Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

2017 New York City mayoral election

An election for Mayor of New York City was held on November 7, 2017. Incumbent Democratic Mayor Bill de Blasio won re-election to a second term with 66.2% of the vote against Republican Nicole Malliotakis.


An election for Mayor of New York City was held on November 7, 2017. Incumbent Democratic Mayor Bill de Blasio won re-election to a second term with 66.2% of the vote against Republican Nicole Malliotakis.

Bill de Blasio was elected mayor of New York City in 2013, with his term beginning January 1, 2014. De Blasio declared his intention to seek reelection in April 2015.

The following candidates filed petitions to have their names on the ballot during the primary elections: Democrats Bill De Blasio, Sal Albanese, Robert Gangi, Richard Bashner and Michael Tolkin, and Republicans Nicole Malliotakis, Rocky De La Fuente and Walter Iwachiw.

On May 9, 2017, the Libertarian Party nominated Aaron Commey. It was Commey's first run for political office. On August 1, 2017, the City Board of Elections determined in a hearing that Rocky De La Fuente had not received enough petition signatures to qualify for the Republican primary ballot. With De La Fuente's disqualification and the remaining Republican candidate, Walter Iwachiw, not reporting any fundraising for this election, Nicole Malliotakis was the only remaining candidate for the Republican nomination.

There were two Democratic primary debates, on August 23 and September 6. The candidates were incumbent mayor Bill De Blasio and former City Council member Sal Albanese. De Blasio won the primary.

The first general election debate was held on October 10, with De Blasio, Republican challenger Nicole Malliotakis, and independent candidate Bo Dietl. The second was held on November 1.

  • Bill de Blasio, incumbent mayor of New York City

  • Sal Albanese, former city councilman and candidate for mayor in 1997 and 2013

  • Richard Bashner, real estate attorney

  • Robert Gangi, activist

  • Michael Tolkin, entrepreneur

  • Tony Avella, state senator, former city councilman and candidate for mayor in 2009

  • Michael Basch, chief business officer of The Future Project

  • Kevin P. Coenen Jr., firefighter and candidate for mayor in 2009 and 2013

  • Bo Dietl, former Fox News contributor and former New York City Police Department detective (ran on the Independent line)

  • Scott Joyner, community advocate and service sector worker

  • Joel Roderiguez, police officer

  • Eric Roman

  • Collin Slattery, entrepreneur

  • Josh Thompson, education activist

  • Hillary Clinton, former U.S. Secretary of State, former U.S. Senator, former First Lady and nominee for president in 2016

  • Rubén Díaz, Jr., Bronx Borough President (ran for re-election)

  • Shaun Donovan, former Director of the Office of Management and Budget and former United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development

  • Harold Ford Jr., former U.S. Representative from Tennessee's 9th congressional district

  • Letitia James, New York City Public Advocate (ran for re-election)

  • Hakeem Jeffries, U.S. Representative from New York's 8th congressional district

  • Melissa Mark-Viverito, Speaker of the New York City Council

  • Eva Moskowitz, founder and CEO of Success Academy Charter Schools

  • Christine Quinn, former Speaker of the New York City Council and candidate for mayor in 2013

  • Scott Stringer, New York City Comptroller (running for re-election)

  • Anthony Weiner, former U.S. Representative for New York's 9th congressional district and candidate for mayor in 2005 and 2013

  • Keith L. T. Wright, former State Assemblyman

PartyCandidateVotes%
Democratic326,36174.6%
Democratic66,63615.2%
Democratic20,4454.7%
Democratic13,5373.1%
Democratic10,5382.4%
437,517100.0%
  • Nicole Malliotakis, state assemblywoman

  • Bo Dietl, former Fox News contributor and former New York City Police Department detective (ran on the Independent line)

  • Michel Faulkner, pastor and former New York Jets player (ran for comptroller)

  • Rocky De La Fuente, businessman, Reform Party and American Delta Party nominee for president in 2016, Democratic candidate for president in 2016 and Democratic candidate for the U.S. Senate from Florida in 2016 (disqualified from the Republican ballot by not having enough signatures)

  • Anniello (Neil) V. Grimaldi, attorney (did not file for the primary ballot)

  • Walter Iwachiw, businessman

  • Paul Massey, businessman

  • John Catsimatidis, businessman and candidate for mayor in 2013

  • Raymond Kelly, former New York City Police Commissioner

  • Donald Trump Jr., businessman and son of President of the United States Donald Trump

  • Eric Ulrich, city councilman (running for re-election)

Besides the Democratic and Republican parties, the Conservative, Green, Working Families, Independence, Reform, and Women's Equality parties are qualified New York parties, with automatic ballot access.

Paul Massey ran as an independent but suddenly withdrew.

Albanese was nominated by the Reform Party Committee. On September 12, 2017, an Opportunity to Ballot was held to determine whether Albanese would retain the party's nomination. Dietl and Malliotakis each attempted to the secure the party line. Albanese won the race with approximately 57% of the vote, defeating the write-in campaigns.

  • Sal Albanese, former city councilman and candidate for mayor in 1997 and 2013

  • Bill de Blasio, incumbent mayor

  • Aaron Commey, director of events for the Manhattan Libertarian Party

  • Bo Dietl, former Fox News contributor and former New York City Police Department detective (running on the "Dump the Mayor" line)

  • Dr. Robbie Gosine

  • Mike Tolkin, entrepreneur (running on the "Smart Cities" line)

  • Eric Armstead, security manager

  • Scott Berry, musician, author (did not qualify for ballot)

  • Garrett M. Bowser, self-employed (did not qualify for ballot)

  • Abbey Laurel-Smith, founder of the Pilgrims Alliance Party of America (did not qualify for ballot)

  • Ese O'Diah, CEO of Liquorbox

  • Karmen M. Smith, volunteer team leader with New York Cares (did not qualify for ballot)

  • Ahsan A. Syed (ran on the Theocratic Party line)

Poll sourceDate(s)administeredSamplesizeMargin oferrorBillde Blasio (D)NicoleMalliotakis (R)SalAlbanese (RF)BoDietl (I)OtherUndecided
NY1/Baruch CollegeOctober 20–27, 2017800 LV± 4.5%49%16%2%3%20%
WNBC/MaristOctober 3–4, 2017428 LV± 4.7%58%16%5%5%2%15%
857 RV± 3.3%55%15%5%5%3%17%
Quinnipiac UniversitySeptember 27 – October 4, 2017731 LV± 4.7%61%17%8%6%1%8%
WNBC/MaristSeptember 13–17, 2017451 LV± 4.6%65%18%8%2%7%
898 RV± 3.3%62%18%9%2%9%
Quinnipiac UniversityJuly 20–26, 2017877± 4.1%52%15%11%2%16%
57%22%4%13%
Quinnipiac UniversityMay 10–16, 20171,019± 3.1%64%21%1%10%

A total of 5,343 write-in votes were also certified by the Board of Elections. These included 982 votes for former mayors Michael Bloomberg, 12 for Rudy Giuliani, 9 for Fiorello La Guardia (deceased), 10 for Robbie Gosine, 3 for David Dinkins, and one each for John Lindsay, Abraham Beame, and Ed Koch (the latter three deceased), and 857 that could not be attributed to anybody or counted. The only other people to receive more than 100 write-in votes were former Sen. Hillary Clinton (240) and Christine Quinn, the former Speaker of the New York City Council (195).

PartyCandidateVotes%
Democratic713,63462.28
Working Families46,4784.06
Total760,11266.17
Republican274,42323.95
Conservative37,1973.25
Stop de BlasioNicole Malliotakis5,3270.46
TotalNicole Malliotakis316,94727.59
Reform24,4842.13
Green16,5361.44
Small Cities PartyMichael Tolkin11,3090.99
Dump the MayorBo Dietl11,1630.97
Libertarian2,7700.24
Write-in5,3430.47
1,148,66498.49
17,6491.51
1,166,314100

Manhattan was the only borough where de Blasio improved upon his 2013 margins.

General Election
ManhattanThe BronxBrooklynQueensStaten IslandTotal
Democratic - Working FamiliesBill de Blasio190,312117,712254,755171,86725,466760,112
Republican - Conservative- Stop de BlasioNicole Malliotakis53,85323,71574,34394,91170,125316,947
All others89,255
1,166,314
  • Sal Albanese (RF) for Mayor
  • Akeem Browder (G) for Mayor
  • Aaron Commey (L) for Mayor
  • Bill de Blasio (D) for Mayor
  • Bo Dietl (I) for Mayor
  • Nicole Malliotakis (R) for Mayor
Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 2017 New York City mayoral election — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report