How New Yorkers Say They’re Voting And Why

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This election has been defined, in part, by debate over how to address the city’s escalating affordability crisis, especially in the face of federal funding cuts.

A polling station at NYCHA’s Gunhill Houses in the Bronx, Tuesday, November 4, 2025. (Adi Talwar/City Limits)

More than a million New Yorkers cast their ballots in the general election Tuesday, as the race for the city’s next mayor—which has drawn attention across the country, and spurred debate across the five boroughs—comes to a close.

By 3 p.m., more than 1.45 million people had already turned up at the polls, surpassing the total number of voters in the 2021 general election that put outgoing Mayor Eric Adams in office.

This election has been defined, in part, by debate over how to address the city’s escalating affordability crisis, especially in the face of federal funding cuts to housing programs, public benefits and other local services.

“I came to Brooklyn in the mid-’80s and lived in a two-bedroom that was $235. That same unit is now $3,000 a month. For that shoebox,” said Bushwick voter María Pagán. “Whoever comes to office needs to regulate these prices.”

RELATED READING: The Candidates for Mayor On Housing, Zoning and NYCHA

Each of the mayoral candidates—former Gov. Andrew Cuomo (running as an independent), Democratic nominee and State Assemblymember Zohran Mamdani, and Republican Guardian Angels founder Curtis Sliwa—have laid out diverging plans to address those problems.

On the candidates

Pagán voted for Mamdani, a democratic socialist from Queens who handily won the Democratic primary in June on a platform that calls for free bus service, annual rent freezes for tenants in stabilized apartments and free childcare for kids under 5.

“I really feel if Zohran wins—he will win—but when he wins, it’ll change stuff for real,” said Mohamed Chaya, 21, a resident of Morrisania in the Bronx whose friends have canvassed for the candidate.

His immigrant parents got him and his sister “into politics really young,” Chaya said, though the generations are somewhat split in this year’s race: he and his father “agree to disagree” about Mamdani and whether plans like a rent freeze are achievable.

RELATED READING: New Yorkers Weigh In On Housing Ballot Measures

“He’s been here for almost 30 years now, struggling trying to make ends meet, so coming from him, he finds it impossible. And I feel like that causes a big disconnect,” Chaya said. “The younger people like me, my sister, we think you [should] give it a chance. You can’t knock it until you try it. How worse can things get?”

But others remain skeptical. “The rent freeze is garbage,” said Ben, a 45-year-old Morrisania resident who did not want to share his last name. “You gotta understand—somebody has to pay, whether it be now or later.”

A polling station at NYCHA’s Gunhill Houses in the Bronx, Tuesday, November 4, 2025. (Adi Talwar/City Limits)

Mamdani’s competitors have also sought to cast the assemblymember’s plans as unrealistic. Both Cuomo and Sliwa have accused him of being too inexperienced for the mayoralty—Mamdani recently turned 34—and too far left.

Sliwa, an animal rights advocate with a colorful history best known for his subway patrols in the 1980s, pledged to “restore law and order” and advocate for outer borough neighborhoods (including by repealing Mayor Adams’ City of Yes housing plan).

Cuomo’s campaign has touted the former governor as the most experienced manager in the race, citing his decade at the helm in Albany and past work in the Clinton administration.

The message resonated with some voters. Cuomo “knows what he’s doing,” said Floyd Monroe, 68, a security worker and tenant at NYCHA’s Brevoort Houses. “Can’t leave the city to someone so inexperienced,” he said.

But for others, Cuomo’s experience is what turned them off. The former governor weathered several scandals during his time in office, and resigned in 2021 amid accusations of sexual harassment by multiple women who’d worked with him (Cuomo has denied the allegations).

“You already know how bad he is. You already know that he’s not for us, he’s for everybody else,” Brooklyn voter Andre Sanchez told City Limits. He said he’s watched both Cuomo and Sliwa in the city’s public life for decades now (“I’ve seen what they’ve done already”), and voted for Mamdani because “he’s fresh.”

“At least he’s new,” Sanchez said. “I’m going to give him a shot, because I’m tired of the nonsense, and I’d rather have somebody else try to do something.”

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

The post How New Yorkers Say They’re Voting And Why appeared first on City Limits.

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