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Opini | Panduan untuk Pemilihan Walikota New York dan Pemilihan Pendeta Demokrat

Opini | Panduan untuk Pemilihan Walikota New York dan Pemilihan Pendeta Demokrat

For The Choice, a new project from New York Times Opinion, we asked a range of New Yorkers about the biggest difficulties and opportunities facing the city as it votes in the June 24 Democratic primary for mayor and their top pick among the candidates. They were also asked to make the case for their choices on issues like the economy, housing and crime.

The results reflect the anxiety and ambivalence many voters feel right now. Our panelists split sharply on Andrew Cuomo, the front-runner in the race, with some endorsing him as the toughest and most tested candidate and others denouncing him as a bully who disqualified himself with disgraceful actions as governor. There was also fierce disagreement about the other leading candidate, Zohran Mamdani, an energetic state assemblyman whose charisma helped lift his campaign but whose progressive agenda and relative lack of experience elicited deep skepticism from many in our group.

In the end, a veteran civic leader and elected official, Brad Lander, the city comptroller, emerged as the top overall choice among the panelists, including four who recently shifted away from Mr. Cuomo, Mr. Mamdani and other candidates. Mr. Lander was also cited as best on education, the economy and leadership. Those who favored him cited his experience in city government and his ability to work with others — but, truth be told, he also benefited from lacking the heavy baggage of Mr. Cuomo and the democratic socialist image of Mr. Mamdani. Danny Meyer, the restaurateur, spoke for others in our group when he said of Mr. Lander, “He understands the complexity of how the city works, what our city government does and what it can and cannot do.”

The Choice was written by Times Opinion editors based on the assessments of our panel. Read on for the full choices of the panelists.

These 15
New Yorkers
sized up the
candidates

These 15 New
Yorkers sized up
the candidates

Our panelists were selected
for their expertise on the
forces shaping New York and
for their deep commitment
to their communities.

Our panelists were selected for their expertise
on the forces shaping New York and for their
deep commitment to their communities.

Who won
their support

Who won
their support

Panelists scored the candidates overall and on the city’s most pressing issues. Tap a category to see how the candidates ranked.

Panelists scored the candidates overall and
on the city’s most pressing issues. Tap a category
to see how the candidates ranked.

1

Brad Lander Andrew Cuomo

neil-blumenthal
mitchell-moss

Zohran Mamdani

victor-ng
a-mychal-johnson

Whitney Tilson

reihan-salam
howard-wolfson

Scott Stringer

ester-fuchs

Adrienne Adams

rev-frederick-davie

Zellnor Myrie Jessica Ramos Michael Blake

Methodology

Times Opinion asked 15 New Yorkers to join a panel this spring to assess the candidates running in the Democratic mayoral primary and share their views with our readers.

The panelists were chosen based on their experience in citywide or local community affairs, their knowledge of key issues and their range of viewpoints. All of them are following the candidates and the race closely; they were not selected based on party affiliation, although most are registered to vote in the Democratic primary. None of the panelists are involved with any of the campaigns.

Some panelists have made donations to candidates in the race; this information is disclosed in their extended biographies. The Times ascertained the panelists’ donations to various candidates from public filings and from conversations with them.

The panelists were asked to name which Democratic candidates would make the best mayor and why and which of the candidates would be most effective at handling several key issues facing the city. The ranking of the candidates on each issue is based on the number of panelists who picked that candidate as the best on that issue.

The panelists were also asked to rate each candidate numerically on a scale of one to 10 for every issue, information that was used to break ties among candidates.

Panelists’ selections and scores were tallied on June 10.

Two candidates on the ballot, Selma Bartholomew and Paperboy Love Prince, were not included in the survey. They entered the race late, ran low-profile campaigns with little money and ranked near the bottom of the polls.

Credits

Candidate portraits by Damon Winter/The New York Times and Yuki Iwamura/Associated Press (Cuomo). Panelist portraits by Jonno Rattman for The New York Times. Cinematography: Elliot deBruyn and Jonah M. Kessel. Producing: Emily Holzknecht and Ingrid Holmquist. Video editing: Jonah M. Kessel.

Additional reporting by Julie Ho.

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