The New York City mayoral election is being billed as a window into the soul of the Democratic Party, even though there isn’t a traditional Democrat on the ballot.
Here’s a look at the candidates vying in Tuesday’s election to determine the next leader of the nation’s most populous city and its nine million residents:
ANDREW CUOMO
The scandal-plagued former governor has the backing of billionaires such as Bill Ackman and Barry Diller; current Mayor Eric Adams, who dropped his reelection bid; and even the reluctant support of President Donald Trump, who told New Yorkers in a social media post Monday that “Whether you personally like Andrew Cuomo or not, you really have no choice. You must vote for him” over Democratic socialist Zohran Mamdani.
(Cuomo has said he wouldn’t accept a Trump endorsement.)
While governor, Cuomo faced backlash for severely undercounting the deaths of state nursing home residents.
Cuomo, 67, was also accused by multiple female state employees in 2020 of sexual harassment, sexual assault and creating a toxic work environment. New York Attorney General Letitia James launched an independent investigation into the matter in 2021, and found Cuomo had violated state and federal laws.
Cuomo has denied those allegations, but after pressure from Democratic leaders, including then-President Joe Biden, he resigned in August 2021.
After a primary loss to the far less experienced Mamdani, Cuomo announced he would run in the general election as an independent.
Among his policies are increasing the number of police officers and their permanent presence in subway stations, reducing class sizes in schools and increasing housing across all income levels.
ZOHRAN MAMDANI
Mamdani, a state assemblyman from Queens, has shot to fame in the span of a year. His grassroots campaign carried him to the Democratic nomination in July in a crowded race conducted by ranked-choice voting.
Mamdani, a 34-year-old Democratic socialist, is running on a platform centered around affordability. Mamdani says he plans to freeze the rent for rent-stabilized tenants, make buses free and implement universal child care, policies that have been characterized by his opponents and even some in his own party as unrealistic.








