incumbents who created the landscape we live in.” More

  • in

    Maya Wiley Has ‘50 Ideas’ and One Goal: To Make History as Mayor

    Maya Wiley Has ‘50 Ideas’ and One Goal: To Make History as MayorMs. Wiley has unveiled an array of policies to fight inequality as she seeks to become the first woman elected mayor of New York. Can she break out of the pack?Maya Wiley, at a vaccine sign-up in Brooklyn last month, is a civil rights lawyer who has focused her mayoral campaign on addressing inequality and systemic racism.Gabriela Bhaskar for The New York TimesThe New York City mayoral race is one of the most consequential political contests in a generation, with immense challenges awaiting the winner. This is the fourth in a series of profiles of the major candidates.May 19, 2021If there was a single moment that captured the essence of Maya Wiley’s campaign for New York City mayor, the Women for Maya launch was it.She sat on a folding chair in Central Park at the event earlier this month, at the foot of a statue depicting three historical figures of women’s suffrage. To her immediate right was Representative Nydia Velázquez, the first Puerto Rican woman elected to Congress; to her left was Gloria Steinem, the feminist icon.Since entering the mayor’s race last year, Ms. Wiley had underscored how it was time for a woman — a Black woman — to finally lead New York, someone who understood the concerns of those who struggled even before the pandemic and who are worried that the recovery is leaving them behind.“You will no longer tell us we are not qualified,” Ms. Wiley said, before starting to chant “We lead!” with a crowd of supporters who gathered at the event.Ms. Wiley, 57, offers a mix of experience — she served as a former counsel to Mayor Bill de Blasio and led the Civilian Complaint Review Board — and a dose of celebrity: As a prominent analyst for MSNBC, she won the attention of its left-leaning viewership and sparked enthusiasm that she could become the standard-bearer for New York’s progressive left.Her comfort level with the on-the-fly jousting seen on cable news shows seemed to give her an advantage last week in the first official Democratic debate, as she repeatedly challenged Eric Adams, the Brooklyn borough president who is one of the contest’s front-runners.Three days later, she landed a key endorsement from Representative Hakeem Jeffries, the state’s highest-ranking House member. His support is expected to help Ms. Wiley with a key constituency Mr. Adams is also vying for: Black voters, especially from central Brooklyn.Ms. Wiley was endorsed by 1199 S.E.I.U., the city’s largest labor union, which represents health care workers, many of whom are women of color. She speaks often about making sure women are not left behind in the recovery.Gabriela Bhaskar for The New York TimesIf Ms. Wiley has a path to victory in the June 22 primary, it will also largely be paved by women. She has the support of the city’s largest labor union, Local 1199 of the Service Employees International Union, which represents 200,000 health care workers, many of whom are women of color. And she has the backing of Ms. Velázquez and Representative Yvette Clarke, two powerful congressional leaders in Brooklyn.She hopes to capitalize on the sexual misconduct allegations that were recently lodged against her chief rival for progressive voters in the Democratic primary, Scott M. Stringer, the city comptroller; Ms. Wiley called on Mr. Stringer to withdraw from the race, and she has picked up some of the endorsements he has lost.Her campaign is centered on a series of policy proposals that reflect her progressive values. She wants to cut $1 billion from the police budget and trim at least 2,250 officers. She wants to help poor families pay for child care by offering $5,000 grants to caregivers and building community centers with free child care. And she wants to create a $10 billion Works Progress Administration-style jobs program that funds infrastructure repairs and other projects.But she has yet to fully energize the left-wing of the party that she is trying to win over; she upset some activists by distancing herself from the defund the police slogan; she can also sound at times like her former boss, Mr. de Blasio, whose popularity has fallen sharply in his second and final term.Unlike Mr. Stringer and Mr. Adams, who have said they had always wanted to be mayor, Ms. Wiley readily acknowledges that running for office was never a lifelong ambition. She says she long believed she was more effective, and more natural, at pressuring elected officials from the outside.“I literally never thought I would run for public office, and I mean never,” she said in an interview. “It was not on my bucket list. I’ve been a civil rights lawyer and advocate my whole career, and politics is not appealing. What I wanted to make was change.”She said that her outlook began to shift several years ago, when her teenage daughter came to her almost in tears, worried she would be unable to pay rent in New York City while pursuing a career as a graphic novelist and illustrator. Ms. Wiley said the exchange brought home how increasingly unaffordable the city had become.“That was an emotional gut-punch moment that really stayed with me,” she said.While politics was not necessarily in Ms. Wiley’s blood, a commitment to social justice was.Ms. Wiley worked as Mayor Bill de Blasio’s counsel and served as chair of the Civilian Complaint Review Board. Her father, a prominent civil rights leader, founded the National Welfare Rights Organization.Gabriela Bhaskar for The New York TimesAt the event in Central Park, Ms. Steinem spoke about working with Ms. Wiley’s father, George Wiley, a prominent civil rights activist, in the 1970s.He founded the National Welfare Rights Organization and paid attention to “women in poverty as the single most important indicator of the country’s welfare when no other male spokesperson was doing that,” Ms. Steinem said.“I’m so sorry that Maya lost him young, but his spirit is in her,” she said.‘We had to find a way to live’The sudden death of Ms. Wiley’s father was especially traumatic.Mr. Wiley had taken his two children, Daniel and Maya, sailing off Chesapeake Beach, Md., on a summer day in 1973. The winds and seas were rough, and Mr. Wiley fell from the 23-foot pleasure craft into the Chesapeake Bay.His children threw him a line, but the tides and wind pulled him away, according to an Associated Press account of the episode. Days later, memorial services for Mr. Wiley, 42, were held across the nation.Ms. Wiley often speaks of her father’s death as a formative experience that shaped her and taught her a hard lesson in grief and perseverance. At her campaign kick-off event on the steps of the Brooklyn Museum in October, Ms. Wiley compared her loss to families who had watched a relative die from the coronavirus and could not hold them one last time.“My brother and I — two little kids, 9 and 10 years old — alone on a boat after watching the waves wash away our father, we had to find a way to live,” she said.She described how they found their way to the shore, and how the white beachgoers they encountered did not help them. They went from house to house asking for help until someone called the police.The seeming indifference from the people on the beach stayed with her. The experience, she told Bloomberg Opinion, made her realize that “racism is a deep illness.”Other parts of her biography often come up on the campaign trail. Ms. Wiley’s mother, Wretha, grew up in Abilene, Texas, and came to New York to attend Union Theological Seminary. Her parents met at Syracuse University and moved to the Lower East Side, where Ms. Wiley lived briefly as a baby, before they left for Washington.When she talks about education, Ms. Wiley notes that attending a segregated school as a child informed her thinking on the issue. She led a high-profile school diversity panel that in 2019 called for integrating city schools by eliminating gifted and talented programs.Yet when she is asked about fixing the city’s segregated school system, she has been vague at times, seeming cautious and political. Asked if she was afraid of talking about a combustible issue, Ms. Wiley pushed back.“I’m a kid who went to a segregated Black elementary school when I was young and was two years behind grade level despite the fact that my parents had collectively over eight years of graduate education between them,” she said.“I’m not afraid of third rails,” she added. “I wouldn’t be running for mayor if I was.”After her father’s death, Ms. Wiley moved to a private school where she caught up with her peers. She graduated from Dartmouth College and Columbia Law School. As a young lawyer, she worked as a staff attorney at the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund for two years, as an assistant U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York for three years and at the American Civil Liberties Union as part of a fellowship.The job she held the longest was at the Center for Social Inclusion, a nonprofit she founded after the Sept. 11 attacks as a young mother “sitting in my living room with a baby in a bouncy seat.” She built it into a national organization dedicated to addressing racial inequity, with a $3 million annual budget and 13 employees.“As she came into her own, she opted not to go to a big private law firm, but to commit herself to public service,” said the Rev. Al Sharpton, who expressed admiration for Ms. Wiley’s dedication to social justice when she could have taken a different path. “She was progressive before the term was fashionable.”Ms. Wiley was in the running to lead the N.A.A.C.P., but withdrew from contention after joining Mr. de Blasio’s administration.Gabriela Bhaskar for The New York TimesA rocky experience inside city governmentMs. Wiley had never met Mr. de Blasio when she wrote a piece for The Nation magazine about broadband internet access that caught his attention. He invited her to three long get-to-know-you meetings at City Hall.She had been in the running to lead the N.A.A.C.P., but agreed to join Mr. de Blasio’s administration in 2014 as his chief legal adviser. She was proud to be the first Black woman to hold the job, and joked early on that her main goal was to “keep him out of jail.”Ms. Wiley, even in jest, was somewhat prescient: Mr. de Blasio was investigated for questionable fund-raising practices, leading Ms. Wiley to help craft the administration’s legal response. She also became known for her role in what became known as the “agents of the city” controversy, when she argued unsuccessfully in 2016 that Mr. de Blasio’s emails with outside advisers should be private.Ms. Wiley helped form Mr. de Blasio’s argument that communications with outside advisers should be as immune from public scrutiny as those of any city employee, even though many of the advisers also represented clients with business before the city.John Kaehny, executive director of the good-government group Reinvent Albany, said the efforts to hide the mayor’s emails were “desperate, doomed and destructive” and undermined Freedom of Information laws and ethics rules.“Agents of the city was a giant blunder by her and de Blasio and hopefully she learned from her mistakes,” he said.Ms. Wiley has gone to great lengths to say that her administration would be more transparent than Mr. de Blasio’s. She says that it was her job to provide the mayor with legal advice and it was his decision whether to follow that advice..css-1xzcza9{list-style-type:disc;padding-inline-start:1em;}.css-3btd0c{font-family:nyt-franklin,helvetica,arial,sans-serif;font-size:1rem;line-height:1.375rem;color:#333;margin-bottom:0.78125rem;}@media (min-width:740px){.css-3btd0c{font-size:1.0625rem;line-height:1.5rem;margin-bottom:0.9375rem;}}.css-3btd0c strong{font-weight:600;}.css-3btd0c em{font-style:italic;}.css-w739ur{margin:0 auto 5px;font-family:nyt-franklin,helvetica,arial,sans-serif;font-weight:700;font-size:1.125rem;line-height:1.3125rem;color:#121212;}#NYT_BELOW_MAIN_CONTENT_REGION .css-w739ur{font-family:nyt-cheltenham,georgia,’times new roman’,times,serif;font-weight:700;font-size:1.375rem;line-height:1.625rem;}@media (min-width:740px){#NYT_BELOW_MAIN_CONTENT_REGION .css-w739ur{font-size:1.6875rem;line-height:1.875rem;}}@media (min-width:740px){.css-w739ur{font-size:1.25rem;line-height:1.4375rem;}}.css-1dg6kl4{margin-top:5px;margin-bottom:15px;}#masthead-bar-one{display:none;}#masthead-bar-one{display:none;}.css-12vbvwq{background-color:white;border:1px solid #e2e2e2;width:calc(100% – 40px);max-width:600px;margin:1.5rem auto 1.9rem;padding:15px;box-sizing:border-box;}@media (min-width:740px){.css-12vbvwq{padding:20px;width:100%;}}.css-12vbvwq:focus{outline:1px solid #e2e2e2;}#NYT_BELOW_MAIN_CONTENT_REGION .css-12vbvwq{border:none;padding:10px 0 0;border-top:2px solid #121212;}.css-12vbvwq[data-truncated] .css-rdoyk0{-webkit-transform:rotate(0deg);-ms-transform:rotate(0deg);transform:rotate(0deg);}.css-12vbvwq[data-truncated] .css-eb027h{max-height:300px;overflow:hidden;-webkit-transition:none;transition:none;}.css-12vbvwq[data-truncated] .css-5gimkt:after{content:’See more’;}.css-12vbvwq[data-truncated] .css-6mllg9{opacity:1;}.css-1rh1sk1{margin:0 auto;overflow:hidden;}.css-1rh1sk1 strong{font-weight:700;}.css-1rh1sk1 em{font-style:italic;}.css-1rh1sk1 a{color:#326891;-webkit-text-decoration:underline;text-decoration:underline;text-underline-offset:1px;-webkit-text-decoration-thickness:1px;text-decoration-thickness:1px;-webkit-text-decoration-color:#ccd9e3;text-decoration-color:#ccd9e3;}.css-1rh1sk1 a:visited{color:#333;-webkit-text-decoration-color:#ccc;text-decoration-color:#ccc;}.css-1rh1sk1 a:hover{-webkit-text-decoration:none;text-decoration:none;}“Those emails would have been public if I was the decision maker,” she said at a mayoral forum.Not long after the episode, Ms. Wiley resigned and became chairwoman of the Civilian Complaint Review Board, the agency that investigates police misconduct.While Ms. Wiley points to her time there as valuable experience in learning how to tackle police reform, groups like the New York Civil Liberties Union say she was too secretive about the disciplinary process and too sluggish in confronting the Police Department. The current chairman, the Rev. Fred Davie, has been more outspoken on issues like repealing 50-a, a law that until recently kept officer disciplinary records secret.Her experience at City Hall and the watchdog agency has enabled Ms. Wiley to argue that she knows city government, but it also ties her to Mr. de Blasio.As counsel to Mr. de Blasio, Ms. Wiley was known for her role in the “agents of the city” battle, when she tried to keep the mayor’s emails with outside advisers private.Nicole Bengiveno/The New York TimesMs. Wiley, like Mr. de Blasio, has been known to speak about inequality in broad terms. When she described homelessness as a public safety issue during a recent appearance on Brian Lehrer’s WNYC show, Mr. Lehrer shared a response from a listener: “de Blasio 2.0.”Ms. Wiley argues that women should not be judged by the men they worked for. She praised Mr. de Blasio’s achievements like universal prekindergarten and criticized him over his handling of the police killing of Eric Garner in 2014.“Women should not be defined by anything other than their record,” she said. “I’m not running against Bill de Blasio.”A push to ‘reimagine’ New YorkAs protests over police brutality rocked the nation last summer, Ms. Wiley gained attention on MSNBC for her clearheaded explanations of why some activists wanted to defund the police.Her national exposure created excitement when she entered the race, but also the expectation that she would catch fire as the leading progressive candidate. That has not happened for a variety of reasons.“This is a race that has a lot of progressive options,” said Eric Phillips, a former press secretary for Mr. de Blasio. “I think it’s natural that there would be real competition and one candidate wouldn’t automatically own that lane.”Ms. Wiley must prove that she can energize the left-wing of the party and be the most viable candidate to take on the two more moderate front-runners, Andrew Yang, the former presidential hopeful, and Mr. Adams. She is often in third or fourth place in the polls, along with Mr. Stringer.Ms. Wiley would cut $1 billion from the police budget, and hire a police commissioner from outside the department.Gabriela Bhaskar for The New York TimesBut the accusations lodged against Mr. Stringer have created some room for momentum: The powerful Working Families Party had named Mr. Stringer as its first choice for mayor, but withdrew the endorsement after the sexual misconduct allegations. The group is now supporting Ms. Wiley and Dianne Morales, a former nonprofit executive and the most left-leaning candidate in the race.Still, Mr. Stringer has a major fund-raising advantage: He has more than $7 million to pour into television ads. Ms. Wiley has about $2.5 million on hand.Mr. Sharpton said he believed that Ms. Wiley could make a “late surge” once more voters start tuning into the race. He is considering endorsing one of several of the candidates trying to become the city’s second Black mayor — Ms. Wiley, Mr. Adams, or Raymond J. McGuire, a former Wall Street executive — if Mr. Sharpton believes he could help one of them win, according to a person who is familiar with his thinking.To differentiate herself from some of her rivals, Ms. Wiley has been rolling out her “50 Ideas for NYC,” a new plan every day focused on issues like reducing the Black maternal mortality rate. Her most ambitious proposal is called “New Deal New York,” which involves spending $10 billion to help the city recover from the pandemic and to create 100,000 jobs. Her universal community care plan would make 100,000 families eligible for a $5,000 annual grant to care for children and older people. She also wants to hire 2,500 new teachers to lower class sizes.As concerns have grown about violent crime, she released a policing and public safety plan that includes hiring a civilian police commissioner and creating a new commission to decide whether to fire officers accused of misconduct. She was early in urging Mr. de Blasio to fire his police commissioner, Dermot F. Shea, after his aggressive response to last year’s protests.Yet she has also distanced herself from the defund slogan, saying the term “means different things to different people.” In contrast, Ms. Morales has embraced the movement and pledged to slash the $6 billion police budget in half — a stance that has endeared her to left-leaning voters, less so to more moderate ones.At the same time, some business and civic leaders fear that Ms. Wiley is too liberal; in a poll of business leaders, Ms. Wiley was near last place with just 3 percent. They also question whether Ms. Wiley has enough experience as a manager to run a sprawling bureaucracy with a $98 billion budget.“Maya is terrific, but business is looking for a manager, not an advocate,” said Kathryn Wylde, the leader of a prominent business group.At the moment, Ms. Wiley is simply looking to connect to as many voters as she can, in person and on social media, where she posts campaign diaries recorded at home.She lives in Ditmas Park, Brooklyn, with her partner, Harlan Mandel, in an elegant house built in the Prairie School architectural style made famous by Frank Lloyd Wright. They have two daughters, Naja, 20, and Kai, 17. Ms. Wiley is Christian and Mr. Mandel is Jewish, and they belong to Kolot Chayeinu, a reform congregation in Park Slope.The last woman who came close to being mayor, Christine Quinn, a former City Council speaker, said she regretted that she tried to soften her hard-charging personality during her campaign. Her advice for Ms. Wiley was to be herself.“The thing voters hate the most is someone who is not authentic,” Ms. Quinn said. “Maya needs to be exactly who she is.”Who Ms. Wiley is, she said in an interview, is the daughter of civil rights activists who will fight to make the city more fair.“I have been someone committed to racial justice and transformation my entire career,” Ms. Wiley said. “And that means bringing us all back, every single one of us, and not just back to January 2020, but to reimagine this city.” More

  • in

    We Interviewed the N.Y.C. Mayor Candidates. Here’s What We Learned.

    We asked the eight leading Democrats running for mayor of New York City about the pandemic, policing and where they like to go out to eat. Here’s an overview.We interviewed the leading Democratic candidates running for mayor about the most pressing concerns facing New York City as it recovers from the pandemic.We also asked them about their favorite restaurants and their sports allegiances.Voters are still getting to know the crowded field of candidates ahead of the June 22 primary. They come from unique backgrounds and have differing visions for the city on issues that include policing, transit, climate and education.Here’s a glimpse of what we learned (and you can view the full videos here):1. They are keenly focused on leading the city’s economic recovery.Tony Cenicola/The New York TimesAs the end of the pandemic comes into focus, many of the mayoral candidates are centering their pitch around the idea that they can lead New York into a period of greater equity and prosperity than the city experienced before the shutdown.For some of the candidates, that means a focus on small businesses and ensuring that the institutions that make New York so culturally vibrant — restaurants and Broadway, for example — have sufficient support to reopen.“The first thing I would do to help New York City recover from the pandemic is really make sure we are investing in our small businesses and that we are bringing back the things that differentiate us from the rest of the country,” said Kathryn Garcia, the former sanitation commissioner. “Art, culture, restaurants. When they’re strong, that means offices are strong and that means that tourism comes back.”That view was echoed by several of the contenders. Some also emphasized the importance of reopening the city quickly and safely.“We should get our artists, our musicians, our restaurants, filling our vacant storefronts, filling our public spaces,” said Shaun Donovan, the former federal housing secretary, “and make sure every New Yorker and the world knows that we’re alive and fun and the city to be in again.”Or as Andrew Yang, the former presidential candidate, put it: “The first thing we have to do to help New York City recover is let people know that New York City is open for business.”2. Surprise! No one named Bill de Blasio as the best mayor in their lifetime.Todd Heisler/The New York TimesMany New Yorkers will not miss Mayor Bill de Blasio when he leaves office early next year.None of the candidates named him as the best mayor in their lifetime. Instead, many pointed to Michael R. Bloomberg and David N. Dinkins.Ms. Garcia named Mr. Bloomberg, citing “his focus on the data.” Maya Wiley, a former civil rights lawyer, said Mr. Dinkins, who died last year, “was my hero” and cared about all New Yorkers.Raymond J. McGuire, a former Wall Street executive, named both: Mr. Dinkins for bringing the city together as a “gorgeous mosaic,” and Mr. Bloomberg who was “effective at leading and managing the city,” though Mr. McGuire criticized his focus on stop-and-frisk policing.Mr. Yang named Ed Koch, citing “his optimism and spirit,” while Scott M. Stringer, the city comptroller, cited both Mr. Koch and Mr. Dinkins.3. Only one candidate supports the slogan “defund the police.”Tony Cenicola/The New York TimesDianne Morales, a former nonprofit executive, is the only candidate who fully embraced the “defund the police” movement.Ms. Morales described how her children were pepper sprayed by the police at a protest at Barclays Center last summer and how her son was physically assaulted. She suggested that she supports an eventual goal of abolishing the police.“We know that policing does not equal public safety — that communities that are most heavily policed are in fact the most at risk and the most harmed,” she said.Eric Adams, the Brooklyn borough president, said the term defund was not helpful and could “stop the forward movement we’re looking for.”Mr. Yang said the slogan “unfortunately seems very absolutist,” but he does support channeling more resources to mental-health response teams.Other candidates called for cuts to the police budget and other reforms: Ms. Wiley said the police department should have fewer officers; Mr. Stringer said officers should not handle 911 calls for mental health emergencies.4. Left-wing vs. centrist, insider vs. outsiderTony Cenicola/The New York TimesOn any number of key matters, the candidates were in broad agreement: The city, in their view, does have an important role to play in confronting systemic racism; combating issues including traffic congestion and climate change should be top priorities for the next mayor; the city must reopen quickly and safely, and for some contenders, there are growing concerns around crime.But real differences were also evident, both in terms of management style and ideology. Ms. Morales emerged as the most left-wing candidate in the field, on issues including public safety and “austerity,” warning against it as she sketched out an expansive public infrastructure program. Mr. Stringer and Ms. Wiley often took positions that also aligned them further to the left of other candidates.Mr. Yang, Ms. Garcia, Mr. Adams and Mr. McGuire tended toward the more centrist side of the spectrum in discussing policing and economic development.But for many of the candidates, the sharpest contrasts had less to do with politics than with experience. Ms. Garcia, Mr. Donovan and Mr. Stringer in particular are running as résumé candidates, citing their deep experience in government — at the city level for Ms. Garcia and Mr. Stringer and at the federal level for Mr. Donovan.To varying degrees, Mr. Yang, Ms. Wiley, Mr. McGuire and Ms. Morales are seeking to run as less traditional candidates who emphasize their experiences outside of government, while Mr. Adams highlights both his experience in government and his work as a police officer..css-1xzcza9{list-style-type:disc;padding-inline-start:1em;}.css-3btd0c{font-family:nyt-franklin,helvetica,arial,sans-serif;font-size:1rem;line-height:1.375rem;color:#333;margin-bottom:0.78125rem;}@media (min-width:740px){.css-3btd0c{font-size:1.0625rem;line-height:1.5rem;margin-bottom:0.9375rem;}}.css-3btd0c strong{font-weight:600;}.css-3btd0c em{font-style:italic;}.css-w739ur{margin:0 auto 5px;font-family:nyt-franklin,helvetica,arial,sans-serif;font-weight:700;font-size:1.125rem;line-height:1.3125rem;color:#121212;}#NYT_BELOW_MAIN_CONTENT_REGION .css-w739ur{font-family:nyt-cheltenham,georgia,’times new roman’,times,serif;font-weight:700;font-size:1.375rem;line-height:1.625rem;}@media (min-width:740px){#NYT_BELOW_MAIN_CONTENT_REGION .css-w739ur{font-size:1.6875rem;line-height:1.875rem;}}@media (min-width:740px){.css-w739ur{font-size:1.25rem;line-height:1.4375rem;}}.css-1dg6kl4{margin-top:5px;margin-bottom:15px;}#masthead-bar-one{display:none;}#masthead-bar-one{display:none;}.css-12vbvwq{background-color:white;border:1px solid #e2e2e2;width:calc(100% – 40px);max-width:600px;margin:1.5rem auto 1.9rem;padding:15px;box-sizing:border-box;}@media (min-width:740px){.css-12vbvwq{padding:20px;width:100%;}}.css-12vbvwq:focus{outline:1px solid #e2e2e2;}#NYT_BELOW_MAIN_CONTENT_REGION .css-12vbvwq{border:none;padding:10px 0 0;border-top:2px solid #121212;}.css-12vbvwq[data-truncated] .css-rdoyk0{-webkit-transform:rotate(0deg);-ms-transform:rotate(0deg);transform:rotate(0deg);}.css-12vbvwq[data-truncated] .css-eb027h{max-height:300px;overflow:hidden;-webkit-transition:none;transition:none;}.css-12vbvwq[data-truncated] .css-5gimkt:after{content:’See more’;}.css-12vbvwq[data-truncated] .css-6mllg9{opacity:1;}.css-1rh1sk1{margin:0 auto;overflow:hidden;}.css-1rh1sk1 strong{font-weight:700;}.css-1rh1sk1 em{font-style:italic;}.css-1rh1sk1 a{color:#326891;-webkit-text-decoration:underline;text-decoration:underline;text-underline-offset:1px;-webkit-text-decoration-thickness:1px;text-decoration-thickness:1px;-webkit-text-decoration-color:#ccd9e3;text-decoration-color:#ccd9e3;}.css-1rh1sk1 a:visited{color:#333;-webkit-text-decoration-color:#ccc;text-decoration-color:#ccc;}.css-1rh1sk1 a:hover{-webkit-text-decoration:none;text-decoration:none;}The race will test both the city’s ideological mood, and whether voters want a seasoned government insider or someone promising to shake up the system as an outsider.5. Some avoided picking a second-choice candidate.Elizabeth D. Herman for The New York TimesNew Yorkers will use ranked-choice voting in the mayoral election for the first time this year, ranking up to five candidates in their order of preference.That could lead to alliances among the candidates, though some were not ready to reveal whom they might rank second.Ms. Wiley named Ms. Morales as her second choice, citing her “real lived experience” as a person of color in New York City.Mr. Yang named Ms. Garcia and described her as a “disciplined operator with great experience,” and said he would like to work with her in his administration — comments that he has made before and that have frustrated Ms. Garcia, who says she wants the top job.“Kathryn, if you’re watching this, Kathryn, let’s team up,” Mr. Yang said laughing.Mr. Adams said he liked several candidates and was talking to them about a pact to rank each other second.“That is a secret,” he said with a smile.6. Three candidates would accept Governor Cuomo’s endorsement.Sara Naomi Lewkowicz for The New York TimesGov. Andrew M. Cuomo has faced calls to resign over allegations of sexual harassment and his handling of nursing home deaths during the pandemic.Still, Mr. Adams, Mr. Yang and Mr. McGuire said they would accept his endorsement.“I believe strongly in the due process system,” Mr. Adams said, adding that if leaders sidestep that process then “we are on a slippery slope.”Mr. Yang said that the governor’s endorsement would be “positive for New York City” and “a clear signal that the city and state’s interests are aligned.”Ms. Wiley said she was not seeking the governor’s support.“I stand by my request that Governor Cuomo step down and resign because we can’t afford any of our people to doubt the integrity of our public servants,” she said.7. The candidates have bold policies. They also have some restaurant recommendations.Tony Cenicola/The New York TimesThe contenders sketched out extensive, sometimes sharply divergent, policy visions on issues including how to balance economic development with community concerns and the best ways to address educational losses from the pandemic.But they also showed how they would use the bully pulpit of the mayoralty to root for New York City culture, parks and nightlife, ticking through their favorite restaurants, Broadway shows, city green spaces (a Central Park-versus-Prospect Park battle line emerged) and sports teams.From sushi at Amber on the Upper West Side (Mr. Stringer’s favorite) to “a little hole in the wall in Fort Greene” called Dino (Ms. Morales’s choice); pizza at Corner Slice in Hell’s Kitchen for Mr. Yang or a meal at Red Rooster in Harlem for Mr. McGuire, they all appeared eager for a less wonky, but vitally important aspect of the job: cheerleading for the city. More

  • in

    These 8 Democrats Want to Be Mayor of New York City. We Have Questions.

    “How’s it going?”
    “Thought we’d make an entrance.”
    “Hello, everyone.”
    “How you living?”
    “OK, let’s go through this way.”
    [music]
    “Am I just going
    to the chair?”
    “There’s lot of cameras.”
    “I could go into
    the movie business
    I feel pretty good.”
    “I’ve never walked
    out on an interview yet.”
    “All right.
    Tell me what you need.”
    “So starting with pandemic.”
    “What is the first
    thing you would
    do to help
    New York City recover?”
    “Systemic racism.”
    “Educational losses.”
    “Amazon headquarters.”
    “A car-free Manhattan.”
    “What is the key to improving
    public transportation?”
    “Police reform.”
    “Traffic congestion.”
    “Climate change, in general.”
    “That’s an interesting way to ask it.”
    “Do I get choices?
    Do I get to choose
    amongst my answers?”
    “I don’t talk as much as
    the other guys.”
    “That is a secret.”
    “I know, what does that say about me?”
    “Do you want me to
    expound on that?”
    “No questions about my cats?” More

  • in

    Kathryn Garcia on Why She Wants to Be Mayor of New York City

    “New York City really needs
    someone who has strong
    leadership skills and
    understands how to get
    the job done.
    We are facing overlapping
    crises, a public health
    crisis, an economic
    crisis, a crisis
    about our
    socio-emotional health.
    I get stuff done.
    And I’m excited to roll up my
    sleeves and do the hard work
    to bring us back
    strongly out of Covid.
    I’m so happy
    we’re not on Zoom.
    You have no idea.
    The first thing I would do
    to help New York City recover
    from the pandemic is really
    make sure we are investing
    in our small businesses and
    that we are bringing back
    the things that differentiate
    us from the rest
    of the country —
    art, culture, restaurants.
    When they’re strong, that
    means offices are strong.
    And that means that
    tourism comes back.
    That’s how we
    come out of this.”
    “There are proposals to
    build a seawall to protect
    New York City from a future
    Hurricane Sandy amid rising
    sea levels.
    Do you think building a
    seawall is a good idea?
    And what is one additional
    thing you would do to address
    the effects of
    climate change?”
    “Climate change is here.
    In eastern Queens,
    so many trees
    came down that they
    lost power for a week
    during a heat wave.
    This is why I have
    a robust climate
    plan that looks at protecting
    all 520 miles of coastline,
    not only through building
    hard infrastructure,
    but also thinking about
    soft infrastructure, things
    that mitigate wave activity.
    But we can’t only prepare
    for the last emergency.
    If Hurricane Sandy had been
    on a slightly different tide
    cycle, we’d be talking
    about impacts in the Bronx
    and in northern Queens.
    In addition, it’s
    not just storm surge.
    It will be high heat.
    It will be heavy rainfall.
    We have to make
    sure that we are
    decarbonizing the economy.
    We have to make sure
    that we are turning food
    into compost.
    We have to make sure that we
    are electrifying our
    school buses.
    That is how we get this done.
    We have to have
    everything on the table.”
    “Would you accept an
    endorsement from
    Governor Cuomo?”
    “No, I don’t think so.
    Should the governor
    weigh in on this race,
    I do not anticipate
    his endorsement
    due to the fact that I have
    called for him to step aside.
    Systemic racism must be
    combated by all institutions,
    and that includes
    city government.
    Two of my priorities are
    around education and housing.
    In education, we
    need to get rid
    of screens for gifted and
    talented four-year-olds.
    Everyone is gifted and
    talented when they’re four,
    and precious.
    We need to ensure
    that we are working
    with parents to eliminate
    screens in middle school.
    In housing, we
    have not actually
    instituted the
    Fair Housing Act
    in a way that is making it
    so that, particularly when
    we build new housing, that we
    are opening it up to anyone
    in the city of New York.
    You know, I
    actually have to say
    that Mayor Bloomberg was
    the best New York City mayor
    in my lifetime.
    And it is really because
    I appreciated his focus
    on the data.
    His changes in public
    health actually lengthened
    our lifespans.
    There were, of course,
    some tragic decisions,
    particularly around
    stop-and-frisk.
    But I believe that when you
    look at how he approached it,
    that it’s really important
    in the city of New York.”
    “If you were mayor in 2019,
    would you have supported
    the deal to build an Amazon
    headquarters in Queens?”
    “New York City has to be a
    city that’s growing, that’s
    open for business.
    We need jobs in this city,
    and we need good
    jobs in this city.
    If I had been mayor in 2019, I
    would have supported the deal
    with Amazon.
    I would have brought the
    community together with
    Amazon, with the government,
    so that collectively,
    we could have come out
    with the best option
    for everyone.”
    “What would you have said
    to longtime residents who
    opposed neighborhood rezonings
    because they fear they’ll be
    pushed out?”
    “Rezonings allow us to house
    more families in the city
    of New York.
    That means we work
    with communities
    to ensure that we are
    not displacing residents.
    That we are ensuring that
    we are protecting them.
    That we make sure that
    we are providing them
    with legal support
    should their landlord
    take aggressive action.
    But I know that rezonings
    mean homes for families.”
    “What is the most important
    police reform you would
    pursue as mayor?”
    “Trust is at the core
    of public safety.
    The most important
    police reform
    that I would
    pursue as mayor is
    to ensure that we have
    very clear and transparent
    discipline for our officers.
    We also need to make
    sure we are actually
    achieving culture change.
    And by that we have to
    instill new training programs,
    and make sure that we are
    promoting those officers who
    are rebuilding trust
    with communities.
    We need to make sure that
    we’re embedding mental health
    professionals with our
    officers for any emotional
    disturbance call.
    They have to have all the
    tools to make sure that
    that ends safely.
    During the 2020
    presidential primary,
    I supported Joe Biden.
    And I supported him
    because I really
    believe in his policies.
    And I also thought
    he could win.
    And literally, the most
    important thing to me was
    that we beat Trump.”
    “What is the single most
    important step the next mayor
    can take to make up
    for educational losses
    as a result of the pandemic?”
    “New York City students
    have suffered through a year
    of Zoom school or hybrid
    learning or opening
    and closings.
    There are several things
    we all know need to happen.
    One is we are going to have to
    look at each child to see how
    we can design programs
    to catch them up
    for the learning
    that they’ve lost.
    But the second big
    piece is we know
    that they have suffered
    trauma, that one in 1,000
    has lost a parent or
    guardian to Covid, that they
    are going to have
    socio-emotional needs.
    And we need to be
    able to support them.”
    “What is your favorite
    New York City restaurant?”
    “My favorite New York City
    restaurant is Outerspace
    at 99 Scott, which you know,
    is owned by my sister.”
    “Favorite bagel order?”
    “Everything bagel, open-faced,
    cream cheese, lox, tomato,
    onion and capers.”
    “Favorite New York City park?”
    “Prospect Park.”
    “Favorite sports team?”
    “New York Yankees.”
    “Favorite Broadway show?”
    “‘Les Mis.’”
    “Thinking about improving
    public transportation,
    would you focus more on
    modernizing the subway
    or expanding bus-only lanes?”
    “We need to invest in
    fast-forward in
    our subway system.
    But we also need to
    expand our bus
    and our select bus service.
    I love the
    technology that turns
    the light green for
    a bus and allows
    it to zip right through.
    We’re gonna have to do both,
    because we know that we can
    expand buses much more quickly
    than we could put together
    a new subway line.”
    “Mayor de Blasio has
    been criticized for his
    late-morning workouts
    at the Park Slope Y.
    What is your fitness routine?
    And would that
    change as mayor?”
    “My fitness routine used to
    be that I would go around 5:30
    in the morning.
    It’s not been as routine as
    it should be since Covid.
    But I’ve always
    gotten up early
    because I like to be at the
    office — latest by 8.
    You know, so when
    I went to the gym,
    I liked to use
    free weights and I
    liked to go on the elliptical.
    Actually, I don’t like
    to go on the elliptical.
    But I know that I need
    to go on the elliptical
    for the aerobic piece.
    But I don’t particularly
    enjoy that.”
    “Since voters can rank
    up to five candidates
    on their ballot, whom would
    you pick as your
    second choice?”
    “I think I actually said some
    place if I had a No. 2,
    I would not be doing this.
    But —
    I get shit done.
    “You should say that.
    Can we say that on camera?”
    “Are you allowed to say
    that in your newspaper?
    It’s a family paper.” More

  • in

    Dianne Morales on Why She Wants to Be Mayor of New York City

    “I have spent my entire career
    serving New York City’s
    most vulnerable,
    marginalized communities,
    and for too long,
    we have continued
    to fail to provide and
    protect those communities.
    We’ve seen throughout the
    course of the pandemic that
    so many members of
    those communities
    are, in fact, the ones that
    have kept the city operating,
    taking care of the rest of us.
    It’s time for New York
    to center, prioritize
    and elevate their needs.
    I can be loud if
    you want me to.
    I used to be a
    classroom teacher.
    I can be louder.
    Oh, so cool.”
    “What is the most
    important police reform
    you would pursue as mayor?”
    “The protests last summer were
    actually very personal for me.
    At the very first protest
    after George Floyd
    was murdered,
    I stood at the
    Barclays Center
    and watched as my children
    were first pepper-sprayed,
    and shortly
    thereafter, I watched
    as my son was
    physically assaulted
    by a police officer.
    We know that policing does
    not equal public safety,
    that communities that
    are most heavily policed
    are, in fact, the most at
    risk and the most harmed.
    So I don’t believe that we can
    reform the police department.
    I think we need
    to transform it.
    And I think that
    that means divesting
    from the department
    in the way that it is,
    investing in the
    services that we need
    and then
    fundamentally transforming
    the way the department
    operates in our communities.
    So the first thing
    I’ve called for
    is the creation of a community
    first responders department
    because we know that
    so many of the calls
    that N.Y.P.D. responds to
    are not crimes in
    progress, they’re
    social issues
    related to housing,
    related to mental health,
    related to substance abuse.
    A community first
    responders department
    would be staffed by people
    who are trained and skilled
    at intervention
    and de-escalation,
    and then would be
    able to connect
    these people to a larger
    ecosystem of social services
    and human services
    so that we can break
    the cycle of the conditions
    that result in them being
    in need in the first place.”
    “Does that mean abolish?”
    “I don’t think we can move
    to abolishing right now.
    I think that’s a
    longer-term goal.
    You know, I understand
    that for many people
    in our communities, policing
    does equal public safety
    or there is that
    misunderstanding
    about that despite the
    reality and the statistics.
    So I know that it’s going
    to take time for people
    to really move away
    from the sort
    of mental understanding
    that in order to be safe,
    we need to be policed.
    But I think that as we
    begin to provide folks
    with the services and the
    supports that they need,
    it’ll become an easier
    reality for us to accomplish.
    So the first thing
    I think that we
    need to do in order to
    help New York City recover
    is to prioritize
    saving people’s lives.
    I think that means
    that we still
    need to make sure that we
    are investing in security
    so that those people
    that are still at risk
    can stay home safely.
    Until we do that, we
    can’t begin to recover.
    The next thing I think
    that we need to do
    is to make sure
    that those the rest of us
    rely on to keep the
    city operating have
    the protections
    that they need,
    whether that be through P.P.E.
    or access to the vaccine.
    And then we can talk
    about and move
    towards economic recovery,
    which I think really
    needs to focus
    on and prioritize
    our local, small and
    mid-sized businesses first.
    This is an opportunity for us
    to transform how we operate
    and move away from
    an overreliance
    on large corporations that
    come into our communities,
    exploit our labor and
    extract our wealth,
    and rebuild by focusing on
    those who own
    businesses locally.”
    “Would you accept
    an endorsement
    from Governor Cuomo?”
    “No — do you want me
    to expound on that?
    No, I mean, I was the
    first mayoral candidate
    to call for his impeachment.
    I think he has abused his
    power for far too long.
    And I think he’s
    also not been, not
    held the best interest of
    New Yorkers as a priority.
    I’m not interested
    in being endorsed
    by someone whose leadership
    I do not respect and
    whose leadership,
    I believe, has lacked in
    dignity and integrity.”
    “What is the single,
    most important step
    the next mayor can
    take to make up
    for educational losses
    during the pandemic?”
    “This focus on educational
    loss in our Black
    and brown communities
    is one that
    continues to compound
    the harm that’s
    being done to our children.
    Our schools are the
    most segregated schools
    in the country and the
    most under-resourced.
    We need to prioritize, first,
    making sure our schools get
    the funding that they need.
    And then we need to make sure
    that our children, that we’re
    creating environments
    in our schools
    where our children
    feel loved because you
    can’t learn in a space
    where you don’t feel loved.
    That includes
    things like ensuring
    that we have a culturally
    responsive curriculum.
    It includes things
    like ensuring
    that our teachers are
    reflective of the students
    that they’re
    intended to serve.
    It also includes things
    like removing barriers
    to access, which for so long
    have continued to perpetuate
    inequities and disparities
    in terms of the schools
    that our children
    have access to.”
    “Do you support
    year-round school?”
    “I think that we need to
    move away from the agrarian
    calendar and adopt a
    year-round calendar that
    enables us to stagger our
    students in the
    school system.
    This would address the
    overcrowding issue.
    It would address
    the ability for us
    to really have
    smaller classrooms.”
    “Whom did you support in the 2020
    presidential primary and why?”
    “I supported Elizabeth Warren
    in the primary, both
    because I was a supporter
    of her ideas and her vision,
    and because I was really
    appreciative of the role
    that she gave Black women
    and Black women’s voices
    in her campaign
    and her candidacy.
    And she was a woman.
    And I think it’s time
    for us to actually
    have a different
    kind of leadership,
    not just at the local
    level in New York City,
    but at the federal
    level as well.”
    “What is your main
    priority for the city when
    it comes to climate change?”
    “I think we need to adopt a
    Green New Deal for
    New York City, that
    includes the creation
    of a public infrastructure
    program that would actually
    employ tens of
    thousands of New Yorkers
    in doing the work
    that we need to do.
    So that we are actually ready
    for the storms in the future.
    So that we are a
    green city, so that we
    are reducing emissions
    and actually moving
    towards clean energy.
    We need to invest
    in the future,
    and we need to do that now.
    This is not a time for
    us to cry austerity.
    This is a time for us
    to rebuild our economy
    and get ready for the
    future that is coming
    no matter what.”
    “What is the key to improving
    public transportation?
    Would you focus more on
    modernizing the subway
    or expanding bus-only lanes?”
    “There’s a lot of
    room for improvement
    in our public transportation
    system here in New York City.
    I believe in the idea of
    starting with the things
    that we can control first.
    And given that we have
    more influence and impact
    on the busways, I think that
    that would be the right place
    for us to start, while at the
    same time taking on Albany so
    that we can get the funding
    that we need in order
    to improve our subway system
    and make the infrastructure
    improvements that we
    need for our system,
    including the creation of a
    public works infrastructure
    program that would employ
    New Yorkers in actually doing
    that work for us.”
    “What is your favorite
    New York City restaurant?”
    “My favorite
    New York City restaurant
    is a little hole in the wall
    in Fort Greene called Dino’s.”
    “Your favorite bagel order?”
    “My favorite bagel order is an
    everything bagel with
    cream cheese
    and lots of lox.”
    “Favorite sports team?”
    “Favorite sports team —
    this gets
    me all the time.
    I always say the Knicks.
    I’m supposed to say the Nets.
    It’s the Knicks.”
    “Your favorite
    New York City park?”
    “My favorite New York City
    park is probably
    Prospect Park.”
    “And your favorite
    Broadway show?”
    “My favorite Broadway
    show, ‘Hamilton.’”
    “Mayor de Blasio
    has been criticized
    for his late-morning
    workouts at the Park Slope Y.
    What is your
    fitness routine,
    and would that change
    at all as mayor?”
    “Fitness routine.
    What fitness routine?
    I’m running for mayor.
    Before the pandemic,
    I have a sort of teacher.
    Her name is Patricia Moreno.
    She teaches a class
    called ‘intenSati.’
    She’s doing it on
    Zoom these days,
    but I just haven’t
    been able to make it.
    ‘IntenSati’ is actually a
    really cool combination
    of sort of spiritual
    affirmations, cardio,
    kickboxing and yoga.
    It absolutely
    changed my life.
    And both increased my
    level of self-confidence
    and also helped me get into
    the best shape I’ve ever
    been in my life, which
    is not right now.”
    “Since voters can
    rank up to five
    candidates on the ballot,
    whom would you pick
    as your second choice?”
    “There’s a lot of
    daylight between me
    and the rest of
    the candidates,
    so it’s really
    hard to identify
    at this point in
    time how I would
    rank the rest of my ballot.
    I’m looking forward
    to seeing the impact
    that my candidacy has on
    other people’s messages.”
    “Then no second choice today?”
    “No second choice today.” More

  • in

    Shaun Donovan on Why He Wants to Be Mayor of New York City

    [MUSIC PLAYING]
    “No one in this race for mayor
    has the experience that I do.
    No one else has
    sat side by side
    in the situation
    room with Dr. Fauci.
    No one else has led this
    city back from Sandy.
    No one else has led a
    $4 trillion federal budget.
    This city has given
    me everything.
    And in its moment of crisis,
    I want to help
    to lead this city back.”
    “The next mayor will inherit
    an economy devastated
    by the pandemic.
    What is the first thing you
    would do to help
    New York City recover?”
    “Well, the first thing we have
    to do is make sure every New Yorker
    and everyone around the
    world knows that New York
    is the safest city in the world.
    I would make sure everyone
    can walk into a restaurant,
    everyone can walk
    into a theater,
    with an app on their phone
    that lets them know that it’s
    a safe place to be and
    that the restaurant,
    or the theater, or
    wherever it might be,
    knows that that person
    has been vaccinated.
    There’s nothing wrong with
    New York that can’t be solved
    by what’s right with New York.
    We should get our artists, our
    musicians, our restaurants,
    filling our vacant
    storefronts,
    filling our public spaces,
    and make sure every New Yorker
    and the world knows that
    we’re alive, and fun,
    and the city to be in again.
    If I were mayor now, I
    would extend the eviction
    moratorium until the
    pandemic is behind us
    and all of the aid,
    the nearly $50 billion
    in rental assistance that
    I worked with Congress
    and the Biden
    administration to create,
    had the time to get
    into the hands of folks
    who need it most.
    And that will take
    months after the end
    of the pandemic.”
    “What is the most important
    police reform you would
    pursue as mayor?”
    “We need to do three things in
    this city to end the epidemic
    of violence against Black and
    brown New Yorkers and to make
    every New Yorker feel
    respected and safe.
    We need to reform
    policing by creating
    real transparency,
    real accountability,
    weeding out the bad apples.
    But we also need to reduce
    what we’re asking the police
    to do.
    They’re asked to be
    mental health experts with
    our homeless and in so
    many other situations.
    Instead, what we should
    do is reduce those roles
    and focus them on guns
    and violent crime.
    Reducing the flow of
    illegal guns into our city
    is one of the most
    important things
    that we can do
    to end violence.
    We need to reinvest
    in our communities
    to break the cycle
    of incarceration.
    When I was housing
    commissioner in this city,
    I took housing and gave it to
    folks coming out of Rikers.
    And the results
    were remarkable.
    A year later, 95% of those
    folks were stably housed,
    getting back to work,
    and hadn’t reoffended.
    It was so successful that
    effort’s been replicated
    in 40 cities
    around the country.
    Absolutely, New
    York City has a role
    in addressing systemic racism.
    That’s why I’ve put equity
    at the center of my campaign.
    I’d be the first mayor ever
    to have a chief equity officer
    reporting directly to me with
    responsibility to look over
    every single agency.
    It’s why I’ve put 15-minute
    neighborhoods at the center
    of my campaign, to make sure
    that every single New Yorker
    is able to get everything they
    need for opportunity within
    15 minutes of
    their front door.
    And it’s why I’ve created
    the equity bonds idea
    for New York.
    What’s an equity bond?
    Well, every child
    born in this city
    gets $1,000 put in an account.
    And every year,
    depending on their income
    another up to $2,000, so that
    a child born into poverty
    would graduate high
    school with almost $50,000
    in an account to go to
    college, to buy a home,
    to start a business.
    It’s the wealth gap across
    races that, in this city,
    that drives inequality
    more than anything else.
    And equity bonds
    would end that.”
    “Since voters can rank
    up to five candidates
    on the ballot, who would you
    pick as your second choice?”
    “Oh, you are going to
    do this one, aren’t you?
    I’m still getting to know
    the other candidates,
    just like New Yorkers are.
    But if I had to
    answer today, I
    would say my second choice
    would be Maya Wiley.
    I’ve worked on civil rights
    issues my whole career.
    And I have real respect for
    the work that Maya’s done
    to make this a fairer
    city and country.
    The single most
    important thing
    the next mayor can do to make
    up for educational losses
    from the pandemic is to
    ensure that we are investing
    everything we can in
    our kids, particularly
    in the schools that
    have been left behind.
    I would do that by creating
    an education recovery corps,
    bringing more social workers
    and emotional and social
    supports to our
    schools, and creating
    a public-private
    grant program that
    would invest in the
    schools that have
    been left behind the most.
    I have a really
    innovative idea.
    Let’s ask our young
    people, our CUNY students,
    our recent graduates who
    are thinking about becoming
    teachers, let’s put
    them to work right now,
    side by side with
    our teachers,
    helping our kids catch
    up educationally,
    but also socially
    and emotionally.
    I’m certainly not seeking
    Governor Cuomo’s endorsement,
    and I wouldn’t accept it.
    I’ve been clear that
    I believe the brave,
    courageous women who
    have come forward.
    And enough is enough.
    It’s time for Governor Cuomo
    to resign and allow our city
    and our state to move forward
    in the midst of the
    crises we’re facing.”
    “Do you think we should
    move towards
    a car-free Manhattan?”
    “I don’t know that we’ll ever
    get to a completely car-free
    Manhattan, especially if
    we can ensure that electric
    vehicles are everywhere, that
    we have charging stations,
    and that we don’t have
    cars that pollute our city.
    But I do think we have to make
    sure that we put people first
    in Manhattan and every
    other part of the city.
    I would make sure that as
    we’re implementing congestion
    pricing and other ways
    to bring in revenue,
    that we’re investing
    more in our subways,
    in our public transportation,
    in exchange for more control
    over the M.T.A.,
    more board seats,
    more say in the priorities
    that ought to be serving
    our new Yorkers.
    The second thing
    I would do is,
    based on my 15-minute
    neighborhood proposal,
    ensuring that every
    community has access
    to public transportation.
    For some communities,
    that means the subways.
    For others, it would mean real
    bus rapid transit that allows
    them to move quickly through
    the city because we’ve
    prioritized the signals and
    allowed a bus driver to never
    wait at a red light.
    We can be the leading city in
    the world on transportation
    with the right leadership.
    I voted for Joe Biden.
    We had a lot of
    great candidates,
    many who I’ve worked
    with for years,
    but there’s nobody I
    worked more closely with.
    And I agreed with Joe
    Biden that this was a fight
    for the soul of our nation.”
    “What’s your favorite New
    York City restaurant?”
    “This is like picking
    between your children.
    But if I had to pick one
    favorite New York City
    restaurant, I would have
    to say Grimaldi’s Pizza,
    even though it’s
    no longer open,
    because every Sunday when
    my boys were growing up,
    we’d get a pizza,
    sit on our stoop,
    and hang out with
    our neighbors.”
    “Favorite bagel order?”
    “Onion bagel, scallion
    cream cheese, lox, tomatoes,
    and red onions.”
    “Favorite New York City park?”
    “Brooklyn Bridge Park because
    my wife helped design it.”
    “Favorite sports team?”
    “The New York Yankees.
    After more than 20 years
    of having a Red Sox fan
    as mayor, it is time to have
    a Yankees fan in city hall.”
    “Favorite Broadway show?”
    “Little known fact, when
    I was in high school,
    we did a performance of
    ‘Oliver’ at the Shubert Theater.
    And I will never
    forget that moment.”
    “Did you play Oliver?”
    “Of course not.
    I was in the chorus.” More

  • in

    Ray McGuire on Why He Wants to Be Mayor of New York City.

    “I’ve been able to
    be in a business
    where I have led and managed
    budgets that are larger
    than most state budgets.
    How are you?
    I’ve been able to knock
    down doors and make certain
    that others, especially
    those who look like me,
    have the opportunity.
    So I’ve been able to create
    more opportunity and more
    wealth than all the other
    candidates combined.
    I have leadership that
    meets the moment of crisis
    with a proven
    track record.
    There’s no reason —
    what am I going to change?
    It’s kind of a tough nut.
    What — my hair?”
    “If you were
    mayor in 2019, would
    you have supported the deal to
    build an Amazon headquarters
    in Queens?”
    “I would have supported HQ 2.
    Why would I have done that?
    It would have created schools
    and infrastructure and jobs,
    the economic multiplier
    of which, especially today,
    would be in the hundreds
    of billions of dollars.
    I would have been
    supportive of, and
    made certain that I would
    include the community
    from the outset, because
    the thing that was lacking
    was the community involvement.
    We need to make certain that
    our communities are involved
    in each one of these
    projects because their lives
    are the lives that are
    going to be most impacted.”
    “And what do you
    say to residents
    who are afraid of rezoning
    because they
    fear gentrification,
    they fear they
    could be pushed out?”
    “Residents are afraid of
    rezoning because they
    fear gentrification.
    Well, gentrification is real.
    We need to have more equitable
    distribution of housing
    across the five boroughs.
    We need to make
    sure that we include
    the residents, the
    current residents,
    the historic residents
    into decisions
    that get made about what
    takes place in their homes.
    None of us would want
    to have what takes place
    in our homes prescribed
    by people who
    are not inside of our homes.
    And so we need to make
    certain that we’re inclusive,
    and that they get a seat
    and a voice at the table.
    We need to grow our way
    out of this pandemic.
    The first thing
    that we need to do
    is to have a vision of
    what this city ought to be,
    what the potential is.
    The first thing I would
    do is my economic plan,
    the largest, most
    inclusive economic comeback
    in the history of this
    city — 500,000 jobs.
    Go big, go small,
    go forward, focusing
    on the
    small businesses
    who are the
    lifeblood of this city.
    The best New York City
    mayor in my lifetime
    would probably be
    David Dinkins and then
    Mike Bloomberg because
    I think David Dinkins had
    the vision to bring
    this city together.
    What did he call it,
    the gorgeous mosaic?
    We need that kind of mindset
    and that kind of
    leadership today.
    I think Mike was very
    effective at leading
    and managing the city,
    ineffective in other ways
    for which he’s apologized.
    Stop-and-frisk is not
    something for which he’s
    going to be
    applauded in history
    or even today, he’s
    apologized for that.
    So we recognize that.
    But he was an effective
    manager of the city,
    an effective
    leader of the city.
    We need a C.E.O.
    And he was an
    effective C.E.O.”
    “What is the single
    most important step
    the next mayor can
    take to make up
    for educational losses
    during the pandemic?”
    “Today, the lives
    of our children
    are determined
    by their ZIP codes
    because we have inequities
    in the educational system.
    We need to address that.
    And that means specifically
    for those children who
    have been out of school,
    who didn’t have access
    to tablets, who
    didn’t have broadband,
    we need to make certain
    that summer education
    is available.
    If you look at my
    plan, summer education
    is at the core of this.
    Now, parents may
    decide to opt out,
    but we need to make certain
    that we give the opportunity
    for our kids to catch up.”
    “Since voters can rank
    up to five candidates
    on the ballot, who would you
    pick as your second choice?”
    “You know, I’m still
    mulling that over.
    It’s such a serious decision
    at such a difficult time
    in our city’s history.
    We need to have somebody
    who’s got a proven track
    record of leadership who can
    bring this city together.
    I need to continue to
    think through that.”
    “What is the most
    important police reform
    you would pursue as mayor?”
    “I’m not for defund.
    I think that language is
    a divisive narrative when
    we need to come together.
    I’m for better
    policing, and my plan
    would include the
    following: One,
    I would appoint a deputy
    mayor for public safety.
    Two, I would have chain of
    command accountability.
    And three, I would
    create an emergency
    social services bureau, 24
    hours, seven days a week,
    given that four to five
    out of the 10 calls
    that go into 911, have to
    do with mental health issues.
    And I would invest
    in community policing
    and in community centers.”
    “Many voters are concerned
    about the recent uptick
    in violent crime.
    Do you think New York
    is becoming less safe?”
    “I think there is a
    perception that New York is
    becoming less safe.
    In many of
    our neighborhoods,
    we see the horrible acts of
    violent crimes, gun violence.
    We need to address
    this immediately.
    And so a highest
    priority would
    be to return that sense of
    safety, the reality of safety
    to every street.
    We need to make sure that
    we invest in the
    high crimes units.
    We need to make sure
    that we address the iron
    pipeline, which is where
    the guns get manufactured
    and how they end up in
    the top 10 precincts
    where we experience most
    of the criminal activity.
    And we need to invest
    in our neighborhoods.
    So we need to make sure that
    we have safety and justice
    at the same time — we need
    to strike that balance.”
    “Would you accept
    an endorsement
    from Governor Cuomo?”
    “I accept endorsements
    from all New Yorkers
    who care about their city
    and love the city the way
    that I do.”
    “But some of the candidates
    have called on him to resign.
    Others have said he
    should step aside
    while the investigation
    takes place.
    Even after everything
    that’s happened,
    you would still
    campaign with him?”
    “You know, one of the things
    that I recognize here
    is that we have
    a system of law.
    And the attorney general,
    Tish James,
    who is quite
    accomplished and quite
    effective and well-respected,
    has set up a process.
    And I want to see how
    that process evolves.
    And based on whatever
    the course of the process
    turns out to be, that’s the
    process that’s in place.
    We need to respect the
    American jurisprudence
    system, especially
    that one led by
    Attorney General Tish James.”
    “There are proposals
    to build a seawall
    to protect New York City
    from a future
    Hurricane Sandy
    and rising sea levels.
    Do you think building a
    seawall is a good idea?”
    “Well, building a seawall
    begins the conversation.
    We need to prepare for
    the 100-year flood that
    comes every five years.
    We need to make sure that the
    plans, the advertisements,
    the press releases
    that we’ve generated,
    actually, we actually do
    something about them.
    And so you need to look
    at Hunts Point and Red Hook,
    and Coney Island and City Island
    and Lower Manhattan,
    which is part of my
    overall go big, go small,
    go forward comeback plan.
    Investing in
    infrastructure and climate
    would be one of the
    highest priorities
    as we invest in
    infrastructure.
    So, yes, seawalls
    should be part of that.
    Wind and turbines,
    and solar would also
    be part of that.
    City government has a
    clear, unequivocal role
    in combating systemic racism.
    Before I left my day
    job, I wrote the foreword
    to a study that identified
    the years of systemic impact
    in the economy, in
    education, in health care
    and in the criminal
    justice system.
    That study
    demonstrated, analyzed
    that the result of the
    systemic inequities
    in those categories
    had had a $16 trillion
    impact on the U.S. economy,
    and the government took
    a lead there.
    The government needs
    to take the lead now
    because what that
    study also identifies
    is the impact of when
    we began to address it.
    It’s $5 trillion of impact,
    positive on the U.S. economy.
    So unequivocally,
    yes, the government
    needs and must take
    a leadership role
    in combating
    systemic inequities.”
    “What’s your favorite
    New York City restaurant?”
    “Melba’s or Red Rooster.”
    “Favorite bagel order?”
    Lox, cream cheese,
    toasted everything bagel.”
    “Favorite New York City park?”
    “There are two: West 4th
    Street Park, down in the cage,
    and Central Park.
    I used to play basketball
    at West 4th Street.
    That’s how you get
    introduced to this great city,
    if you got some game.”
    “Favorite sports team?”
    “My favorite New York City
    sports team
    is probably
    the Orlando Magic,
    which is where our son plays
    basketball in the N.B.A., but
    I would say probably
    the Yankees.”
    “Favorite Broadway show?”
    “‘Fences,’ August Wilson.
    In the 2020 presidential
    primary, I supported
    now-Vice President
    Kamala Harris, whom
    I introduced to
    New York City, so I’ve
    known her for a long time.
    We’ve been friends
    for a while,
    and she’s very good
    friends with my wife.
    So we know, Kamala and
    Doug and their family.
    Am I good at this?
    I’m going to go into
    the movie business.
    I feel pretty good.” More