Guess who came to dinner?
Photo-Illustration: Intelligencer; Photos: Zach Schiffman

After months of door-knocking, fundraising, and driving around Sutton Place in a Dodge Charger by the campaigns, the primaries are finally coming to a close in New York City. Hundreds of thousands of residents have already turned out to cast their votes for the 11 candidates on the ballot for New York’s next mayor. For the many more who are still making their way to the polls — Primary Election Day is Tuesday! — might we remind you that this is a ranked-choice ballot? That means you can (and should) vote for up to five candidates. Just rank them in order of how you like them. Still deciding who to vote for? We spoke with six of the leading candidates on the biggest issues facing the city.

Our full video series features City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams, Comptroller Brad Lander, State Assemblymember Zohran Mamdani, State Senator Zellnor Myrie, State Senator Jessica Ramos, and former comptroller Scott Stringer. (One leading candidate declined to respond.)

The candidates overwhelmingly say that affordability is the biggest issue in the city; by some estimates, median rent is double the national average. But they have unique perspectives at how to chip away at the crisis.

They are also pretty aligned on closing Rikers Island but not on the prospect of forced mental-health treatment for homeless people.

Public dissent is surging again this summer as masked, plainclothes Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials take undocumented people (and others) off the streets and President Trump holds military parades for his birthday and bombs Iran, while the Israeli government continues to perpetuate alleged war crimes in Gaza. In this video — recorded before Brad Lander was arrested by ICE at immigration court — the candidates discussed how they would manage protests.

We also asked the candidates some lighter questions about their personal lives in the city, including the location and cost of their first apartments and their bagel orders.

The candidates discuss how they will use the city’s budget and status in the world to push back against the president.

Sign Up for the Intelligencer Newsletter

Daily news about the politics, business, and technology shaping our world.

Vox Media, LLC Terms and Privacy Notice