New York City elected a record six out candidates to its City Council
Tuesday night.
The winners are Crystal Hudson (District 35) and Kristin Richardson
Jordan (District 9), the first two Black women from the LGBTQ+ community
elected to the council; Lynn Schulman (District 29) and Tiffany Cabán (District
22), the first women from the community elected to any public office from
Queens; Chi Ossé (District 36), at 23 the youngest person ever elected to the
council; and Erik Bottcher (District 3), who will preserve LGBTQ+
representation in his district, which is home to the Stonewall Inn.
Hudson’s and Ossé’s districts are in Brooklyn, Jordan’s and Bottcher’s
in Manhattan. Ossé, like Hudson and Jordan, is Black, Cabán is Latinx, and
Schulman and Bottcher are white.
The previous record was five out candidates elected at one time.
“New York City just elected one of the largest slates of LGBTQ City
Council candidates in the country and their diversity is reflective of the city
they will now represent,” Annise Parker, president and CEO of the LGBTQ Victory
Fund, which had endorsed all six. “As LGBTQ people and people of color continue
to reel from economic and health disparities exacerbated by the pandemic, these
new leaders will be on the frontlines ensuring inclusive legislation helps all
New Yorkers recover. This is a watershed moment for New York — and these LGBTQ
candidates are ready to deliver.”
All four current LGBTQ+ members of the council were termed out this
year, leading to concerns there would be less LGBTQ+ representation, but that
has turned out not to be the case.
New York also elected a new mayor Tuesday, Democrat Eric Adams, who has
been a police officer, state senator, and Brooklyn borough president. He easily
beat Republican Curtis Sliwa, best known as the founder of the Guardian Angels
volunteer safety patrol. Adams, who will be the city’s second Black mayor, was
endorsed by the Stonewall Democrats of NYC, the city’s largest LGBTQ+
Democratic club. The incumbent, Democrat Bill de Blasio, could not seek
reelection due to term limits.
SOURCE: ADVOCATE
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