Just a few months ago, you could have been forgiven for never having heard of Bill de Blasio.
But the Democratic candidate whose progressive values and multi-racial family became central to his message rode a populist wave to a monster victory Tuesday night, becoming New York City’s first Democratic mayor in 20 years.
The New York City Public Advocate beat long-shot Republican Joe Lhota by a landslide 73% to 24%, according to the latest exit polls. It was a massive win for progressives, as de Blasio promised to be Gotham’s most liberal mayor in several decades. He has pledged to tax the city’s rich to fund education, focus on affordable housing, and reform the city’s controversial stop-and-frisk tactics.
“Thank you, New York City,” de Blasio tweeted shortly after the projected win. He attached a photo of him and his family with their arms around each other after de Blasio cast his vote earlier in the day.
During his victory speech at the YMCA in Brooklyn–not Manhattan–de Blasio said New Yorkers spoke loudly and clearly at the ballot box “for a new direction for our city,” one in which residents are “united by a belief that our city should leave no New Yorker behind.”
He said that while the city’s problems won’t “be solved overnight…make no mistake. The people of this city have chosen a progressive path, and tonight we set forth on it together as one city.”
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo released a statement congratulating “a true friend and former colleague.” The Democrat added, “He has the experience to run New York City, a compelling vision for its future and he and his family epitomize the New York story. …I know Bill will be a tremendous partner in moving this great city forward.”
De Blasio’s campaign ads featured his children and their middle class home in multi-racial Brooklyn. The ads drew enormous appeal for many voters in a melting pot city of 8 million. His impressively Afro-ed 15-year-old son Dante emerged as a star and regular presence on the campaign trail.
De Blasio was a little known candidate just six months ago amid a crowded field of bold faced names running in the Democratic primary. But one-by-one, the competition fell as progressives turned against City Council Speaker Christie Quinn, who was embraced by Wall Street and seemed to offer an extentsion of Michael Bloomberg’s three-term leadership. Former congressman Anthony Weiner tried to use the mayoral race to stage a political comback before he was destroyed by more revelations of sexting and emailing with female fans.









