CITY WIRE: THE BLOG
Primary Turnout: Roughly 1 in 13 Voted in NYC Races
Jarrett Murphy |
Turnout was highest in the race to replace retiring Rep. Charles Rangel, but fewer voters showed up for that contest than had two years ago.
Turnout was highest in the race to replace retiring Rep. Charles Rangel, but fewer voters showed up for that contest than had two years ago.
The contests to decide who gets the Democratic line in seven local Congressional districts are sneaking up on a lot of voters—much like Jim Kelly snuck up on those dudes in the parking lot. Watch your back, voters!
Longtime Bronxnet host Gary Axelbank will query the crowded field seeking to replace Harlem legend Rep, Charles Rangel.
Is there a better way to run elections in New York State? Will more voters show up if we do it that way? Two political observers weigh in via a video interview.
Why would elected officials change the rules that helped them gain and keep office? If thousands of New Yorkers demand it, advocates say.
The vast majority of candidates for judicial posts in next week’s election, some of whom will win terms of 14 years, haven’t bothered to submit a bio for the state court system’s Voters’ Guide.
To answer that, one has to decide what it means to be a progressive mayor and how well the current one has matched that description in both intention and delivery. Watch a video of NYC reporters wrestling with those questions.
In response to an inquiry by City Limits, the Congressman says he did not endorse a court ruling that threw 200,000 Haitians in the DR into immigration limbo.
The mayor’s progressive agenda will be incomplete unless he attacks the growing disengagement of New York’s citizens—starting with these five steps to get young people excited about democracy.
No one knows yet how Governor Cuomo (even the governor himself!) will fill 11 empty seats in the state legislature, including two in the borough.