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A Clear Path for a GOP Mayor in NYC?
Chronicles ^ | June 2025 | Paul Du Quenoy

Posted on 06/29/2025 4:54:34 PM PDT by Angelino97

New York City has not had a Republican mayor since 2007, when Michael Bloomberg left the GOP to finish his remaining time in office as an independent. Republican fortunes in the traditionally left-leaning city could change this year, however, as New York’s Democratic establishment reels from its fractured primary process.

Even before competition became fierce among the 11 eventual Democratic contenders, incumbent Mayor Eric Adams dropped out to run for reelection as an independent when early polling showed that he would probably lose the nomination to disgraced former New York governor Andrew Cuomo.

Then, on Tuesday, Zohran Mamdani, a 33-year-old New York state assemblyman, stunningly defeated Cuomo, by 43 percent to 36 percent. The margin was so high that Mamdani did not have to rely, as was widely predicted, on the city’s bizarre ranked-choice voting system, introduced in 2021, which allows voters to select multiple candidates in order of preference and thus amalgamate support for underperforming candidates.

Cuomo was long favored to win the primary despite his scandal-plagued record. He racked up high-profile endorsements, secured millions in campaign contributions, and pledged a law-and-order approach to city governance. It was not enough.

Mamdani swept the former governor aside through a grass-roots campaign that promised affordable housing, free bus transportation, and other attention-grabbing socioeconomic pledges that appealed to dissatisfied younger voters, struggling immigrants, and guilty progressive elites. Mamdani was also perfectly situated to benefit from the Democrats’ increasingly vituperative intergenerational civil war, which has pitched the party’s younger and more racially diverse progressive faction against its more moderate gerontocratic and almost entirely white leadership.

Mamdani’s campaign thus became an issue of national importance, scoring endorsements from Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders and New York Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the two most important national progressive leaders, while Cuomo, 67, looked like the corrupt creature of a decrepit old guard.

The race between Mamdani and Cuomo was bitter enough that both said that they, too, would run as independents if they lost the Democratic primary, mainly to deny each other ultimate victory. Cuomo has confirmed to The New York Times that he is still considering an independent run.

If he follows through, New York City’s leftist voters will be divided into three rival groups supporting Mamdani as the official Democratic candidate, Adams as the incumbent mayor, and Cuomo as an unreconciled challenger to both.

All three camps have weaknesses that will alienate broad blocks of Democratic voters. Mamdani, a self-professed “anti-Zionist” and “democratic socialist,” is widely perceived as an anti-Semite and political radical whose policies would be prejudiced and economically ruinous.

Cuomo would presumably retain support from the powerful but unpopular Democratic establishment while still trying to live down his bail reform policies, which led to New York City’s recent massive crime surge, his pandemic-era public health directives that are widely believed to have caused mass death among New York’s elderly, his humiliating 2021 resignation as governor following numerous sexual harassment claims, and other scandals.

Adams, rated the least popular mayor in city history, has been mired in corruption allegations that led to his criminal indictment—the first of a sitting New York mayor—by Joe Biden’s Justice Department, and then to allegations of a quid pro quo in which Donald Trump’s Justice Department dropped the charges, possibly in exchange for responsible law and immigration policy enforcement by Adams.

These three deeply flawed candidates could easily cancel each other out. Progressives loathe both Adams and Cuomo as enforcers of a corrupt status quo and will certainly stick with Mamdani.

Adams and Cuomo supporters regard Mamdani as a dangerous and inexperienced radical, and would split centrist Democrats, whose main issues are crime and business growth. Adams remains popular among blacks, Hispanics, and an important segment of city businessowners, while Cuomo would retain blue-collar Democrats, older voters, and Catholics. Mamdani will continue to win immigrants and younger voters but lose many Jews and most, if not all, moderates. Despite Mamdani’s surprise victory, his primary win rests on a mere 43 percent plurality, meaning that 57 percent of New York Democrats voted for someone else in a contest where voters already tend to skew further to the activist left than they do in general elections.

The Republicans have the discreet advantage of unity. Unlike the Democrats, they have one uncontested candidate, Curtis Sliwa, a radio talk show host who in the 1970s famously founded the Guardian Angels, a civic organization to fight crime. Sliwa was the GOP candidate in 2021, when he lost to Adams by nearly 40 points. Adams, however, was then running unchallenged on the left, on what many believed to be a promising professional record as a former transit cop and New York City police captain, and as a black man on the heels of George Floyd and the Black Lives Matter protests.

Sliwa was an anti-Trump Republican who had just disaffiliated from New York’s small centrist Reform party. In the years since, the electorate largely soured on Adams and Sliwa reentered the Republican fold with strong and dramatically more relevant anti-crime credentials. Meanwhile, Trump doubled his voting base in New York City from 15 percent in 2020 to 30 percent in 2024, with his greatest advances among minorities and in the outer boroughs, where Sliwa was strongest in the 2021 mayoral race.

Sliwa has some foibles and eccentricities, but they pale in comparison to the massive deficiencies present in the Democratic field. In any case, it is inconceivable that Trump’s 2024 voters would now drift back to uninspiring Democratic candidates.

If Sliwa can match Trump’s numbers from 2024 and win over even a small percentage of anti-crime Democrats, it is entirely conceivable that he could win the mayor’s office by a plurality that beats out a non-Republican bloc divided among Mamdani, Adams, and Cuomo. It would be the first mayoral victory by plurality since John Lindsay prevailed in a three-way race in 1969, but a low bar above the three Democrats is all Sliwa would have to reach.

Some Republicans already see it. Even before the primary, former New York Governor George Pataki, the last Republican to hold statewide office, spoke strongly in favor of Sliwa and is the headliner of a New York state GOP fundraiser for the mayoral candidate scheduled for Thursday, just two days after the Democratic decision. Hours after the primary, New York Republican Congressman Mike Lawler posted in Sliwa’s favor.

Nothing is guaranteed, of course. Some observers have advocated for Republican voters to back Cuomo or the seemingly reformed Adams as a firewall to stop Mamdani. New York City’s often abashed and self-effacing GOP will have to get behind Sliwa full-steam, and apathetic city Republican voters will have to turn out in greater numbers than usual. But the path to victory is there, if they have the guts to take it.


TOPICS: News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: New York
KEYWORDS: bloggers; curtissliwa; kathyhochul; newyorkcity; zohranmamdani
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I agree. Sliwa can win.

No guarantees. But it can happen.

1 posted on 06/29/2025 4:54:34 PM PDT by Angelino97
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To: Angelino97

Sliwa can’t win. A GOP Adams might be able to.


2 posted on 06/29/2025 4:55:44 PM PDT by 9YearLurker
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To: Angelino97

They need a serious guy. Business exec. A guy with some credentials (by guy I mean man or woman)


3 posted on 06/29/2025 4:56:31 PM PDT by stanne (Because they were mesmerized by Obama, the man for whom this was named, whose name they left out of )
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To: Angelino97

uh…is the writer a New Yorker or any personal relationship with the city and its people?

doesn’t sound it.


4 posted on 06/29/2025 4:59:50 PM PDT by CondoleezzaProtege
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To: 9YearLurker

> Sliwa can’t win. <

I agree (sadly).

Let’s say it’s Mamdani vs. Adams vs. Sliwa.
Adams and Sliwa will split the sane vote. Mamdani will win.

Sliwa should do the honorable thing. Drop out, and support Adams. I wonder if his ego will allow that.
🤔


5 posted on 06/29/2025 4:59:59 PM PDT by Leaning Right (It's morning in America. Again.)
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To: 9YearLurker

There is regular stupid and California or New York level stupid which ensures that Sliwa can’t win.


6 posted on 06/29/2025 5:06:00 PM PDT by Vigilanteman (The politicized state destroys aspects of civil society, human kindness and private charity.)
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To: Angelino97

Should be, but no.

And Eric Adams should stay registered as an independent, at least for now.

He is the best “moderate” available who can possibly win.

I have nothing against Sliwa, I just don’t think he can win in NYC. I think he’ll do well in Staten Island, some areas of Queens and Brooklyn, maybe even get 49% in Queens, but lose in total in Manhattan, Bronx, parts of Queens and parts of Brooklyn - enough to not get close to a city majority. Just my take on Sliwa and the folks in the different sections of the city.


7 posted on 06/29/2025 5:09:47 PM PDT by Wuli (uire)
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To: Leaning Right

Cuomo won’t drop out. Don’t forget him.


8 posted on 06/29/2025 5:10:49 PM PDT by Fledermaus ("It turns out all we really needed was a new President!")
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To: Angelino97

Maybe if Sliwa runs as a muslim.


9 posted on 06/29/2025 5:11:13 PM PDT by JZelle
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To: Leaning Right

The GOP and Adams together ought to be able to buy out Sliwa’s ego.


10 posted on 06/29/2025 5:14:31 PM PDT by 9YearLurker
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To: Angelino97

Not going to happen. They will elect the communist and NY will turn into a hell hole. Just look at what the same idiots did in Chicago but this will be worse,


11 posted on 06/29/2025 5:14:39 PM PDT by Dave911
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To: Fledermaus

> Cuomo won’t drop out. <

Good point! Cuomo is an old-school Democrat. I assumed he would respect the D primary results. Evidently not. I just looked it up. He’s still in, and on the ballot as a candidate of a minor party (the “Fight and Deliver” party, believe it or not).

I see this as more good news for Mamdani, as the sane vote will be split even more.

But I could be wrong. This mess is very complicated. It’s becoming more than an amateur like me can comprehend.

🤷‍♂️


12 posted on 06/29/2025 5:24:11 PM PDT by Leaning Right (It's morning in America. Again.)
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To: Angelino97

RUDY!! America's Mayor 🗽 🇺🇸


13 posted on 06/29/2025 5:28:27 PM PDT by Jane Long (Jesus is Lord!)
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To: Angelino97

No, no he can’t. He’s the male version of a cat lady who pretends to be a tough guy and hasn’t done anything of note in the last 50 years.


14 posted on 06/29/2025 5:30:35 PM PDT by GrootheWanderer
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To: Angelino97

What was Sliwa’s beef with Trump? Has he changed his opinion?


15 posted on 06/29/2025 5:31:41 PM PDT by mbrfl
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To: Jane Long

“ RUDY!! America’s Mayor 🗽 🇺🇸”

Rudy went in as a democrat. He hired good people. Installed broken windows policy. Loved New York

Switched to republican. Law and order

No jay walking

The nYC voters hated him. They don’t want rules. They don’t care about NYC

The commuters- they’re different. They vote for Trump (not the westchester ppl. But Suffolk, Nassau half and half and def states island.


16 posted on 06/29/2025 5:35:35 PM PDT by stanne (Because they were mesmerized by Obama, the man for whom this was named, whose name they left out of )
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To: Angelino97

IMHO, it’s a long shot. Possible, but unlikely.


17 posted on 06/29/2025 5:56:31 PM PDT by matt04 ( )
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To: Vigilanteman

Sadly I agree. NYC is toast


18 posted on 06/29/2025 5:56:31 PM PDT by from occupied ga (Your government is your most dangerous enemy - EVs a solution for which there is no problem)
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To: Jane Long

I remember once reading that Rudy Guilanti had a son that might fit the ticket?


19 posted on 06/29/2025 5:56:38 PM PDT by rovenstinez
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To: rovenstinez

Andrew ran for Governor of NY ... lost to Hochhhhhul.

There is name recognition, but ... Rudy has the experience.


20 posted on 06/29/2025 5:59:53 PM PDT by Jane Long (Jesus is Lord!)
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