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Filed: Sunday, March 10, 2013

New York.USA

Openly gay city council speaker launches New York City mayoral bid

Would be the first female and first openly gay mayor to lead the nation's largest city
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NEW YORK — Long seen as a leading contender, City Council Speaker Christine Quinn formally launched Sunday what she hopes will be a history-making mayoral bid.

A veteran of city politics, Quinn would be a groundbreaking mayor across two personal dimensions: She would be the first female and first openly gay mayor to lead the nation’s largest city.

Announcing on Twitter that she’s in the race, Quinn said she wanted to give middle- and working-class New Yorkers the same opportunities generations of her family got when they came here.

Christine Quinn
Photo: Seth Wenig, AP

“I’m running for mayor because I love this city. It’s the greatest place in the world,” she said in a video linked to her post, before starting what she called a walk-and-talk tour intended to take her to every neighborhood in the city before the Democratic primary in September.

Her first stop was the upper Manhattan neighborhood of Inwood, where she was surrounded by supporters carrying signs that read “Christine Quinn for Mayor” and wearing baseball caps with her initials on them.

Before the walk, Quinn told reporters, “I’m running today and I’ll stack my record against anybody else’s in this field. … I balance budgets on time, and I had the wisdom in the first three years I was speaker, when there were surpluses, to not spend that money.”

Her attempts to meet the people led to a classic New York City moment.

She shook hands with everyone — people on the street, workers in a diner and even a bedraggled-looking man sitting on a sidewalk bench.

“Hi, I’m Christine Quinn and I’m running for mayor,” she told the man, who looked up at her, seemingly puzzled.

“I need some change,” he replied as she searched her pockets, saying, “I don’t have any.”

A former tenant organizer and director of a gay and lesbian advocacy group, Quinn, 46, has been on the City Council since 1999 and its leader since 2006. The position has afforded her considerable exposure going into the crowded field of candidates vying to succeed term-limited Mayor Michael Bloomberg.

She’s enjoyed a considerable edge over other Democratic contenders in polls. A Quinnipiac University poll late last month gave her 37 percent of the Democratic vote, while her opponents each got less than 15 percent. Registered Democrats outnumber Republicans more than 6 to 1 in the city, though that hasn’t translated into Democratic success in a mayor’s race since 1989.

Quinn has generally been perceived as likely to get the backing of Republican-turned-independent Bloomberg, and with it support from business leaders.

Some of her Democratic opponents have tried to use that against her, suggesting Quinn is too close to a mayor they say has sometimes turned a cold shoulder to the concerns of middle-class and working-class New Yorkers. Opponents have faulted her, for example, for joining Bloomberg in opposing a plan to require businesses with at least five employees to provide paid sick leave. Quinn has said it’s a worthy goal, but now is not the economic time to do it.

She also has taken heat for helping Bloomberg get the council to agree to extend term limits so he could run for a third time in 2008, without asking the voters who had approved a two-term limit twice in the 1990s.

In office, Quinn leads 50 other council members and largely controls what proposals come to a vote. Under her leadership, the council has taken on matters including requiring electronics manufacturers to collect their products for recycling, making it tougher for immigration officials to deport people being released from city jails or police custody and barring employers from discriminating against unemployed job applicants — the last of which Bloomberg vetoed. Quinn has vowed the council will override his veto.

Quinn and her longtime partner, products liability lawyer Kim Catullo, married last year after more than a decade together. Their wedding guest list was a who’s-who of New York politics, with Gov. Andrew Cuomo, Bloomberg and many other officeholders in attendance.

The year before, Quinn had invoked her personal story in lobbying state lawmakers to legalize gay marriage, a cause Cuomo championed. She called it “one of the best feelings I have ever had in my life” when the measure passed in June 2011.

Her announced and likely Democratic opponents include former City Councilman Sal Albanese; Public Advocate Bill de Blasio; Comptroller John Liu; and former Comptroller Bill Thompson.

Republican contenders include former Metropolitan Transportation Authority Chairman Joseph Lhota; Tom Allon, a publisher; billionaire businessman John Catsimatidis; and George McDonald, the head of a nonprofit that helps the homeless.

Former Bronx borough president and federal housing official Adolfo Carrion, a former Democrat who is now unaffiliated, is running on the Independence Party line and seeking Republican backing.

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Tags: Christine Quinn, LGBT Politicians, New York, New York City

Filed under: Editor's Picks, New York

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11 more reader comments:

  1. Cool beans!

    Posted on Sunday, March 10, 2013 at 10:30am
  2. Imagine the amount of new Home Depots, Doc Marten Retail Outlets, organic grocery stores and dog walking parks she could add to Manhattan! She has my vote!

    Posted on Sunday, March 10, 2013 at 10:42am
  3. not sure how i feel about this one.

    Posted on Sunday, March 10, 2013 at 10:46am
  4. No! this woman is a horrible leader. many in the nyc lgbt community do NOT support her. She will only vote in favor of lobbyists that support her.

    Posted on Sunday, March 10, 2013 at 10:47am
  5. Woo hoo!

    Posted on Sunday, March 10, 2013 at 10:51am
  6. HORRIBLE LEADER. SHE ALLOWED FOR ST. VINCENT’S HOSPITAL TO SHUT DOWN. SHE’S REALLY PART OF THE RICH PEOPLE. DON’T VOTE FOR HER. I THINK JOHN LIU IS THE BEST.

    Posted on Sunday, March 10, 2013 at 10:54am
  7. you go Girl!

    Posted on Sunday, March 10, 2013 at 11:27am
  8. Hm. Support the fact that someone who identifies as homosexual can run for office in this day and age. I do not support this particular woman as a canidate, however, after reading other comments and doing some research.

    Posted on Sunday, March 10, 2013 at 12:12pm
  9. Oh dear the crazies are gonna flip”she’s trying to turn our Christian nation gay”lol nope crazies we don’t turn ppl gay. We just want the ones who already are to be equally treated. LGBT Americans openly holding positions in law means possibility of equal treatment.

    Posted on Monday, March 11, 2013 at 8:06am
  10. Jeremy ur drunk, go home!

    Posted on Monday, March 11, 2013 at 10:39am
  11. When I was at CHURCH, they taught me somethin’ else. If you preach hat at the service, those words aren’t annointed. The Holy Water that you soak in has been poisoned!!!

    Posted on Monday, March 11, 2013 at 10:40am
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