2021 election
What to Ask Mayoral Candidates Who Say They Can Solve NYC’s Housing Crisis
Jarrett Murphy |
Thirteen questions for the candidates, to separate meaty plans from mere paperwork.
Michael Appleton/Mayoral Photography Office
Mayor Bill de Blasio attends the topping off ceremony for a 100% affordable housing project using M/WBE firms in Downtown Far Rockaway, Queens on Monday, February 22, 2021.
Thirteen questions for the candidates, to separate meaty plans from mere paperwork.
Campaigns are reacting to a second woman coming forward to accuse the governor of sexual misconduct.
Yes, there are four elected officials in the race to be the city’s No. 3 official. But Michelle Caruso-Cabrera, Zach Iscol, Terri Liftin and Reshma Patel are likely to be on the ballot, too.
Several Republican critics of the governor (and one of his Democratic allies) are pushing legislation that could undermine efforts to achieve broad immunity to COVID-19 and other infectious diseases.
The race between two frontrunners will come down to how 27 percent of voters ranked the candidates.
An estimated 400,000 people in New York state have Alzheimer’s, and by 2025 the number is expected to reach 465,000. It is now the ninth most common cause of death in the five boroughs.
Mayoral candidates Adams, Donovan and McGuire issued detailed reports on farming, health and policing, respectively.
In light of the controversy over Gov. Cuomo’s delay in releasing nursing-home fatalities numbers, we asked the mayoral candidates how they would approach enforcing the Freedom of Information Laws. They were, for candidates, oddly quiet.
The next mayor will have to deal with the educational damage wrought by COVID-19 and the profound problems of quality and equity that challenged the city’s schools even before the pandemic.
The comptroller and Democratic mayoral candidate also discussed his promise for more frequent, round-the-clock transit service, his climate plan, policing and the state of the primary contest.