logo
Live Updates: New Yorkers Hurry to Vote Before Polls Close in Democratic Primary for Mayor

Live Updates: New Yorkers Hurry to Vote Before Polls Close in Democratic Primary for Mayor

New York Times6 hours ago

Anthony Weiner, after serving a prison sentence for sharing explicit photos with a minor, is running for City Council in Manhattan.
Anthony Weiner, posted on a sunbaked corner of the East Village on Tuesday, had stooped to hear an older woman tell him that she had just voted for him when a much younger woman stopped, took a quick selfie in front of the candidate and muttered 'pedophile.'
'What did she say?' the older woman asked.
'Supports another candidate,' Mr. Weiner deadpanned.
That he is himself a candidate is a plot twist in a story that many believed had ended badly. Mr. Weiner resigned from Congress in 2011 following a sexting scandal. A second sexting scandal cost him a run for mayor in 2013. Four years later, he was convicted of a felony and served 18 months in prison for sharing sexually explicit photos and texts with a 15-year-old girl.
He is now seeking an improbable comeback, running for a City Council seat in Lower Manhattan, asking voters to return him to an office he first won in 1991, in his mid-20s, in a Brooklyn district.
During his campaign, he has owned those dark episodes without, as he put it, 'wallowing' in them — 'contrition, but not scraping.' He hopes his practical, street-level ideas to fix what ails the city — hire more police officers, find proper care for the mentally ill and homeless living in parks — attract voters ready to set aside his past.
'I can't think of another political campaign that's quite like this,' he said.
One thing that is undeniable, watching him greet person after person under a punishing midday sun that reduced his pole-thin shadow to a sliver, is that Mr. Weiner loves this part of the game. He is a tireless retail politician.
'You guys vote yet?' he asked a passing couple.
'We're not from here.'
'Maybe someday!' he replied.
He recalls running for the Council in 1991 and has pictures of himself that year, looking gaunt and strung out.
'I'd be out at 2 in the morning at a 24-hour-supermarket, walking the aisles,' looking for voters, he said.
'I always thought to be good at this job, you have to like this stuff — I do,' he said between greetings. 'When I was cranky, my staff would send me to a senior center.'
He said the idea of running for office again sounded ridiculous just months ago. 'Did you forget how that turned out the first time?' he'd ask people urging him to step forward. Then he found himself running out of reasons to say no.
He felt the city needed to move in new directions and urged others to run for office. 'But I wasn't willing to do it, because someone might say something mean to me. It didn't seem fair,' he said.
And he looked around and found himself in ample company of fallen politicians from the #MeToo movement testing the waters of voter forgiveness. Why not him as well?
On the corner, a woman asked for a selfie. He smiled for the camera and asked, 'Did you vote for me?'
'Yes,' she said.
'If I win by one vote, I'll know who to thank.'
The woman, a 34-year-old high school teacher who did not want to give her name, walked away down the block, and confided, 'I did not vote for him. What was I going to say? I grew up here, and I know the history of Anthony Weiner.' And, she said, she wants a woman in that seat.
Image
A 34-year-old high school teacher hesitated to tell Mr. Weiner that she had not voted for him.
Credit...
Dave Sanders for The New York Times
The woman who had called him a pedophile stepped out of a nearby bagel shop with her order and ignored the candidate on her return trip.
By then, Kevin Mahon, a lifetime New Yorker, had stopped to tell Mr. Weiner he appreciated his nuanced thoughts on crime — that while it is down overall, isolated incidents continue to make people uneasy.
'The pandemic, the homeless on the street, rattled everyone,' Mr. Mahon said. As for Mr. Weiner's past, 'Everyone's got it,' he said. 'He did his time, whatever. He deserves a shot.'
Mr. Weiner, who is facing four other Democrats in the primary, was wearing his third shirt of the day by 10 a.m., having sweated through the first two. He and his team — 'the pirates,' he calls them — were on the streets at 4 a.m. posting campaign signs outside the district's more than two dozen polling places.
The election capped a surreal couple of weeks. Earlier this month, his former wife, Huma Abedin — she divorced Mr. Weiner during the scandals — married Alex Soros, the son of the billionaire donor George Soros, in a lavish wedding in the Hamptons that attracted Democratic royalty.
'I didn't go,' Mr. Weiner quipped, then softened. 'I'm very, very happy for her,' he said.
Another woman asked for a selfie, guiding Mr. Weiner to face the sun for better lighting. 'Let's take a whole montage,' he said, and she walked away smiling.
'He's an interesting New Yorker,' she said.
There was a time when his friends suggested Mr. Weiner should pack up and leave the city for someplace where he could lie low and be anonymous. He had a standard reply.
'Do I look like I would fit in anywhere else?'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Top Biden aide admits to Congress she directed autopen signatures without knowing who gave final approval
Top Biden aide admits to Congress she directed autopen signatures without knowing who gave final approval

Yahoo

time10 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Top Biden aide admits to Congress she directed autopen signatures without knowing who gave final approval

A former top aide to President Joe Biden said she was authorized to direct autopen signatures but was unaware of who in the president's inner circle was giving her final clearance, according to a source familiar with the aide's closed-door testimony in front of Congress Tuesday. Neera Tanden, the former director of Biden's Domestic Policy Council, testified for hours Tuesday during an interview in front of the House Oversight Committee, which is investigating the former president's mental acuity and his use of an automatic signature tool that allowed aides to sign pardons, memos and other important documents on Biden's behalf. During Tanden's interview before Congress, which lasted more than five hours, she told lawmakers that, in her role as staff secretary and senior advisor to the former president between 2021 and 2023, she was authorized to direct autopen signatures on behalf of Biden, an Oversight Committee official told Fox News. The system of approval used, according to Tanden's testimony relayed to Fox News, was inherited from previous administrations. Who Is Neera Tanden? The Controversial Dem Operative Who Testified On Biden's Mental Acuity But Tanden, who said she had limited interactions with Biden, described an approval process that left her in the dark about who specifically was giving final approval on the decisions to use the automatic signature tool, sources told Fox News. Tanden testified that to get approval for the use of autopen signatures she would send decision memos to members of Biden's inner circle. However, she added that she was not aware of what actions or approvals took place between the time she sent the decision memo and the time she received it back with the necessary approval. Read On The Fox News App When Tanden was asked whether she ever discussed Biden's health or his fitness to serve as president during her time as a top aide, including during the period of the former president's widely criticized debate performance last summer, Tanden said she did not. Lawmakers laid out a list of names of officials she could have potentially discussed it with, and Tanden said "no" to each name, according to a source familiar with her closed-door testimony. Biden Insists 'I Made The Decisions' As Republicans Investigate White House Autopen Use Tanden did not speak to reporters on the way to the Capitol Tuesday morning. Upon exiting, she expressed her willingness to cooperate with the ongoing investigation. "I just spoke with the House Oversight Committee, Majority and Minority Council. I answered every question, was pleased to discuss my public service and it was a thorough process. And I'm glad I answered everyone's question," Tanden told reporters. When subsequently asked whether there was any effort to hide Biden's condition, Tanden replied, "Absolutely not." In addition to Tanden, Biden's former White House physician, Dr. Kevin O'Connor, will appear for a deposition in front of House Oversight lawmakers after being subpoenaed by Republicans. In addition to O'Connor and Tanden, the Oversight Committee plans to hear from Anthony Bernal, who served as a senior advisor to former first lady Jill Biden; Annie Tomasini, who was Biden's former deputy chief of staff; and Ashley Williams, who was the former deputy director of Oval Office operations under Biden. Oversight Republicans are also seeking interviews with officials who were some of Biden's closest confidants, including former chief of staff Ron Klain and Anita Dunn, a former senior advisor to the president for article source: Top Biden aide admits to Congress she directed autopen signatures without knowing who gave final approval

State sends City of Turlock letter over lack of shelter funding
State sends City of Turlock letter over lack of shelter funding

CBS News

time15 minutes ago

  • CBS News

State sends City of Turlock letter over lack of shelter funding

The battle over funding for Turlock's We Care emergency men's shelter has triggered a deeper crisis: one that could cost the city millions in state money. The California Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD) says Turlock's refusal to allocate even a single dollar that would have unlocked nearly $270,000 in state funding for We Care points to a much bigger issue. In a letter to the city, HCD warns that Turlock's entire housing plan has been out of compliance since December 2023 and unless the city takes action, it risks steep fines, lawsuits and the loss of affordable housing funds. Mayor Amy Bublak defends the council's decision, saying the funding was tied to requests like 24-hour restrooms at the shelter and came down to accountability. "It just looked like a little bit of a threat, that that dollar was going to be what keeps them coming after you," Bublak told CBS13. "And that, to me, makes no sense." Bublak says the city is working on meeting housing requirements but argues the attention on Turlock has gone too far. "It just seems odd that the town of 73,000 — and they're hammering on us about this," she said. "We'll get it done. We're working on it." HCD has given Turlock until July 3 to respond with a plan, or face consequences that could include fines up to $100,000 a month and legal action from the state.

California bill would create regional housing authority to tackle homelessness
California bill would create regional housing authority to tackle homelessness

CBS News

time15 minutes ago

  • CBS News

California bill would create regional housing authority to tackle homelessness

A first-of-its-kind plan to help end homelessness will be unveiled in Sacramento on Wednesday. Supporters say it's an aggressive approach to getting more people off the streets and into permanent homes. State Senator Angelique Ashby is introducing a bill that would take a regional approach to creating new affordable housing. The proposal calls for creating a new government joint powers authority called the Sacramento Area Housing and Homelessness Agency. Mike Jaske with Sacramento Area Congregations Together says many homeless advocates have been calling for more regional cooperation. "The grand jury several years ago issued a report criticizing the homeless structure and recommending the JPA be formed," Jaske said. Right now, Sacramento County and its cities each have their own plans to build affordable housing that are not coordinated, and they are thousands of units short of the requirements set by the state. "You'd be hard pressed to find a jurisdiction that's actually on track to accomplish their numbers," Jaske said. This new idea would consolidate the region's housing needs into a single number, and housing tax money from the county and each city would be combined to help issue bonds and build more affordable units. The bill also disbands Sacramento's housing and redevelopment agency and its responsibilities would be taken over by this new board. "Senator Ashby should be applauded for taking a shot at proposing something that can be part of the solution," Jaske said. But Jaske says taking a regional approach still doesn't resolve the most pressing issue. "The most fundamental problem is not absence of coordination," Jaske said. "The fundamental problem to solving homelessness is insufficient funding. There simply is not enough money." Senator Ashby will be meeting with local government officials to unveil the details of the bill tomorrow.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store