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1985 New York City Council presidential election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1985 New York City Council presidential election

← 1981
November 5, 1985
1989 →
 
NomineeAndrew SteinEvelyn Guardarramas
PartyDemocraticRepublican
AllianceLiberalConservative
Popular vote799,431143,277
Percentage83.0%14.9%

Results by State Assembly district
Stein:     70–80%     80–90%     >90%

President of the City Council before election

Carol Bellamy
Democratic

Elected President of the City Council

Andrew Stein
Democratic

Elections in New York
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An election was held on November 5, 1985 to elect the President of theNew York City Council. Democratic incumbentCarol Bellamy ran for mayor againstEd Koch, leaving the seat vacant for the next term.Andrew J. Stein won the open race, defeatingKenneth Lipper in the Democratic primary. Stein won the general election in a landslide.

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]

Campaign

[edit]

The campaign evolved into a two-way race between Lipper and Stein. As the only office without an incumbent candidate, it was one of the most expensive and hostile in New York City history.[1] Each of the two main candidates ran multi-million dollar advertising campaigns accusing the other of unethical behavior, with Lipper calling Stein ''a cheap thief''.[1] Another Lipper ad accused Stein of money laundering for having loaned money to his campaigns which he repaid himself with campaign contributions from real estate developers. ''Andy Stein's been going to the laundry, and he's been taking us to the cleaners,'' the commercial said.[3] Another accused him of poor attendance as a member of the State Assembly, depicting him on vacations in Germany and the Caribbean.[3] Stein fired back by calling Lipper "very frustrated and desperate" and his campaign "completely negative."[3]

Lipper, DelToro and Ruiz were initially removed from the ballot following a legal challenge to their nominating petitions, but the Appellate Division court restored them each to the ballot.[4]

Observers described the primary as two races–one for the nomination and a second election between DelToro, Erazo and Ruiz to demonstrate support from the city's Hispanic communities.[3]

Results

[edit]

Polls closed at 9:00 p.m.[5]

Results by State Assembly district
  Stein
  •   20%–30%
  •   30%–40%
  •   40%–50%
  •   50%–60%
  •   60%–70%
  Lipper
  •   30%–40%
  Ruiz
  •   30%–40%
  DelToro
  •   40%–50%
1985 Democratic Council President primary (unofficial)[6]
PartyCandidateVotes%
DemocraticAndrew Stein286,46149.43%
DemocraticKenneth Lipper140,43224.23%
DemocraticIsrael Ruiz Jr.46,8468.08%
DemocraticAngelo DelToro37,3986.45%
DemocraticJoseph R. Erazo34,5755.97%
DemocraticLorraine Stevens33,2325.73%
Total votes579,484100.00%

Lipper conceded defeat at 10:00 p.m. at the Westbury Hotel. Stein claimed victory shortly afterwards. In his victory speech, he claimed a broad mandate, saying, "We won in every borough with every ethnic group and a broad coalition of people. I think it was also a mandate on my 17 years in public office. I had the record and I don't think anyone else did."[1]

Lipper initially did not make reference to Stein, but in an interview on election night, concluded that "business is a much more ethical and honorable affair than politics. I learned unhappily that my deep concern for the fate of New York was not shared by the public itself in terms of turning out to vote. After all, it's all our subways, all our education system, all our streets that are unsafe."[1]

General election

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
  • Evelyn Guardarramas (Republican)
  • Angela M. Powderly (Right to Life)
  • Andrew Stein, Manhattan Borough President (Democratic and Liberal)

Campaign

[edit]

Stein effectively stopped campaigning after winning the Democratic nomination.[7] Guardarramas attempted to distance herself from her running mate for mayor, Diane McGrath, after McGrath made several controversial proposals, in particular her promise to replace Police Commissioner Benjamin Ward and Schools Chancellor Nathan Quinones. Guardarramas instead endorsed incumbent mayor Ed Koch.[7] In response, the Republican and Conservative parties urged voters to boycott her campaign and leave the Council President race blank.[8]Guy Velella, running for Comptroller as the third candidate on the Republican-Conservative ticket, publicly attacked Guardarramas for "ranting over nonexistent biases.''[9]

Results

[edit]
1985 New York City Council President election (unofficial)[10]
PartyCandidateVotes%
DemocraticAndrew Stein799,44183.03%
RepublicanEvelyn Guardarramas143,27714.88%
Right to LifeAngela M. Powderly20,0932.09%
Total votes962,811100.00%

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdefghijSchmalz, Jeffrey (1985-09-11)."BOROUGH CHIEF DEFEATS LIPPER BY 2-TO-1 EDGE".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved2025-02-17.
  2. ^ab"Opinion | For the City Council".The New York Times. 1985-09-05.ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved2025-02-17.
  3. ^abcdOreskes, Michael (1985-08-13)."COUNCIL PRESIDENT RACE TO SET A SPENDING RECORD".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved2025-02-17.
  4. ^Lynn, Frank (1985-08-26)."COUNCIL PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES CHALLENGED ANEW".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved2025-02-17.
  5. ^Goldman, John J. (1985-09-11)."Koch Wins by Landslide in N.Y. Mayoral Primary; Young Scores Victory in Detroit".Los Angeles Times. Retrieved2025-02-17.
  6. ^"Voting Totals in City Primary".The New York Times. September 12, 1985. p. B6.
  7. ^ab"Ho-hum race for mayor in New York - UPI Archives".UPI. Retrieved2025-02-17.
  8. ^"Voter Boycott Is Urged In Guardarramas Race".The New York Times. 1985-10-19.ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved2025-02-17.
  9. ^Schmalz, Jeffrey (1985-10-15)."G.O.P. RIFT WIDENS FOLLOWING CRITICISM OF MAYOR NOMINEE".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved2025-02-17.
  10. ^"Election Results from Voting Tuesday in City and on Long Island".The New York Times. November 7, 1985. p. B6.
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