New York Primary Election Results
The race to become New York City’s next mayor is one of the most consequential political contests in a generation, with the recovery of the nation’s largest city at stake. The winner of the Democratic primary is likely to win the general election in November. With 13 Democrats on the ballot and the city using ranked-choice voting for the first time, no one knows what to expect. Two Republicans are also competing in a bitter campaign to become the face of their party in New York City.
Democratic Primary for New York City Mayor
Updated 1:41 AM ET
84% REPORTED 
Candidate	Votes	Pct.First Round	Votes	Pct.Final Round
Eric Adams
253,234	31.7%	Ranked-choice vote counts not expected until June 29.
Maya Wiley
177,722	22.3		
Kathryn Garcia
155,812	19.5		
Andrew Yang
93,291	11.7		
Total reported
798,491			
View all candidates
See results from every neighborhood in our detailed map
Don’t Expect a Winner Tonight. Here’s Why.
The vote count could take weeks.
The votes announced on Tuesday will include only early in-person and Election Day ballots. Absentee ballots, which the Associated Press estimated to be around 15 to 20 percent of the total vote, can arrive at the Board of Elections up to 10 days after Election Day.
Ranked-choice voting is likely to determine the winner.
The city’s ranked-choice voting system says that if no candidate receives a majority of the first-choice ballots, the last-place candidate is eliminated and their votes are reallocated, round by round, until only two candidates remain. Learn more about ranked-choice voting in New York City.
The first ranked-choice results are to be revealed next week.
The city’s Board of Elections plans to release the first round of ranked-choice results on Tuesday, June 29, and it will release updated results once a week after that as absentee ballots are counted. More complete results should arrive weekly through the week of July 12.
Learn more about what to expect
Results by Borough
STATEN ISLAND
BRONX
BROOKLYN
QUEENS
MANHATTAN
 Adams  Wiley  Garcia  Yang  Stringer  Morales  Donovan  McGuire
Circle size is proportional to the number of votes for the leading candidates in each borough.
Borough	Adams	Wiley	Garcia	Yang	Stringer	Rpt.
Brooklyn	
36%
27%
16%
10%
3%
91%
Manhattan	
19
22
32
10
7
84
Queens	
33
19
15
17
5
77
Bronx	
46
17
10
9
5
83
Staten Island	
31
13
20
17
8
80
Republican Primary for New York City Mayor
Updated 1:41 AM ET
84% REPORTED 
Candidate	Votes	Pct.
Winner
Curtis Sliwa
36,872	71.9%
Fernando Mateo
14,392	28.1
Total reported
51,264	
Other Races
Mayor
Race	Candidates	
Albany Dem.	Sheehan* 64%Winner	Faust 36%
Albany Rep.	PurdyWinner	Uncontested
Albany Con.	PurdyWinner	Uncontested
+ View all
* Incumbent 
Public AdvocateSee full results »
Race	Candidates	
New York City Dem.	Williams* 71%Winner	Herbert 21%
New York City Rep.	NampiaparampilWinner	Uncontested
New York City Con.	HerbertWinner	Uncontested
* Incumbent 
District AttorneySee full results »
Race	Candidates	
Brooklyn Dem.	Gonzalez*Winner	Uncontested
Manhattan Dem.	Bragg 34%	Farhadian Weinstein 31%
Manhattan Rep.	KenniffWinner	Uncontested
* Incumbent 
Borough PresidentSee full results »
Race	Candidates	
Bronx Dem.	Gibson 39%	Cabrera 35%
Bronx Rep.	KingWinner	Uncontested
Bronx Con.	RaveloWinner	Uncontested
+ View all
* Incumbent 
City CouncilSee full results »
District	Candidates	
1 Dem.	Marte 40%	Low 18%
1 Rep.	ToboroffWinner	Uncontested
2 Dem.	Rivera* 73%Winner	Hussein 27%
+ View all
* Incumbent 
ComptrollerSee full results »
Race	Candidates	
New York City Dem.	Lander 31%	Johnson 23%
New York City Rep.	CarrerasWinner	Uncontested
New York City Con.	RodriguezWinner	Uncontested
County Executive
Race	Candidates	
Nassau Dem.	Curran*Winner	Uncontested
Nassau Rep.	BlakemanWinner	Uncontested
Nassau Con.	BlakemanWinner	Uncontested
+ View all
* Incumbent 
Supervisor
Race	Candidates	
Babylon Dem.	Schaffer*Winner	Uncontested
Babylon Rep.	MartinWinner	Uncontested
Babylon Con.	SchafferWinner	Uncontested
+ View all
* Incumbent 
Related Coverage
Meet the Candidates
Meet the Candidates
Feb. 3, 2021
Video Interviews
Video Interviews
May 17, 2021
How Ranked Choice Voting Works
How Ranked Choice Voting Works
April 22, 2021
When to Expect Results
When to Expect Results
June 21, 2021
Source: Election results and race calls from The Associated Press
By Annie Daniel, Andrew Fischer, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. Lee, Rebecca Lieberman, Charlie Smart and Isaac White
NYC 
Supermarket duopoly: What Nicola Willis’ adviser thinks about breaking up Foodstuffs and Woolworths – Jenée Tibshraeny Hope Nicola delivers Kai costs too much https://t.co/67ud2Et75x — Shane te Pou (@PouTepou) March 30, 2025  
Comments
Post a Comment