Eric Adams poised to be New York's next mayor after winning Democratic
nomination
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[July 07, 2021]
By Joseph Ax
(Reuters) -Brooklyn Borough President Eric
Adams won the Democratic nomination for New York mayor on Tuesday,
positioning the former police captain who stressed enhancing public
safety to become the next leader of America's largest city.
Updated vote tallies posted online on Tuesday evening based on the
city's new ranked-choice voting system showed Adams with what appeared
to be an insurmountable lead over his nearest rivals, two weeks after
Election Day.
With fewer than 8,000 absentee ballots left to count, Adams was ahead of
the city's former sanitation chief, Kathryn Garcia, by 1 percentage
point, or 8,426 votes. The Associated Press called the race for Adams
soon after the results were released.
Maya Wiley, a civil rights lawyer and former MSNBC analyst, was in third
place, without an obvious path to victory.
The field of more than a dozen Democratic candidates was historically
diverse. If elected, Adams would be the city's second Black mayor.
Either Garcia or Wiley, who is Black, would have been the first woman to
hold the office.
The new results came one week after the city's Board of Elections -
which has faced accusations of mismanagement for years - botched its
initial tabulation of ranked-choice ballots, posting and then removing
erroneous totals after mistakenly including test ballots.
In a statement, Adams acknowledged some votes remained to be counted
before looking ahead to November's election, when he will be heavily
favored over Republican nominee Curtis Sliwa, founder of the Guardian
Angels civilian patrol, who has vowed to run on a "law-and-order"
platform.
Registered Democratic voters outnumber Republicans in the city by more
than a 6-to-1 margin.
"Now we must focus on winning in November so that we can deliver on the
promise of this great city for those who are struggling, who are
underserved, and who are committed to a safe, fair, affordable future
for all New Yorkers," Adams said.
Garcia did not comment on the results, and her campaign said she would
hold a news conference on Wednesday at 10 a.m. (1400 GMT). Wiley issued
a statement criticizing the elections board but stopping short of
conceding the race, noting that the figures are "initial and
uncertified."
"We will have more to say about the next steps shortly," Wiley said.
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Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams won the Democratic nomination
for New York mayor on Tuesday, positioning the former police captain
who stressed enhancing public safety to become the next leader of
America's largest city. Gloria Tso reports.
CHALLENGES LOOM
The next mayor will oversee a still-nascent recovery from the
coronavirus pandemic and will also confront several deep challenges,
including a spike in shootings, persistent wealth inequality, a
troubled public-school system and a lack of affordable housing.
The election offered an early look at how national Democrats may
approach the fraught issue of policing in next year's congressional
elections.
Adams, 60, centered his campaign on improving public safety.
Decrying the "defund the police" movement that has gained traction
among some liberals, the moderate Adams sought to strike a balance
between addressing rising crime rates and eliminating racial bias
from the department.
Wiley, 57, who emerged late in the race as the favorite of the
party's liberal wing, proposed cutting one-sixth of the city's
police budget in order to fund mental-health support and other
social services.
Garcia, 51, ran a technocratic campaign focused on her long
experience in government.
The incumbent mayor, Democrat Bill de Blasio, was unable to run for
re-election due to term limits.
The ranked-choice system operates as a series of instant runoffs, in
which the candidate in last place is eliminated and his or her votes
redistributed based on voters' second choice. That process repeats
until there are only two candidates remaining.
After seven rounds, Adams was at 40.5%, with Garcia at 30.4% and
Wiley close behind with 29%. The eighth round eliminated Wiley and
reallocated her votes, with Garcia picking up more of Wiley's
support but not enough to overtake Adams.
(Reporting by Joseph Ax; Additional reporting by Daniel Trotta;
Editing by Bill Berkrot and Peter Cooney)
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