Tuesday’s New York primaries are local affairs featuring candidates for mayor and city council, from Buffalo to the Bronx. But the results could be harbingers of 2024 when the state will likely play a major role in which party controls the House. If big Democratic energy in the Hudson Valley is any indicator, the future is bright blue. The region is a political battleground, with cities New Rochelle, Yonkers, Poughkeepsie and Kingston fielding younger, more diverse Democratic candidates vying to move up the ballot — or enter elected office for the first time. In New Rochelle, Councilmember Yadira Ramos-Herbert is running in the city’s first open mayoral primary in more than two decades. A councilmember in Yonkers, Corazon Pineda-Isaac, is trying to block Mayor Mike Spano from taking a fourth term in her quest to become the first woman and person of color to lead the state’s third largest city. Kingston’s Charlotte Lloyd, a 25-year-old tenant activist, is running for the local council and was recruited by the group For the Many, which came out of the Occupy movement. And north of the Hudson Valley in Buffalo, India Walton will face off against Zeneta Everhart. Walton previously beat incumbent Mayor Byron Brown in the June 2021 primary — only to lose to his write-in bid in November. Now Walton and Everhart will compete to represent the Masten district on Buffalo's Common Council. That’s where a white shooter opened fire in the Tops supermarket, killing 10 people, almost all of them Black. Everhart’s son was injured but survived the attack. On the other hand, the Democratic energy in New York City this primary season is more subdued. As our Bill Mahoney reported, only 17 City Council seats have contested Democratic primaries, down from 46 in 2021. And two of the most contested races are in districts that could go red this November. The first race is the Bronx’s district 13, where incumbent Marjorie Velázquez is defending her seat from three challengers. Should she win, Velázquez will have another tough race against a Republican in a district that went for GOP mayoral nominee Curtis Sliwa in 2021. The second race that could add to the GOP’s small but growing caucus on the council is in a brand new district. Brooklyn’s 43, which includes Sunset Park, was created through redistricting to reflect the area’s majority Asian population. The district was solidly red in the gubernatorial race, where former GOP candidate Lee Zeldin won 61 percent of the vote, and Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul took just 38 percent. IT’S TUESDAY. WHERE’S KATHY? In New York City with no immediate public schedule. WHERE’S ERIC? Voting in the 2023 primary election, delivering an education and mental health-related announcement, and meeting with Italy’s President of Emilia-Romagna Region Stefano Bonaccini. QUOTE OF THE DAY: “I think pizza has saved more marriages than any other food,” Mayor Eric Adams said, responding to a protest on Monday at City Hall where a person threw multiple pies over the gate. The city's Department of Environmental Protection drafted a new rule that would target pizza shops using wood and coal-fired ovens.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment