Who
Should
Be Mayor
of
New York
City?
Times
Opinion convened a
panel of
New Yorkers to
assess
the mayoral candidates
for the
Nov. 4 election.
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2025/10/29/opinion/new-york-mayor-candidates.html
Oct. 29,
2025
On a
scale from 0-10, we asked panelists to rate each candidate’s potential to be a
great mayor of New York City.
New York
City has rarely had a mayoral election so transfixing, or with such critical
stakes for its future. In the cross hairs of President Trump’s assault on
America’s cities and facing an acute affordability crisis, voters will choose
on Nov. 4 from a unique slate of candidates: Zohran Mamdani, a 34-year-old
democratic socialist, who surprised experts by winning the Democratic primary
in June; Andrew Cuomo, the three-term governor forced to resign amid a wave of
sexual misconduct accusations, now running as an independent; and Curtis Sliwa,
a Republican making his second run for mayor.
Times
Opinion brought together 14 panelists to assess the candidates and their
ability to lead the city; 11 returned from the panel we convened for the
Democratic primary in June. In particular, the panelists explored how Mr. Cuomo
stacked up against Mr. Mamdani, who has maintained a steady lead in the polls
after energizing a broad coalition of voters with a message laser-focused on
the cost of living.
Some of
the panelists who favored Brad Lander, the city’s comptroller, in the June
primary, embraced Mr. Mamdani’s vision for fresh approaches to seemingly
intractable problems, while placing a bet that he would overcome his relative
inexperience in government. “We’re riding on hope here,” said one. Many agreed
with another panelist’s assessment that it was “time for a generational shift.”
A few panelists spoke favorably about Mr. Cuomo’s long experience in
government, but most felt he represented a tired and pugilistic style of
politics and hadn’t done enough to change that dynamic.
The
Choice was compiled by editors in Times Opinion using a brief questionnaire,
material from a round-table discussion in early October and individual
discussions. The material has been edited for length and clarity.
After one
participant dropped out late in the process, Joseph Borelli was added to the
panel, but not in time for the round-table discussion; He conveyed his views in
an interview and in the questionnaire.
Mamdani
Skepticism
New York
and Trump
Education
and Housing
Public
Safety
The
Democratic Party
Israel
Curtis
Sliwa
Sizing Up
the Candidates
Mamdani
Skepticism
Eleanor
Randolph
Eleanor
Randolph Journalist and former Times editorial board member
It looks
like Mamdani is going to win, but you never know absolutely what’s going to
happen in an election. We’re riding on hope here because we don’t really know
who this guy is, ultimately, but he’s doing a lot of the right things, like
talking and listening to people in the business community as part of
understanding how complicated this city is.
Caitlin
Kawaguchi
Caitlin
Kawaguchi Nonprofit strategist and community representative in Brooklyn
I hear
that we don’t know definitively how he will be as mayor, whereas with Cuomo, we
have his background. But I think with Cuomo, his background is not good, right?
We’ve seen that he rewards his donors. We’ve seen that he retaliates against
folks who oppose him.
When he’s
had a platform, he’s used it to his own personal gain.
Amit
Singh Bagga
Amit
Singh Bagga Democratic strategist and former city official
On his
core issues, Mamdani has stayed remarkably consistent. He’s had a laser focus
on affordability and quality of life as it is experienced. And that is the No.
1 issue facing New Yorkers. Like Eleanor, I’ve been pleased and encouraged by
what I have experienced as genuine and sincere outreach to corners of New York
City society and economy that perhaps were very skeptical of him. And he has
demonstrated a remarkable degree of openness that many politicians do not seem
to have, a willingness to learn.
Neil
Blumenthal
Neil
Blumenthal Co-founder and co-chief executive of Warby Parker
This is
effectively a two-way choice. On the one hand, you have somebody who has a
wealth of experience, has been an attorney general, a governor, a cabinet
secretary. And on the other hand, you have somebody who hardly has work
experience. So that’s what it comes down to for me.
Joseph
Borelli
Joseph
Borelli Republican former city councilman from Staten Island
Andrew
Cuomo will not be as conservative as I’d like him to be. I think he won’t be as
progressive as others would like him to be. I think he’ll be more moderate by
definition. And that, to me, is a better outcome than having someone who will
almost always be looking to accelerate the progressive socialist agenda.
Mamdani is running not just to fix the potholes. He’s running to implement a
vision of government that is not shared by myself and not shared by a lot of
New Yorkers.
Mitchell
L. Moss
Mitchell
L. Moss Urban policy professor at N.Y.U.
I think
Mamdani’s a compelling candidate with vast upside but much more downside than
people recognize. He doesn’t know what he doesn’t know. He is prepared to give
up control of the school system, and that is a path to more education failure,
not greater success.
Policywise,
he has a thin agenda. The rent stabilization that he proposes would not help
people in NYCHA [the city’s public housing agency]. It doesn’t help people who
rent in two-family homes. But it’s very attractive symbolically. Affordability
is a great concept, but as for free buses, the buses aren’t actually under his
control, but under an M.T.A. board.
Antonio
Weiss
Antonio
Weiss Financial executive and former U.S. Treasury official
There’s a
lot to unpack in what Mitchell said. Since the ’70s we’ve had the Financial
Emergency Act, which calls for a balanced budget. And so the budget should also
be thought of as a set of choices that the mayor and the City Council make
about the allocation of resources. Mamdani has been clear about the priorities
he would set in a way that this current administration has not done. And look,
we’re going to be in a pitched battle next year with a federal administration
that’s withholding funds.
New York
State passed its budget as if none of this were happening. New York City passed
its budget as if none of this were happening. And what Mamdani has shown us is
he’s reaching out across the board. And yes, that’s a coalition to get elected.
It’s also a coalition to govern.
Frederick
A. Davie
Frederick
A. Davie Senior executive vice president at Union Theological Seminary
I want to
explore a little bit of an intangible. Mamdani has tapped into the way that a
whole swath of this city that’s a lot younger than me understands and
experiences life. And he’s able to not only grasp that, but give voice to a lot
of what they’re feeling and offer solutions and directions that they can
connect to. And I think there’s a genius in that we shouldn’t miss or dismiss.
And I think that same genius can be brought to bear on governing the city. It’s
probably time for a generational shift in leadership in this city.
Iwen Chu
Iwen Chu
Former New York State senator representing South Brooklyn
Brad
[Lander] was my choice in the primary, and then Brad now is not on the ticket.
What option do I have?
For me,
there are four factors. We look at the past for your record. We look at the
future for your vision. We look at your team, your leadership. We look at your
personal ethics. That’s how I ranked it.
And I
think Mamdani’s approach, how he handled police, public safety, education,
Israel issues, business is all the same: He listens. So I think how he builds
his team is crucial, to build the trust for the voters.
New York
and Trump
Frederick
A. Davie
Frederick
A. Davie Senior executive vice president at Union Theological Seminary
So
Mamdani’s under no illusion that Trump’s going to make it easy for him. But he
also knows it’s not a battle he has to fight alone, that he has the governor,
state legislative leaders and members of Congress.
Christina
M. Greer
Christina
M. Greer Political scientist and a host of the “FAQ NYC” podcast
I don’t
trust Cuomo to protect New York City. I think that he will acquiesce to Donald
Trump in ways that he says he won’t, but he’s a lot of bluster.
I do
agree with Mamdani in the sense that it will take Hakeem [Jeffries] and Chuck
[Schumer] having a backbone and supporting him in a lot of ways. I do think we
will be penalized — as a city economically, if not worse, with the National
Guard and ICE agents.
Is
Mamdani an ideal candidate, 33 years old, who’s never been citywide elected?
[Mr. Mamdani turned 34 after this discussion took place.] No. Are these the
cards that we have and we’re going to play them? Yes. And I think I’m
optimistic with him, sort of, getting people power to resist the Trump
administration and the draconian policies that will come out of Washington,
D.C.
Joseph
Borelli
Joseph
Borelli Republican former city councilman from Staten Island
I think
this issue has been framed to be one-sided. Why do we assume that Trump is
going to come after New York when, in reality, Mamdani is going to benefit
politically from going after the Trump administration, and being the leading
far-left figure in American politics?
Jared
Trujillo
Jared
Trujillo Law professor and former defense lawyer
I think
that Andrew Cuomo actually had a really good opportunity to push back on the
Trump administration when they threatened to arrest someone — Mamdani — who won
a Democratic contest for mayor. He didn’t. And I think that’s really indicative
of who Andrew Cuomo is. To the extent he was an effective leader, it’s because
he was a bully. He cannot deal with Trump, someone with more power than him.
Whitney
Toussaint
Whitney
Toussaint Co-president of Community Education Council 30 in Queens
On Trump,
Cuomo has already sold out. He’s not really spoken out against the harmful
things the Trump administration has already done. He’s courting many of the
same kinds of voters.
Education
and Housing
Howard
Wolfson
Howard
Wolfson Deputy mayor in the Bloomberg administration
I’ve been
profoundly disappointed by the lack of conversation about education during the
campaign from all the candidates. The Times recently published a story, 140,000
homeless students in New York. And I don’t hear the candidates really talking
an awful lot about how to address what is, in my view, a really systemic
crisis. I think the mayor should be running the school system. There should be
a point of accountability. If parents feel like they have been shut out and
Mamdani feels that way, too, he can bring them in.
Neil
Blumenthal
Neil
Blumenthal Co-founder and co-chief executive of Warby Parker
I think
around a million students having a school system overseen by someone who has
managed an office of five or so people and only has a few years of experience
in the State Assembly —
I think
that is a major abdication of responsibility by us as voters to those kids, to
put somebody in charge of them that has so little experience. And to layer on,
he’s been against mayoral control of the schools, which is the single most
important governance issue for our schools, and to ensure that we’re educating
our kids.
Whitney
Toussaint
Whitney
Toussaint Co-president of Community Education Council 30 in Queens
On school
control, the law is what the law is. He will still have to appoint a chancellor
and members to the panel of education policy. The mayor still has to do that.
But we do need to engage parents who are active.
Mamdani
is listening to us on education. Cuomo is talking at us instead of including
parents like me in these discussions. We are talked at. You know what Eric
Adams called us? Professional parents. Well, damn it, I am.
Caitlin
Kawaguchi
Caitlin
Kawaguchi Nonprofit strategist and community representative in Brooklyn
On
housing, it’s a central issue to New Yorkers of all ages, especially renters. I
think there’s a real need for not only a focus on building, which I think is
crucial, but also deep affordability.
One thing
that’s really resonating with folks, including myself, about Mamdani’s platform
is that it feels like he’s willing to try new things and to push the envelope.
Freezing the rent is something specific to rent-stabilized tenants, which is
not all of New York. But I think it is emblematic of a commitment to thinking
about solutions in a way that can be talked about and communicated.
Jared
Trujillo
Jared
Trujillo Law professor and former defense lawyer
Housing
is not my first issue. But if it were, I think I’d be really excited about
Zohran. It has been a big part of his affordability messaging. And just looking
at how he’s prioritizing it, I can tell that he cares a lot about it.
Public
Safety
Howard
Wolfson
Howard
Wolfson Deputy mayor in the Bloomberg administration
Cuomo had
the edge on this last time we met because he did not call for defunding the
police. And he didn’t call them racists, which Mamdani did and has now walked
back from. This was like five years ago, during the beginning of his political
career.
Jared
Trujillo
Jared
Trujillo Law professor and former defense lawyer
And after
George Floyd died, we saw 10 minutes of people actually caring about racialized
policing. Now we’re seeing real retrenchment from that. I think that is why
Cuomo was given so much unearned grace. Something that we haven’t really talked
about here yet is that Mamdani is the first Muslim candidate who has a very
real chance of becoming mayor. For most of his life, he is much more likely to
have been profiled because of who he is than to be mayor, to be any elected
official at all whatsoever.
And so I
don’t really like the fact that he walked those statements back. At the end of
the day, is it reflective of policy? I actually am a little bit worried that it
is.
A. Mychal
Johnson
A. Mychal
Johnson South Bronx social justice advocate
Mamdani
has talked about how policing alone cannot solve social issues happening on the
street — trauma, mental health, housing. If the police are the first in, people
in crisis end up in Rikers, not in care. That’s not the answer.
I’ve
personally been stopped and frisked. Who else in this room has been? OK, only
people of color. Mamdani’s approach here is, how do we do things a little bit
differently? Andrew Cuomo wants to increase the police force. Is that the
answer? I say no. We need police. Who doesn’t say we need police? But we also
need the community care and infrastructure that actually make all of us safe.
Cuomo hasn’t shown a willingness to do anything differently.
Joseph
Borelli
Joseph
Borelli Republican former city councilman from Staten Island
I think
Sliwa would be the best to deal with policing, but he’s not going to win. I
think he has a more rational view: that there are bad people who need to be
prosecuted, punished and put in jail.
Iwen Chu
Iwen Chu
Former New York State senator representing South Brooklyn
Public
safety and policing are totally different subjects. School safety, mental
health, homeless issues: They’re all public safety.
But
policing and the quantity of the police are not equal to public safety. Mamdani
wants to hold the law enforcement accountable — that’s policing. How he can
build a coalition and work with the law enforcement and make sure our law
enforcement is functional — that’s a separate subject.
Eleanor
Randolph
Eleanor
Randolph Journalist and former Times editorial board member
There’s
another issue besides public safety. And that is how the police and the mayor
are going to deal with the possibility of the president and his team sending up
people to walk around the streets with their guns out and all that sort of
stuff.
You can
hear the drumbeat and you know he’s coming after New York. So how does that
work with a police department and the way the next mayor operates?
Neil
Blumenthal
Neil
Blumenthal Co-founder and co-chief executive of Warby Parker
I think
it’s important to look at the data. The data shows that more police officers in
the subway, on the streets and on corners in high-crime neighborhoods can
reduce crime.
Between
Cuomo and Mamdani, one is proposing expanding the police force and one
candidate is not. When Mamdani claims that he wants to defund the police and
then now claims to be an advocate and a champion for N.Y.P.D., are we supposed
to believe that he’s going to be able to lead and inspire the nation’s largest
municipal police force to do their best work?
Frederick
A. Davie
Frederick
A. Davie Senior executive vice president at Union Theological Seminary
Eric
Adams was probably the most pro-police mayor that we’ve had in a while. And
we’re still hemorrhaging police officers.
So I’m
not sure that that in and of itself gets us to where we want to be. Could
Andrew Cuomo have a better relationship with the N.Y.P.D. than Zohran Mamdani
would or could? The answer to that is probably in the beginning, yes. But
again, I think what we’re seeing with Mamdani is that what he understands is
that he needs to aggregate around him people who have expertise in areas and
places where he does not.
The
Democratic Party
Howard
Wolfson
Howard
Wolfson Deputy mayor in the Bloomberg administration
Mamdani
has energized an enormous number of people who were previously outside of the
political process and did not see themselves as central to it. And to miss that
would be an enormous mistake and, as a Democrat, completely foolish.
The flip
side of that is that the Democratic establishment — of which, for better or
worse, mostly, I’m something of a card-carrying member — utterly failed during
this campaign. It attempted to elevate candidates that were deeply flawed, were
unable to solidify behind people who would have been able to present an
alternative to Mamdani.
Caitlin
Kawaguchi
Caitlin
Kawaguchi Nonprofit strategist and community representative in Brooklyn
It’s not
as if the establishment could have produced a Mamdani. The Democratic Party has
not been engaging with folks who could be the next great electeds. And it’s not
going to be just a person who presents in the same way as Mamdani. We’ve seen
campaigns across the country who are looking to emulate his campaign by doing
walking-style TikTok videos. But that’s not what was great about Mamdani’s
campaign. It was great because it was connecting with everyday New Yorkers
around issues that matter to them, that presented creative solutions.
Christina
M. Greer
Christina
M. Greer Political scientist and a host of the “FAQ NYC” podcast
I have
some strong critiques of the Democratic Socialists of America still, but they
have been using their network as a way to bring people into the political fold
in a way that the parties haven’t. I think a lot of voters feel really
disrespected by the establishment. Because the voters spoke on June 24 and
said: We don’t want you, Andrew Cuomo. Go home.
Jared
Trujillo
Jared
Trujillo Law professor and former defense lawyer
I have to
think that a lot of the refusal to support Mamdani is Islamophobia. And I think
that there’s going to be a real reckoning with that at some point.
Iwen Chu
Iwen Chu
Former New York State senator representing South Brooklyn
I lost my
election last year because Democrats don’t know how to address cost of living.
When the primary result came out, it was like: What am I going to do as a
voter, as an immigrant? I looked at Mamdani’s policies again. Sure, I do want
those city-run grocery stores down my block. Do I want free buses? Yes, I do.
New York State actually can afford statewide universal free lunch, school
lunch. It’s just about priorities. We don’t have a shot if we don’t try. We
need to try.
Antonio
Weiss
Antonio
Weiss Financial executive and former U.S. Treasury official
Democrats
have to embrace winning and be a bit more fearless about that. As important or
more important than this election is that, once elected, Mamdani succeeds, and
the Democrats abandon their approach of disqualifying and discouraging winning
candidates and instead start investing in their success.
A. Mychal
Johnson
A. Mychal
Johnson South Bronx social justice advocate
Mamdani
is running like he wants to serve. It’s not like he’s running for a job or for
power. And we too often have candidates who are about power and control, not
community.
Amit
Singh Bagga
Amit
Singh Bagga Democratic strategist and former city official
Some of
his promises are achievable independently at the city level; others require
real partnership with Albany. Overall, these fresh ideas are proxies for goals
that he wants to achieve because they are the core issues that people face
every day.
Joseph
Borelli
Joseph
Borelli Republican former city councilman from Staten Island
I think
the city was ripe for new ideas. The problem is, some of those ideas aren’t
really practical or financially feasible. We can talk about free buses, but
what happens when you take, you know, $800 million out of the fare box of the
M.T.A.? How do we make up for that shortfall?
How does
this affect the need to raise tolls and congestion pricing down the road? These
are all scary things.
Whitney
Toussaint
Whitney
Toussaint Co-president of Community Education Council 30 in Queens
The
universal child care that he’s proposing. He wants families of newborns to get
baby baskets, something they do around the world. You don’t realize how
expensive these things are until you have to go shopping for a baby.
And I’m
going to bring it back to what Mychal said, because I love what you said. He is
running like someone who wants to serve.
Mitchell
L. Moss
Mitchell
L. Moss Urban policy professor at N.Y.U.
We
basically have hope versus despair. Cuomo is despair. Each one has different
strengths. But my students are working for Mamdani. And I mean of every race
and income.
Israel
Howard
Wolfson
Howard
Wolfson Deputy mayor in the Bloomberg administration
On
Israel, I believe his views are deeply felt.
I happen
to be in very strong disagreement with him in this area. There was a real
effort post-primary to encourage him to condemn the phrase “globalize the
intifada.” To his credit, he met with and spoke with many people who shared
their very strong concerns about that. And I believe that he was sincerely
listening. In the end, where he landed was he was going to discourage people
from using it.
That was
a really long time to brew some really weak tea. I think it was indicative of a
very strongly held set of beliefs on his part that are very much at odds with
my set of beliefs and the set of beliefs of many of my friends and neighbors.
Mitchell
L. Moss
Mitchell
L. Moss Urban policy professor at N.Y.U.
I think
that we have to appreciate that he’s not changing. This is a belief. And when
you buy the mayor, you buy the belief.
Curtis
Sliwa
Mitchell
L. Moss
Mitchell
L. Moss Urban policy professor at N.Y.U.
We should
recognize the lunacy of voting for Sliwa. I’m not saying he’s not going to get
votes, but it’s a wasted vote.
Jared
Trujillo
Jared
Trujillo Law professor and former defense lawyer
I would
vote for Sliwa before Cuomo.
Amit
Singh Bagga
Amit
Singh Bagga Democratic strategist and former city official
So would
I.
Jared
Trujillo
Jared
Trujillo Law professor and former defense lawyer
That’s
saying a lot. To be clear, Sliwa is not the lovable eccentric some make him out
to be — he’s not a serious candidate. His platform is riddled with proposals
that a mayor can’t actually enact, like rolling back the 2019 state tenant
protections that only Albany can touch. Other parts of his agenda veer into the
downright Orwellian. He’s not even a Bloomberg Republican. On policy, he’s
Trump in a red beret.
That
said, I do think he’s genuinely committed to ending the inhumane practice of
horse-drawn carriages. He is the most qualified candidate for equine
liberation, and that is it.
Christina
M. Greer
Christina
M. Greer Political scientist and a host of the “FAQ NYC” podcast
I think
Sliwa will do better than expected. There’s going to be some people who are
like: This 33-year-old kid and some of these ideas are just maybe a bridge too
far for me. [Mr. Mamdani turned 34 after this discussion took place.] And Cuomo
is an absolute no. And there are some people who will never be able to vote for
a nonwhite person.
Sizing Up
the Candidates
Mitchell
L. Moss
Mitchell
L. Moss Urban policy professor at N.Y.U.
I admire
the way in which Mamdani has framed his belief that we can make the city
better. His work in political campaigns has been terrific. The evidence that
he’s a great manager is the great campaign he ran. But running for office and
governing are opposite skills. One is performance art. The other is a
day-to-day job of distributing not just joy and benefits, but pain, too.
Antonio
Weiss
Antonio
Weiss Financial executive and former U.S. Treasury official
Mamdani’s
appointments, if he wins, will matter a lot. Who’s going to be the first deputy
mayor? Is there going to be a deputy mayor charged with figuring out how to
integrate the Department of Community Safety with the N.Y.P.D.? Every
indication is that he’s going about not just his campaign but his transition
with the intent of providing convincing answers to all of that.
Neil
Blumenthal
Neil
Blumenthal Co-founder and co-chief executive of Warby Parker
There’s
just a big difference between running a campaign and running one of the largest
cities in the world. Experience matters for the second most important job in
America.
A. Mychal
Johnson
A. Mychal
Johnson South Bronx social justice advocate
I’m just
hearing all these comments about Mamdani’s relative lack of experience, but the
ones who had experience didn’t deliver for the people who mobilized behind
Mamdani. These are people and communities who have been left behind for
decades.
Christina
M. Greer
Christina
M. Greer Political scientist and a host of the “FAQ NYC” podcast
Well,
we’ve got someone who has the most important job in America who has zero
experience. Take a chance.
Additional
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About our
panel
These 14
local leaders assessed the candidates independently, as individual voters, not
on behalf of their organizations. Joseph Borelli was unable to attend the
round-table discussion and provided his comments in separate interviews. Some
panelists made donations to candidates; that information is disclosed in their
biographies.
Amit
Singh Bagga
Amit
Singh Bagga is a Democratic strategist who runs a political consulting firm and
a veteran of New York State, city and federal government. While in city
government, he helped lead the 2020 census campaign. In 2021 he made an
unsuccessful bid to represent City Council District 26 in Queens.
He has
contributed $100 to Zohran Mamdani’s campaign.
Neil
Blumenthal
Neil
Blumenthal is a co-founder and co-chief executive of the New York-based eyewear
company Warby Parker. Since 2015, the company has partnered with New York City
agencies and organizations to provide free eyeglasses to students. Mr.
Blumenthal also serves on the boards of Robin Hood, Tech:NYC and the
Partnership Fund for New York City.
Joseph
Borelli
Joseph
Borelli is a Republican former city councilman who represented the South Shore
of Staten Island for nearly 10 years. He was the council’s minority leader from
2021 to 2025 and chaired its Committee on Fire and Emergency Management. He
served in the New York State Assembly for three years and currently works as a
political strategist.
Iwen Chu
Iwen Chu
is a former state senator from South Brooklyn and a former State Assembly aide
and community education council member. During her two years in office, she
helped secure funding for schools and Asian American community organizations.
Ms. Chu was the first Asian American woman to serve in the State Senate.
Frederick
A. Davie
Frederick
A. Davie is a senior executive vice president at Union Theological Seminary in
Morningside Heights. He helps lead community and civic engagement with social
and economic justice organizations. He also has served in New York City
administrations since the 1990s. He was deputy borough president of Manhattan
in the mid-1990s and was chair of the board responsible for civilian oversight
of the New York Police Department from 2017 to 2022.
Christina
M. Greer
Christina
M. Greer is a political scientist at Fordham University who studies Black
politics, mayors, elections and public opinion. She writes a weekly column for
The Amsterdam News and co-hosts the podcast “FAQ NYC,” about city politics and
culture.
A. Mychal
Johnson
A. Mychal
Johnson is a South Bronx community leader focused on economic and social
justice for working-class communities of color through grass-roots organizing
and policy advocacy.
Caitlin
Kawaguchi
Caitlin
Kawaguchi is a co-founder of the nonprofit consultancy Parkes Philanthropy and
the former president of New Kings Democrats, a grass-roots organization in
Brooklyn. She has served on the Brooklyn Democratic Party’s County Committee
since 2018 and is an appointed member of Brooklyn’s Community Board 1.
Mitchell
L. Moss
Mitchell
L. Moss is a professor of urban policy and planning at New York University and
an expert on cities and technological change. He has advised city and state
governments on infrastructure policy and economic growth. Mayor Eric Adams and
Gov. Kathy Hochul appointed him to a committee shaping policy on transit, open
space and equitable opportunity to guide New York’s economic goals.
Eleanor
Randolph
Eleanor
Randolph is a journalist who managed city and state political endorsements as a
member of the New York Times editorial board from 1998 to 2016. In 2019 she
wrote “The Many Lives of Michael Bloomberg.”
Whitney
Toussaint
Whitney
Toussaint is a co-president of Community Education Council 30 in western
Queens. She has collaborated with the City Council and other local leaders on
the construction of schools in Hunters Point and Court Square.
Ms. Toussaint has contributed $100 to Zohran Mamdani’s
campaign.
Jared
Trujillo
Jared
Trujillo is a professor at CUNY School of Law, where he teaches constitutional
law and critical race theory. He is a chair of the New York City Bar
Association’s L.G.B.T.Q. Rights Committee and a former president of the
Association of Legal Aid Attorneys.
Antonio
Weiss
Antonio
Weiss is a partner in the investment firm SSW, a senior fellow at the Harvard
Kennedy School and a former official at the U.S. Treasury, where he led the
domestic finance department. He is a trustee of the Citizens Budget Commission
and a former chair of an independent budget panel advising the city.
He
contributed $2,100 to Andrew Cuomo’s campaign during the primary and has
contributed $2,500 to a group that supports Zohran Mamdani.
Howard
Wolfson
Howard
Wolfson is a Democratic strategist who heads Bloomberg Philanthropies’
education work. He was a deputy mayor under Michael Bloomberg from 2010 to
2013, overseeing collaboration among the city, state and federal governments.

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