The public advocate has the formal role of presiding over meetings of the New York City Council (although the Speaker elected by the Council itself now does much of this work), and, until the next election, would serve as acting Mayor whenever the elected Mayor is unable to serve.
This election has drawn significant interest from politicians looking to advance their careers, as the extension of New York City term limits allows more incumbents to seek reelection.[2]
Candidates included CouncilmanEric Gioia of Queens, who has raised $2.5 million for the campaign; Norman Siegel, the civil liberties lawyer who lost in a runoff to Gotbaum in 2001; former public advocate Mark Green, and Councilman Bill de Blasio of Brooklyn.
After acknowledging he was considering the race in December 2008,[4] Green announced on February 10, 2009, that he would again run for the office.[5][6] Green was Gotbaum's predecessor as public advocate and the first person to hold this title. His entry changed the landscape of the race, due to his name recognition and ability to raise money.[7]
Councilman John Liu, also from Queens, had been considered a potential candidate for advocate, but he ran for and won the office of New York City Comptroller—an office uncontested by the current city comptroller, Bill Thompson, who preferred to seek election as mayor in 2009.[8] Councilwoman Jessica Lappin and Guillermo Linares, a former councilman and current commissioner of the Mayor's Office of Immigrant Affairs, were also considering a run[2]AssemblymanAdam Clayton Powell IV was also considered a potential candidate.[7] Lappin decided not to run.[9]Imtiaz S. Syed, a lawyer, economist, investigative accountant, banker, administrator and management consultant, also ran.[10]
On September 15, 2009, de Blasio won 32.6% of the Democratic primary vote and Green 31.5%. (Most of the remaining 36% of the primary voters cast their ballots for Gioia or Siegel.) Neither de Blasio nor Green won enough votes (40%) to avoid a run-off primary election between them two weeks later.
On September 29, Bill de Blasio won that Democratic primary run-off by 62.4% to 37.6% for Mark Green. Turnout was very light, about 220,000 or 10% of the eligible voters, according to The Associated Press. (In the same run-off election, John Liu led his fellow City Councilman David Yassky, of Brooklyn, for the Democratic nomination for New York City Comptroller by 56% to 44% of a similar turnout.)[11]
Republican party
Alex Zablocki, an aide to State Senator Andrew Lanza of Staten Island, declared his candidacy. At 26 years old, Zablocki was the youngest candidate to run for public advocate.[citation needed]
Gotbaum set up meetings with each of her potential successors in order to help them understand the position.[12] On March 30, 2009, Alex Zablocki, Republican candidate for public advocate, met with Gotbaum in her office for about an hour to discuss the importance of the office and afterwards thanked her for her service.[13]
On March 10, Fordham Law School hosted a town hall meeting with Gioia, Siegel, de Blasio and Green.[14] Zablocki was not invited, which he considered an "outrage". The organizer said that he believed students wanted to see the Democratic contenders first, and wished to set up a debate including Zablocki in the future.
Endorsements
De Blasio was endorsed by The New York Times,[15] the Working Families Party, and over 150 elected officials and organizations.[16][17] Gioia was endorsed by various labor unions, including Local One of the Stagehands, the Sergeants Benevolent Association (SBA) and the Captains Endowment Association (CEA).[18][19] Alex Zablocki was endorsed by all five Republican county organizations in New York City,[20] led by his home borough of Staten Island.[21] Alex Zablocki was also endorsed by the Staten Island Advance on October 30, 2009,[22] as well as The Wave,[23] Rockaway's leading newspaper, on October 23, 2009.
^"Archived copy"(PDF). Archived from the original(PDF) on October 7, 2009. Retrieved August 31, 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) Board of Elections in the City of New York.