This week's SCOTUS summary is found here.
We had a significant increase in turnout, with as many voters as there were since 1969. The increase is relative, with only around 40% taking part. The Bronx had a paltry 28%. My city council district changed hands. What small fraction decided the result?
Voting is a civic obligation. Many people think it is pointless to vote, including if they don't like the candidates. Republicans often felt they were wasting their vote, helping someone they strongly opposed in the process. Others also did not like Mamdani.
It is still important for people to vote. There were also other races and six ballot measures. The two links provide some voting analysis. For instance, the black vote significantly shifted from Cuomo in the primary to Mamdani in the general. Recall Mayor Eric Adams (black) was not in the primary.
One analysis argues that Mamdani's leading reform proposals are cheap as a segment of the overall budget. The analysis provides some interesting information, including that free buses seem less extreme when 48% already do not pay for bus fares.
(That seems high, but there was a study comparing riders to fares obtained. I don't take buses too much, but have seen evidence of the overall practice.)
Meanwhile, NY SNAP funding will continue even in the face of the government shutdown and Trump shenanigans. I expected state funding would help.
[ETA: After last night's SCOTUS order, the SNAP benefits are more up in the air. The linked article was updated since I first posted this.]
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This entry has links to three online newspapers covering NYC and NY state news, as well as one to an NYT article. The (free) NY-specific online papers have provided helpful local coverage.
Paywalls are annoying but fair since media providers need to be paid. Archived content can help avoid it. Also, you can fiddle around with the browser, including cookie settings, to avoid some others.

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Thanks for your .02!