2025 New York City Mayoral Election

Live blog: New York Election Day 2025

Updates from three mayoral candidates, juggernaut voter turnout, one divided city.

Alexi J. Rosenfeld/Getty Images

The whole country is watching New York City today. Follow along with us as we fan out across the city to talk to voters, follow candidates to the polls, hit up election night watch parties and process results. We’ll also have some updates from major races around the state.

11:45 p.m. – Bruce Blakeman and Republicans easily lead in Nassau County

Anne Donnelly poised to win second term as the county’s district attorney.

Republican Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman is poised to win a second term leading the Long Island county, with his fellow Republicans leading in the other two countywide races.

With 76% of precincts reporting, Blakeman leads Democrat Seth Koslow 54% to 46%. Republican District Attorney Anne Donnelly leads Democrat Nicole Aloise 55% to 45% in her bid for a second term. Republican County Comptroller Elaine Phillips, a former state senator, leads Democrat Wayne Wink Jr. 55% to 45%.

Blakeman’s victory comes after he positioned himself as one of the state’s leading conservative Republicans, touting support for President Donald Trump, leading a ban on transgender athletes at county-run facilities and focusing on crime and immigration. Blakeman has not ruled out a gubernatorial run next year against Rep. Elise Stefanik in the GOP primary.

Donnelly, a career prosecutor, overcame a dent her reelection bid received when several law enforcement unions that had backed her four years ago did not support her bid for a second term.

– John Celock

10:40 p.m. – Andrew Cuomo concedes to Zohran Mamdani

And so ends a political dynasty – at least for now.
Sahalie Donaldson

About an hour and 40 minutes after the polls closed, former Gov. Andrew Cuomo took to the stage at Ziegfeld Ballroom and conceded to Zohran Mamdani in the New York City mayoral race. While Cuomo eventually congratulated Mamdani on his victory – and told his supporters to stop booing the 34-year-old democratic socialist – it took him a moment to get there. “This campaign was the right fight to wage and I’m proud of what we did and what we did together,” Cuomo said. “This campaign was to contest the philosophies that are shaping the Democratic Party, the future of this city.” He also thanked supporters, calling out former Mayor Mike Bloomberg, former Gov. David Paterson and Mayor Eric Adams by name. “It was a gracious thing to do,” Cuomo said of the mayor, referring to giving him a better chance against Mamdani by dropping out.

– Sahalie Donaldson

11:35 p.m. – New York’s first Black female sheriff elected

Jackie Salvatore has won the race for Columbia County sheriff.

Democrat Jackie Salvatore made history by being elected the first Black female sheriff in state history. Salvatore defeated Republican John Rivero 58% to 42% to win election as the next sheriff of Columbia County. Salvatore currently serves as the county’s undersheriff.

– John Celock

11:20 p.m. – Rep. Pat Ryan’s ally wins in suburban Buffalo

Democrat Shawn Lavin to be next Amherst town supervisor.

Democrat Shawn Lavin, an Air National Guard member endorsed by Rep. Pat Ryan’s new PAC, has been elected the new town supervisor in Amherst, a large Buffalo suburb that is an economic center in its own right.

With almost all precincts reporting, Lavin led Republican Dan Gagliardo 52.95% to 46.95%. Lavin, the current deputy town supervisor, succeeds term-limited Democratic Supervisor Brian Kulpa.

Amherst, a 130,000-person town that is home to the University at Buffalo’s North Campus, had been a Republican stronghold that has become more purple since the turn of the century. Erie County Republicans had made the Amherst race a top priority this year.

Lavin was an early endorsement for Patriot PAC, which Ryan created in September. Ryan, an Army veteran from the Hudson Valley, has focused the PAC on endorsing veterans seeking office statewide.

– John Celock

11 p.m. – Three upstate cities to receive new mayors

Democratic nominees clinch upstate races, except in Binghamton

Several cities in upstate New York will greet new mayors in 2026 after their Democratic nominees coasted to victory. At the time of writing, Rochester Mayor Malik Evans won reelection over Louis Sabo, who ran on the Conservative Party line, with 86% of the vote compared to Sabo’s 12%. Democratic State Sen. Sean Ryan won 72% of the vote in Buffalo, defeating Republican James Gardner, who received 23%. Democratic Syracuse Deputy Mayor Sharon Owens defeated Republican Thomas Babilon after getting 74% of the vote to Babilon’s 18%. Albany Chief City Auditor Dorcey Applyrs won her race against Rocco Pezzulo, getting 83% of the vote to Pezzulo’s 14%. Owens and Applyrs will both be the first Black women to helm their cities. However, in Binghamton, the GOP retained control of City Hall after Republican Mayor Jared Kraham won reelection against Democrat Miles Burnett. Kraham received 53% of the vote while Burnett received 45%.

Austin C. Jefferson

10:45 p.m. – Erie County comptroller easily reelected

Political science professor defeats Mensa member

Democratic Erie County Comptroller Kevin Hardwick easily defeated Republican Christine Czarnik to win a second term as the county top fiscal officer. With 80% of Election Day ballots counted, Hardwick had 58.9% to 41% for Czarnik. The result assures that Erie County Executive Mark Poloncarz has a fellow Democrat in the comptroller’s office in what are likely to be tough budgets for the next two years.

Hardwick became a Democrat in 2018 while serving as a county legislator. The longtime political science professor at Canisius University, Hardwick was first elected to office as a high school senior as a school board member outside of Binghamton. Czarnik is an accountant who once served as a town council member in South Carolina. She touted her membership in Mensa as part of her biography.

– John Celock

10:20 p.m. – Curtis concedes

The Republican candidate for mayor had strong words for Mayor-elect Mamdani.
Rebecca C. Lewis

Curtis Sliwa called it an early night, addressing a crowded room of supporters roughly a half hour after the polls closed. He started his remarks by praising the record turnout, which topped 2 million voters for the first time in over half a decade. “I want to applaud everybody in New York City … We will be setting a new record that hasn’t been achieved since I was a young boy watching the election in 1969,” Sliwa said.

Conceding the race to Zohran Mamdani, whose name he never actually said during his speech, Sliwa started by wishing him well. “Obviously, I wish him good luck, because if he does well, we do well,” he said. But Sliwa quickly shifted his tone to issue a warning to Mamdani. “If you try to implement socialism, if you try to render our police weak and impotent, if you forsake the people’s public safety, we’re not only organizing, but we are mobilizing,” he said to cheers. “And we will become the mayor-elect’s and his supporters’ worst enemies.”

Despite Sliwa’s disdain for Mamdani’s left-wing politics, he issued a similar denouncement of the city’s ruling class. “The masters of the universe, the billionaires, decided I did not have the right to represent all of you,” he said, a refrain that was also common on the Mamdani campaign trail. “The billionaires and the insiders and the influencers continued to put the pressure on me … we will determine who the next mayor is. You remember what I told them? ‘No, no, no.’” – Rebecca C. Lewis

10:15 p.m. – Kayla Santosuosso claims City Council victory

The Associated Press has called this race in Brooklyn.
Amanda Salazar

Kayla Santosuosso, New York City Council Member Justin Brannan and state Sen. Andrew Gounardes arrived at her election night party 40 minutes after polls closed, claiming her victory over Republican nominee George Sarantopoulos in the race for New York City Council District 47. At the time, Santosuosso was up 59%-41%, with more than 94% of the scanners reported. “If you knocked doors in our office or in our district in the last couple of months, you know that our goal wasn’t just to win – our goal was to crush it,” she said in her victory speech. “And what did we do? Crush it.”

– Amanda Salazar

10:05 p.m. – Kristy Marmorato bows out of the race

The Bronx City Council district has flipped back to the Democrats.
Tsehai Alfred

As results in the nail-biting race to represent New York City Council District 13 became clear, Republican City Council Member Kristy Marmorato conceded defeat at her election night watch party. “I’m proud of everybody,” Marmorato told a crowd of her cheering but disappointed supporters. The race was one of the few competitive City Council races this general election, with the results still remaining unclear well after Zohran Mamdani’s mayoral win was declared. Following Marmorato’s upset Republican win in 2023, the East Bronx district has flipped back to blue as Democratic nominee Shirley Aldebol has narrowly won this seat 51.5% to 46.2%, with over 95% of scanners reported.

– Tsehai Alfred

10 p.m. – Phil Wong projected to win Council District 30

Republicans in Vaichunas’ camp are stunned.

With most of the votes in, Democratic nominee Phil Wong holds a strong 10-point lead over Republican nominee Alicia Vaichunas in the race to succeed their former boss, City Council Member Bob Holden

Asked how he was feeling, Wong wrote in a text message: “sleepy, tired, with leg cramps. I’ve been up since 5 AM today.”

The race was always unusual and a toss-up, but a Wong landslide was not necessarily on anyone’s minds.

The results shocked the crowd at Vaichunas’ election night watch party, which includes high-profile GOP electeds, leaders and candidates who canvassed for her. They said that they had usually been received very enthusiastically across the district.

“I did think she was going to win,” Republican Council Member Joann Ariola said. “She put her heart and soul into this district, and worked very hard for Council Member Holden, and she had great name recognition. But the electorate is fickle and they voted and they spoke.” – Celia Bernhardt

10 p.m. – Housing ballot measures appear poised to pass

The even-year elections proposal, however, appears less likely.

After a contentious few weeks between the New York City Council and the Charter Revision Commission convened by Mayor Eric Adams, New Yorkers have spoken on three key housing-related ballot measures: Proposals 2, 3 and 4 passed. With over 90% of the votes counted, Proposals 2, 3 and 4 got about 58%, 57% and 58% votes in favor, respectively. While Proposal 2 looks to fast-track affordable housing projects, the third is designed to simplify the review process for more minor projects. The fourth proposes the creation of an affordable housing appeals board, effectively ending the council’s tradition of member deference. While housing advocates and Adams allies have argued the proposals will cut through the red tape that is currently stopping the city from building more housing, the council has pushed back, saying the measures severely limit – if not fully eliminate – members’ input on housing issues close to home, and by extension, New Yorkers’ input. The passage of the three housing-related measures is a blow to the council, which campaigned heavily against them. Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani had avoided taking a position on Proposals 2, 3 and 4 for the last several weeks of the general election – and he took some heat for that from his opponents at the second mayoral debate. It was not until he cast his vote Tuesday morning that he revealed he supported those three, in addition to Proposals 1 and 5. Mamdani said he voted against Proposal 6, which would allow all local elections to be moved to even years to correspond with presidential elections. That question seems to have been the most controversial, with 53% voting against it with more than 90% of votes counted. Only Proposal 5 passed easily, with 73% of the vote supporting the measure that would create a unified, digital city map. As of about 10 p.m., about 60% of the votes had been counted on the only statewide ballot proposal, Proposal 1, had not been counted. But the vote is evenly split on the measure to allow the Mount Van Hoevenberg Olympic Sports Complex to stay on U.S. Forest Service land, in exchange for protection of state forest land elsewhere.

– Sophie Krichevsky

9:40 p.m. – Zohran Mamdani wins mayoral election

The democratic socialist is currently leading Cuomo by 9 points.

Democratic mayoral nominee Zohran Mamdani is headed to City Hall. Just before 9:40 p.m., with roughly 66% of scanners reporting, Mamdani had a lead of 9 points over independent candidate and former Gov. Andrew Cuomo, with Republican nominee Curtis Sliwa at under 8%.

The 34-year-old democratic socialist’s rapid rise to mayoral front-runner over the last year has shaken establishment politics to its core, cementing a new era of progressive power in New York City that has resonated around the world.

How long that lasts past Inauguration Day on Jan. 1, 2026 is unclear. But a packed crowd of Mamdani supporters at the Brooklyn Paramount had little concern for that question Tuesday night, as they celebrated a victory that started to look inevitable after Mamdani's stunning primary win in June. Read the full story here.

Annie McDonough and Sahalie Donaldson

9:15 p.m. – New York City Council Member Kristy Marmorato’s supporters await results

Marmorato faces a competitive challenge from Democratic nominee Shirley Aldebol
Tsehai Alfred

Republican New York City Council Member Kristy Marmorato’s election watch party has kicked off in the East Bronx, as her supporters are eager to see the results of her competitive City Council race. Dozens have gathered at Brewski’s Bar & Grill in Throggs Neck, awaiting the council member’s appearance. The race is one of the few heated council races in the city this general election. In 2023, Marmorato became the first Republican to represent the outer borough in nearly two decades. But now, the Republican faces a challenge in Democratic nominee Shirley Aldebol.

9 p.m. – Vaichunas’ supporters and fellow GOP candidates gather in Maspeth

The race is unusual and competitive.
Celia Bernhardt

Dozens of supporters are at Republican New York City Council candidate Alicia Vaichunas’ party in her campaign office in Maspeth, Queens, which is decked out in red, white and blue. Queens Republican Party Chair Tony Nunziato is here, as is New York City Council Member Joann Ariola and Republican New York City Comptroller candidate Peter Kefalas. Vaichunas came in around 8:45 p.m., and was greeted with flowers. Nunziato said he’s feeling confident about her. “She worked for it. She’s from the neighborhood. I feel good about it,” he said.

9 p.m. – Offensive sticker

This AI creation is being handed out at Sliwa’s party.
Rebecca C. Lewis

Not campaign merch, but someone is handing out these stickers at Curtis Sliwa’s party. The QR code leads to a Sticker Mule shop. In case you forgot, that’s Anthony Constantino’s business, the famous right-wing personality who is also running for Elise Stefanik’s seat. So on brand.

8:45 p.m. – Eager start to Democrat’s party in Brooklyn City Council district

Kayla Santosuosso’s election watch party kicks off in southern Brooklyn.
Amanda Salazar

The election night party for Kayla Santosuosso, the Democratic candidate for New York City Council District 47, is getting started at the Salty Dog Bar & Grill in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, shortly before the polls closed. Supporters are trickling in, grabbing food and drinks, and settling around tables facing televisions showing NY1’s election coverage. The candidate, her campaign team and her boss, New York City Council Member Justin Brannan, have yet to arrive, but the early arrivals seem eager to get the night started.

8:40 p.m - Hundreds of journalists crowd into Mamdani’s watch party

The Democratic nominee has drawn interest from around the world
Holly Pretsky

The press line to get into Zohran Mamdani‘s election night watch party in Brooklyn stretched around the block, evidence of the international interest in this local off-year election. Mamdani’s creative director Andrew Epstein surveyed the crowd and said he’s excited about the voter turnout numbers. “The turnout is astounding, and incredibly exciting for us, for this city, for our democracy,” he said.

6 p.m. – Almost to the finish line

Start of post-work voting surge promises a finally tally over 2 million

In the last set of voter data three hours before polls close at 9 p.m., the New York City Board of Elections reported that about 1.75 million New Yorkers have cast their ballots so far. Almost 300,000 people voted between 3 p.m. and 6 p.m., the biggest three-hour increase yet Tuesday. With more people getting off work at 6 p.m., the final tranche could be even higher.

The BOE also released early mail and absentee voting as of Oct. 31, reporting that roughly 100,000 of those ballots have been scanned thus far. That brings the total votes cast in this election as of 6 p.m. up to about 1.85 million. The big question is now whether this race will hit numbers unseen since the 60s – about 2.4 million voted in the 1969 election. – Rebecca C. Lewis

5:30pm - Mayor Adams casts ballot for Cuomo

The mayor said there’s no such thing as a perfect candidate, but New York “can’t go backwards.”
Celia Bernhardt

Mayor Eric Adams just cast his ballot for former Gov. Andrew Cuomo here at P.S. 81 in Bed-Stuy..

“We can’t go backwards. We can’t legalize prostitution, we can’t tax people based on their ethnicity, we can’t defund our police department,” Adams said, invoking some stances conservative media has claimed Democratic nominee Zohran Mamdani holds.

The mayor, who initially ran for reelection but ended his campaign in late September, said he’s not dwelling on what could’ve or should’ve been, and that it will be a great accomplishment to know his portrait is hanging in City Hall. He said that he’s left New Yorkers a great city, adding, “don’t fuck it up.”

Cuomo was endorsed last night by President Donald Trump and this morning by billionaire Elon Musk. Asked about Musk’s support, Adams said he thought the DOGE architect was “being responsible.”

“I think both the president and Elon pointed out that there’s no perfect candidate,” Adams said, adding that he’s had plenty of critiques for Cuomo over the years. “But one thing we know for sure – we do have a perfectly imperfect candidate, and Zohran is that.”

Asked by the Post whether he had found it difficult to find Cuomo’s name on the ballot (as Musk suggested in a post on X earlier today), Adams said he had not had any trouble finding Cuomo’s name on the ballot and others would not either. When asked directly about Musk’s insinuation that there’s something amiss with the city’s ballots, Adams said, “you’ll have to ask Elon.” – Celia Bernhardt

4:30 p.m. – Voters come out to decide North Country special election

Democrat Michael Cashman and Republican Brent Davison are on the ballot.

North Country voters in Clinton and Franklin Counties, as well as a few towns in Essex County, are coming out to decide their next Assembly member. Clinton County had more than 10,000 voters come out as of 4 p.m., and Essex County tallied 2,339. In Franklin County, 638 of 972 absentee ballots have been returned, but turnout data wasn’t available for today.

Democrats nominated Plattsburgh Town Supervisor Michael Cashman, while Republicans nominated retired State Police Commander Brent Davison (and not without controversy either). Billy Jones, a Democrat, held the seat until he resigned earlier this year, and political strategists expect Democrats should be able to hold onto the seat, but the results of this special election could serve as a bellwether for Democrats’ prospects far from New York City, where Democratic mayoral nominee Zohran Mamdani is expected to win. – Austin C. Jefferson

4 p.m. – Conservative Democrat Phil Wong films GOTV videos with lefty council Members

Vying for votes against fellow Holden staffer, Republican Alicia Vaichunas, Wong tries a new approach
Screengrab/Phil Wong Campaign

Phil Wong, holding a campaign sign that read “back the blue,” took a video with progressive Council Member Julie Won. Won said she looked forward to serving with him and that he’d “fight for our children’s education.”

He also took a video with Council Members Jennifer Gutiérrez and Lincoln Restler (famously a Citibike enthusiast, which is not a popular stance in Wong’s council district).

“Phil is amazing, he’s a Democrat running here in Ridgewood,” Restler said in the video. “Support immigrant rights Ridgewood, come out!” Gutierrez said.

Wong has notably spoken out against migrant shelters throughout his political career.

The Democrat used to be a registered Republican and describes himself as very conservative. He’s indicated that if elected, he’d stay closely in line with Council Member Bob Holden’s political legacy – which has often been to fight back against the policies that Won, Gutierrez, and Restler have championed.

Wong and Vaichunas, both Holden loyalists to their bones, have thus far had no perceptible political differences throughout the campaign, though tensions have flared between the two former friends. – Celia Bernhardt 

3:30 p.m. – Ossé not on WFP line

Archila: "We don't understand it."

New York City Council Member Chi Ossé was not listed on the Working Families Party line on Tuesday's ballot, despite receiving the party's endorsement. While it will not impact the result of the election, as Ossé is running unopposed, it's ... not great. The omission came as a surprise to WFP co-chair Ana María Archila, who said she found out while speaking to a voter in Osse's central Brooklyn district Tuesday.

"This is confusing. We don't understand it," she added.

Both Archila and Elijah Fox, a spokesperson for Ossé, told City & State that Ossé had completed the steps to appear on the WFP line and pointed to the BOE as the likely culprit. "There is nothing that tells us that they rejected the ballot, the signatures, or that there was a concern, like, nothing that we know. So we don't really understand what happened," Archila said. "But we believe it's not something that Chi did wrong or that we did wrong. We believe that there's some mistake inside the Board of Elections, but we don't know."

Vincent Ignizio, deputy executive director at the BOE, said via text that while the BOE was going to look into it, there was "no way that's correct," and suggested that Ossé perhaps did not make the ballot, did not file or was thrown off. "We didn't say, ‘Oops we forgot.’"

There's not much the party can do at this point. "The recourse would be to file some kind of complaint, and that complaint would result in a rerun of the City Council election," Archila said. "We don't want that – it's a waste of taxpayer dollars." 

Still, it's a letdown for the WFP. "(Having the WFP line) is a way to really demonstrate the demand for an alternative to the two-party system when the two major parties are so dominated by the influence of the richest few," Archila said. – Sophie Krichevsky

3:20 p.m. - Western New York turnout is steady

Erie and Niagara counties have big local races

Voter turnout by mid-afternoon in Western New York is steady, with most of the vote coming from communities with competitive local races.

Erie County has seen 37,000 early and absentee votes with 71,000 voting in-person by 3 p.m., according to county Board of Elections Republican Commissioner Ralph Mohr. Mohr said turnout remains comparable to four years ago.

Erie County has races for county comptroller and county sheriff, along with competitive local races, including Amherst town supervisor, Cheektowaga town board, Lancaster town board and Hamburg town supervisor. Mohr said much of the turnout has been fueled by those communities. The Buffalo mayoralty is on the ballot with Democratic nominee Sean Ryan heavily favored. Erie County has 620,000 registered voters.

In neighboring Niagara County, 20,577 people have voted countywide by 3 p.m. out of 144,000 registered voters, according to county Board of Elections Democratic Commissioner Lora Allen. “It’s steady,” she said. “It’s not the best I’ve seen or the worst.”

Allen said the two busiest communities are Niagara Falls, which features competitive races for City Council and North Tonawanda, where incumbent Democratic Mayor Austin Tylec is facing off against Republican nominee Tom Krantz, a former police chief, in a competitive race.

Niagara County voters are also being asked to approve a referendum to extend county legislature terms from two years to four years. - John Celock

3:15 p.m. - Cuomo's COVID mea culpa

Apologizing on Fox News

In his closing message to New Yorkers headed to the polls in the city, Andrew Cuomo offered an apology for the deaths of seniors in nursing homes during the earlier days of the COVID pandemic. It is the most direct mea culpa Cuomo has offered since he first found himself in the hot seat over his decision to discharge COVID-positive seniors from hospitals back to nursing homes. “I apologize to anyone who lost a loved one during that time,” Cuomo said during a morning hit on Fox News. “It was on my watch, and I understand how terrible it was.”

Still, the former governor did not admit to any wrongdoing on his part, reiterating that he followed federal guidance and advice from leading health experts at a chaotic time when little was known about the new disease. Cuomo’s handling of the pandemic, and COVID in nursing homes in particular, has haunted him since he resigned from office and on the campaign trail. - Rebecca C. Lewis

3 p.m. – Creeping toward record turnout

The latest numbers show that the city is largely on pace to hit 2 million votes cast for mayor

The city Board of Elections released new voter numbers at 3 p.m., showing that about 1.45 million people have cast ballots so far. Roughly 250,000 people voted in the past three hours. The rate of turnout has remained consistent since polls opened at 9 a.m., without much of a midday lull. That rate would put turnout at just under 2 million, without accounting for the likely after-work surge and mail-in ballots. – Rebecca C. Lewis

2:30 p.m. – Friends in Low(er East Side) places

Zohran Mamdani comes to the voters (and the down-ballot candidates) on the Lower East Side.
Annie McDonough

Zohran Mamdani’s whirlwind tour of the city on Tuesday included a stop on the Lower East Side, where he joined Assembly Members Grace Lee, Jordan Wright, Harvey Epstein and City Council Member Chris Marte for a brief voter meet-and-greet. It’s ultra friendly territory for Mamdani, and the response from young voters and fans on the street reflected that. But the stop also served to bring a little extra attention to down-ballot races. P.S. 020, where Mamdani and the other elected officials greeted voters, is right on the border of City Council Districts 1, which is represented by Marte, and 2, very likely soon to be represented by Epstein. Not that Marte and Epstein, Democrats with heavy advantages, really need the boost. Marte is also running for City Council speaker.

New York Working Families Party co-director Jasmine Gripper said she’s enthused by the energy she’s seen around Mamdani today, though she said she’s seen an increase in Cuomo’s presence on the trail since the primary. (She suggested that presence includes paid canvassers, however.) “There was one Cuomo volunteer that covered up his stickers and asked to take a picture with Tish James,” Gripper said with a laugh. – Annie McDonough

2 p.m. – Mamdani mobbed in Fort Greene

Dogs, toddlers, elected officials in tow.
Celia Bernhardt

Zohran Mamdani received a warm welcome from a tight crowd of supporters on a street corner across from a Fort Greene polling site. WFP leadership, along with Rep. Nydia Velázquez, state Attorney General Letitia James, Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, Council Member Crystal Hudson, state Sen. Jabari Brisport and Bed-Stuy DSA Assembly candidate Eon Huntley all joined the fray.

Mamdani took a few questions, but didn’t deliver a speech, opting to chat and take photos with people as he shuffled through the crowd. Some supporters were meeting the candidate in person for the first time; some introduced him to their toddlers or their dogs.

A few minutes in, electeds led an “I believe that we will win” chant.

Asked by a reporter if he’d support Hudson for Council Speaker, Mamdani said he liked the council member but was zeroed in on his own election. Asked by Politico if he’d take a nap or party upon winning, he responded “I’m gonna get to work.”

WFP National Director Maurice Mitchell said he was feeling good. “Every now and then, our politics actually become cultural expressions of where everyday people are, and political leaders actually become movement leaders, and that’s what’s happening right now.” – Celia Bernhardt

12:30 p.m. – Reports of swatting at Manhattan polling sites

Threatening emails come amid non-credible bomb threats in New Jersey

Three polling places in Manhattan have received emailed threats of a terroristic nature, MSNBC reported. The Daily News reported that the New York City Police Department is considering the threats, to polling locations in Midtown, Harlem and Greenwich Village, to be swatting, and no polling sites have been closed.

Bomb threats briefly shut down polls in seven New Jersey counties Tuesday morning as Garden State voters go to the polls to decide a competitive gubernatorial race. New Jersey Lt. Gov. Tahesha Way, who oversees state elections, said law enforcement deemed the threats non-credible. – John Celock

12:05 p.m. – Curtis Sliwa hangs out in Whitestone

… with Vickie Paladino
Curtis and Nancy Sliwa hit Whitestone with Vickie Paladino. / Tsehai Alfred

GOP mayoral candidate Curtis Sliwa criticized President Donald Trump’s endorsement of Andrew Cuomo while stumping with GOP Council Member Vickie Paladino in Whitestone, Queens.  “He's the guy who said that Andrew Cuomo was a lousy governor, and during COVID-19, in the lockdown,” Sliwa said. He also knocked Zohran Mamdani for finally voting on the housing ballot proposals, noting Sliwa is now the only candidate who voted against them. The proposals are unpopular in suburban areas like Paladino’s district. 
Cuomo tried to get Paladino’s endorsement, but she turned him down, City & State scooped. – Tsehai Alfred

12 p.m. – NYC passes 1 million votes

Big spike in turnout between 9 a.m. and 12 p.m.

With the latest update in turnout from the New York City Board of Elections, the city officially surpassed 1 million votes cast in today's elections, with almost 1.2 million total votes as of noon, including early votes. BOE numbers also show a huge increase in turnout between 9 a.m. and 12 p.m. on Election Day – 268,906 people cast ballots in that time. That's a more than 78,000-person bump from the first three hours of the day. - Sophie Krichevsky

11:00 a.m. – Kristy Marmorato projects confidence

The Bronx Republican City Council member faces a Democratic challenge

Locked in her own competitive City Council race, Kristy Marmorato met up with Republican nominee for mayor Curtis Sliwa to greet poll workers in her East Bronx district. “We thank them for their service because they put in really long hours so it’s nice to say thank you,” Marmorato told City & State, referring to Sliwa’s visit.

Marmorato faces Democratic nominee Shirley Aldebol, who secured a divisive victory in the Democratic primary this summer. Marmorato became the first Republican to represent the district nearly two years ago, narrowly beating Democrat Marjorie Velázquez. Marmorato said that she is confident about securing her seat, saying, “We have a lot of local support, and that's what I'm the proudest of.” – Tsehai Alfred

10:10 a.m. – Andrew Cuomo is feeling confident

The freshly Trump-endorsed Democrat was embraced by many in Midtown as he cast his vote.
Annie McDonough

Andrew Cuomo rode in on a white Bronco to save New York City. That was the vibe, at least, from a crowd of Manhattanites happy to see the former governor at an East Side poll site Tuesday morning. It’s the same location where Cuomo cast his vote in the Democratic primary in June, but his position is in a markedly different place today. Back in June, he was the front-runner casting a side glance at an upstart Democratic socialist gaining on him in the polls. Today, that upstart is favored to win the whole race. Fresh off an endorsement from President Donald Trump – which he’s flitted between touting and playing down – Cuomo called Zohran Mamdani an existential threat to New York City. Accompanied by two of his daughters and his son-in-law, the warm reception he received at the High School of Art and Design in Midtown suggested others agree. (This is an area he won in the primary, so it’s unsurprising to see that kind of response.) “Take the communist down!” one man shouted as Cuomo entered the poll site. Shaking hands and taking selfies, Cuomo started off his Election Day on a positive note: “I feel the momentum is on our side,” he proclaimed. – Annie McDonough

10 a.m. – WFP hits Park Slope

Brad Lander and Ana María Archila say there’s “a lot of hope and energy”
Holly Pretsky

Erstwhile mayoral candidate and New York City Comptroller Brad Lander voted for Zohran Mamdani on the Working Families Party line in Park Slope, accompanied by WFP Co-Director Ana María Archila. Lander, a possible candidate for New York’s 10th Congressional District, also voted for a possible rival, City Council Member Alexa Avilés, who represents him. “Obviously, New York 10 is a big, exciting possibility in the primary,” Archila said. – Holly Pretsky

9:30 a.m. – Mamdani flips on even-year elections

He struck a different tone in the Assembly

All eyes were on how Zohran Mamdani would vote on contentious housing ballot proposals, but his decision on the sixth measure to move city elections to even years is perhaps more interesting. Mamdani voted against a proposal to start the process to move elections to even years on Tuesday. He didn't seem to hold the same belief when he voted to move other municipal elections in the past.

Speaking to reporters after casting his ballot, Mamdani said he was particularly moved by a column in the online news and culture site New York Groove. “I found the arguments in opposition to No. 6 to be quite compelling, especially those making the case for New Yorkers to have a distinct opportunity to weigh their future,” Mamdani said. It was so compelling, it caused him to offer a different opinion than two years ago.

As an Assembly member in 2023, Mamdani voted in favor of a law to move county and town elections from odd years to even years. The state's highest court recently upheld the law, leading Republicans to file a new federal challenge to overturn it.

The arguments against moving municipal elections are not new, with critics long saying that local races would get overshadowed by federal ones to the detriment of voters. Apparently, Mamdani didn't find such appeals persuasive until it could impact one of his own races – and potentially his total time in office. All town and county elected officials in office when the switch occurs starting next year will see their total tenure cut by one year. It’s not clear exactly how the New York City initiative, which would need to make it through a lengthy legislative process, would change Mamdani’s term limits, though there has been speculation that it could lengthen his time in office. – Rebecca C. Lewis

9:15 a.m. – Don’t forget about Curtis – or his cats

The Republican nominee says he’s not worried about Trump’s endorsement of Cuomo
Annie McDonough

Republican mayoral nominee Curtis Sliwa accompanied his wife Nancy to vote on the Upper West Side, where he arrived in style with a cat-festooned tie and a book of “Pawverbs.” That’s because Nancy cast her vote for him on the “Protect Animals” party line, which Sliwa is also appearing on. As for President Donald Trump handing former Gov. Andrew Cuomo an endorsement at the eleventh hour Monday night, Sliwa said he’s not sweating it. “I don’t think he understands the dynamics in the streets and in the subways. He’s no longer here,” Sliwa said of the former New Yorker. “I respect the president. I see what he’s done. But I don't really think it’s going to make much of a difference.” – Annie McDonough

9 a.m. – Turnout high after three hours of voting

More than 190K voters cast their ballots before 9 a.m.

The New York City Board of Elections reported that as of 9 a.m., three hours after the polls opened, 926,156 people had cast their ballots in Tuesday’s races, including early voters.

That number is already on par with the number of check-ins the BOE reported as of 7:30 p.m. on primary day, at which point, 930,505 people had voted. While it’s not a perfect comparison – there will always be higher turnout in general elections than primaries – it speaks to the sheer volume of people voting in this election. The first three hours of voting Tuesday produced more than any single day of early voting, however, with just under 191,000 people having cast their ballots in that three-hour span compared to more than 151,000 on Nov. 2. – Sophie Krichevsky

8:30 a.m. – Mamdani fires back at Trump

Trump dropped a Cuomo endorsement Monday night

After President Donald Trump endorsed Andrew Cuomo on Monday night, Mamdani criticized Trump’s funding threats. “What we see in the language of Donald Trump is a premise as if it is his decision on whether or not to fund … the very money this city is owed,” Mamdani said, addressing a large crowd of reporters early Tuesday morning. “I look forward to utilizing every single tool at my disposal to fight for the people – that means using the courts, that means using the bully pulpit, that means ensuring that we actually following the letter of the law.”

The Republican president made his feelings known in a Truth Social post, where he said he would withhold federal funds from the city if the 34-year-old democratic socialist wins the mayoral race. He’s threatened to do as much before, but that wasn’t all. The post also doubled as an endorsement for Cuomo – and a warning not to vote for Republican nominee Curtis Sliwa. “Whether you personally like Andrew Cuomo or not, you really have no choice,” Trump wrote. “You must vote for him, and hope he does a fantastic job. He is capable of it, Mamdani is not!” – Sahalie Donaldson

8 a.m. – Mamdani votes in favor of ballot proposals 1-5

The big reveal
Sahalie Donaldson

Democratic mayoral nominee Zohran Mamdani voted in favor of a series of contentious housing-related ballot measures, at last taking an 11th hour position on the politically-fraught issue. 

“We urgently need more housing to be built across the five boroughs, and we also need to ensure that that housing is high quality, creating high quality union jobs,” Mamdani told reporters Tuesday morning outside his poll site at Frank Sinatra School of the Arts in Astoria. “And I also understand that there are council members in opposition to these measures, and their opposition is driven by commitment to their communities and a deep concern about investment in those communities and I share the commitment to that investment. I look forward to working with them and delivering.” 

For weeks, Mamdani has been evasive about where he stands on the questions, which are aimed at making it easier to build more housing amid the city’s dire shortage, but would weaken the City Council’s power over some projects. With allies on both sides of the debate, the calculus of whether to support or oppose them – and when – has been complex. But with Election Day underway, the decision could wait no longer. Mamdani said he voted in favor of ballot proposals one through five. The lone proposal he voted against was No. 6, which would move city elections from odd-numbered years to even-numbered years, bringing them in alignment with higher-profile federal elections. Read more here. - Story by Sahalie Donaldson

5 a.m. – Early voter turnout has already broken records

Juggernaut early voting for an off-year election

Over 735,000 New Yorkers hit the polls over the nine days of early voting according to data from the city Board of Elections, shattering records and capturing headlines. Altogether, turnout ahead of Election Day was the highest it had been in a non-presidential election year since early voting was implemented by the city in 2019. Juxtaposed against the over 5.3 million registered New York City voters, that’s 14% turnout so far. Some analysts are already speculating that early voting numbers could signal that overall turnout may approach a staggering 2 million.

While there’s plenty on the ballot beyond the mayoral race, there’s no denying that the three-way contest between front-runner Zohran Mamdani, independent candidate Andrew Cuomo and Republican nominee Curtis Sliwa has energized New Yorkers. General elections for New York City mayor have historically been a far more muted affair, but this election cycle has been anything but ordinary. 

Manhattan has led turnout so far followed by Brooklyn. And as far as age goes, baby boomers – New Yorkers born between 1946 and 1964 – have led turnout by casting about 29% of early votes. While millennial turnout initially struggled, it recovered toward the end of early voting. As of Sunday, these New Yorkers closed out with about 28% of the early vote, according to The City.Sahalie Donaldson

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