USA TODAY US Edition

Wiley makes gains in NYC mayoral race

Progressiv­es are at a crossroads in ‘post-COVID’ era

- Ryan W. Miller

NEW YORK – Amid a mayoral race in which moderate candidates focusing on public safety have led in polling, factions further to the left in New York City are coalescing around Maya Wiley less than two weeks before election day.

Wiley received her highest profile endorsemen­t over the weekend from Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., a stalwart of self-described “progressiv­e” politics.

Ocasio-Cortez called Wiley her “No. 1” choice for mayor in a primary election June 22, when voters will rank their top five candidates. The left-leaning Working Families Party backed Wiley as its first-choice candidate last week after supporting other candidates.

“We have an option of a candidate who can center people, racial justice, economic justice and climate justice, that didn’t just come up to run for mayor but has experience and has a lifetime of dedication to this. And that candidate is Maya Wiley,” Ocasio-Cortez said outside City Hall Saturday.

Wiley is a lawyer, professor, former MSNBC commentato­r and member of Mayor Bill de Blasio’s administra­tion who entered the race in October.

Before the endorsemen­t, Wiley hadn’t cracked the top tier in polling, and candidates who have called for increases in policing have fared much better throughout the race despite New York’s reputation as a liberal city.

The upsurge of support for Wiley could be pivotal as more voters tune in, said Michael Hendrix, director of state and local policy at the Manhattan Institute. “If there’s a time to break out in the progressiv­e lane, this is it,” Hendrix said. “It’s a big moment for her.”

How Wiley won backing

Before Democratic Mayor de Blasio, New York City elected Republican Rudy Giuliani to two terms and Republican­turned-independen­t Michael Bloomberg to three.

In the national spotlight, New York is sometimes cast as a city with extremely liberal politician­s. It was even labeled an “anarchist jurisdicti­on” by the Department of Justice under President Donald Trump in a threat to withhold federal funding.

In recent years, left-leaning candidates have made huge strides, and there was a perception among progressiv­es that this race was their moment, Hendrix said. De Blasio, though viewed unfavorabl­y by many liberals, ran his mayoral campaign on the “tale of two cities,” highlighti­ng economic inequality­and winning in 2013 and 2017. Ocasio-Cortez defeated longtime incumbent Joe Crowley in 2018.

When Wiley announced her candidacy, she called for building a “stronger, fairer and more just city.”

“Some will say I don’t sound like past mayors or look like them or think like them. And I say, ‘Yes, I don’t. That is the point.’ I am not a convention­al candidate,” Wiley said.

Wiley has campaigned on a variety of liberal policy proposals, including expanding public housing investment; funding a “care income” to send $5,000 to low-income families for child and elder care; and creating a “Works Progress Administra­tion-style infrastruc­ture, stimulus

and jobs program” would cost $10 billion.

Wiley’s platform calls for “transformi­ng” policing. She’s backed measures that would cut at least $1 billion from the New York Police Department’s budget and divert funding to schools, mental health and homelessne­ss services.

Hendrix said, “She’s someone whose background as a community organizer, lawyer, someone who’s taught social justice at the New School in Manhattan, and who also is a woman of color … lend credence to support by progressiv­es.”

Wiley has won the backing of other left-leaning politician­s in New York and beyond, such as Rep. Jamaal Bowman, DN.Y.; Sen. Elizabeth Warren, DMass.; former Housing and Urban Developmen­t Secretary Julián Castro; and state Sen. Julia Salazar.

Dianne Morales and Scott Stringer, two other liberal candidates, have experience­d campaign setbacks.

Stringer, the city’s comptrolle­r who has run on a balance of extensive government experience and liberal policies, was accused of sexual misconduct by two women, including a former campaign staffer, The New York Times reported. The former staffer accused him of unwanted kissing and groping. Stringer denied the allegation.

Morales, a former executive at a nonprofit group, faced internal division in her campaign after her staff formed a union and made a list of demands that Morales rejected. City & State, a local news outlet, reported Morales said the demands “included things that either violate state and local laws, and/or create a risk of fiscal liability for the campaign.”

Though the Wiley endorsemen­ts may have united progressiv­e support, which had been divided among the three candidates, winning in New York City requires a coalition of diverse voting blocs, said Ester Fuchs, director of the Urban and Social Policy Program at Columbia University.

“I don’t think an individual politician’s endorsemen­t brings a significan­t bloc of voters,” said Fuchs, who worked in Bloomberg’s administra­tion and donated to Stringer’s campaign.

‘Post-COVID moment’

that

In the mayoral race, seen by many as one of the most consequent­ial in recent history, as the city comes out of the COVID-19 pandemic, polling has not shown consensus support for a far-left candidate.

Former NYPD officer Eric

Adams leads the crowded pack of eight major Democratic candidates, according to a poll from NY1/Ipsos, released Monday and conducted from May 17 to 31. Close behind are Andrew Yang, a former Democratic presidenti­al candidate, and Kathryn Garcia, a former head of the city’s sanitation department.

Though there is a Republican primary between businessma­n Fernando Mateo and Guardian Angels founder Curtis Sliwa, neither is likely to present a competitiv­e challenge to the winner of the Democratic primary.

Adams, Yang and Garcia run more moderate campaigns than Wiley on the issue of policing. Yang and Garcia called for more officers in certain areas, and Adams, who is the Brooklyn Borough president and was briefly registered as a Republican in the 1990s, has made public safety the central message of his campaign. Hendrix said Adams appealed to Black voters who support “community policing” while calling for reforms to the department.

After Ocasio-Cortez backed Wiley, Adams accused his opponent of trying to cut the police budget and decrease the size of the department “when Black and brown babies are being shot in our streets, hate crimes are terrorizin­g Asian and Jewish communitie­s and innocent New Yorkers are being stabbed and shot on their way to work.”

Shooting incidents have increased 77% this year versus 2020, according to NYPD statistics; however, shootings remain at far lower levels than in the peaks of violent crime in New York City in the 1980s and 1990s.

According to the NY1/Ipsos poll, 72% of voters say they support putting more officers on the street.

On the other side of the public safety debate, the issue of policing reform has gained support in the wake of the killing of George Floyd, Fuchs said, and Adams, Yang and Garcia all vow to address those concerns, too.

The moderates and “old school liberals” in the race, Fuchs said, have balanced those two demands: “They want the police department reformed, but most people want the crime rate down, and they believe that police are a part of that.”

Fuchs and Hendrix said issues around quality of life have come to the forefront.

“It’s a post-COVID moment when the policy solutions of moderate Democrats seem to resonate more,” Hendrix said.

 ?? SIPA USA VIA AP ?? Mayoral candidate Maya Wiley, right, receives Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s endorsemen­t in New York.
SIPA USA VIA AP Mayoral candidate Maya Wiley, right, receives Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s endorsemen­t in New York.

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