Mamdani, Espaillat and New York City mayor
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When did the city become an epicenter of regional specialties? By Luke Fortney There’s something I meant to tell you last week, but I chickened out: I’m a Californian by birth! I moved to the city after college,
It's the time of year when the setting sun lines up perfectly with New York City's street grid, creating a stupendous solar spectacle.
A new independent expenditure group named “New Yorkers for a Better Future Mayor 25” is launching a campaign against Mamdani, with a plan to raise around $20 million, according to a person helping organize the committee. A form filed to the New York State Board of Elections shows the group registered to be active in New York on Tuesday.
State law currently prevents the cars from operating without a driver behind the wheel. Waymo is pushing to change that.
New York has failed to recover all the construction jobs lost during the COViD-19 pandemic, in large part because of less demand for office space amid hybrid work policies, according to an
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Intelligencer on MSNTrump and Mamdani Spar Over a Federal Takeover of New York CityTrump floated taking over the city under a Mamdani mayoralty, saying, “We have tremendous power at the White House to run places when we have to.”
It’s certainly an unusual New York City mayor’s race. If you recently started paying attention, here’s the extremely abridged version: Our incumbent Mayor Eric Adams should have had an easy path to reelection after winning the open seat as a Democrat in 2021.
During a cabinet meeting on Tuesday, Trump was asked about the New York City mayor’s race. Mamdani won the Democratic primary last month, drawing the ire of Trump. Mamdani is a self-described democratic socialist. Trump has consistently referred to Mamdani as a communist; Mamdani has said that he is not.
In the first half of 2025, international buyers doubled from last year, despite market stalls and geopolitical concerns
New York lawmakers are proposing the MELT Act, which would require law enforcement agents to be clearly identifiable and display a name, badge number, or other visible marker on their uniforms while on duty in state borders.