Anthony Weiner announces NYC mayor run - Politico

Diablo

New member
Former Rep. Anthony Weiner, whose career in public life came to an abrupt end when he sent lewd pictures to a college student on Twitter, jumped back into politics on Wednesday by announcing a bid for mayor of New York City.
“Look, I’ve made some big mistakes and I know I’ve let a lot of people down,” the Democrat said in a 2-minute video announcing his bid. “But I’ve also learned some tough lessons. I’m running for mayor because I’ve been fighting for the middle class and those struggling to make it for my entire life. And I hope I get a second chance to work for you.”
Continue Reading


Weiner’s wife, long-time Hillary Clinton aide Huma Abedin, also appears in the video endorsing her husband’s run.
“We love this city, and no one will work harder to make it better than Anthony,” she says.
(QUIZ: Do you know Anthony Weiner?)
The announcement comes only six weeks after Weiner emerged from political hibernation with a profile in the New York Times Magazine portraying him as contrite and lacking the “burning, overriding desire” to run for mayor. Weiner starts the race for mayor as an underdog, but appears to be counting on a middle class-focused message and a formidable war chest to put him over the top.
A Quinnipiac University poll released Wednesday morning found City Council Speaker Christine Quinn, the long-time frontrunner, drawing 25 percent of the vote to Weiner’s 15 percent in the multi-candidate Democratic primary. Twenty-seven percent of Democratic primary voters were undecided. Nearly half of the city’s voters said Weiner shouldn’t run for mayor, including 52 percent of women and 44 percent of Democrats.
An April poll found only 46 percent of the city’s Democrats would even consider voting for him — bad news when a Democrat needs 40 percent of the vote to avoid a runoff election.
(PHOTOS: Scandal pols: Where are they now?)
The city’s public advocate, Bill de Blasio, and comptroller, John Liu, are also running to succeed three-term Mayor Michael Bloomberg, as is the party’s 2009 nominee, Bill Thompson. Former MTA chief and Rudy Giuliani aid Joe Lhota is the GOP frontrunner.
Weiner has had some trouble recruiting staff for his run, with many long-time consultants taking a pass, but hired a campaign manager last week. It’s also unclear if allies built up over Weiner and Abedin’s long careers in politics will stand by them. Sen. Chuck Schumer, who gave Weiner his start as a congressional staffer, declined to comment when asked in April about a Weiner bid. And both Clintons said they wouldn’t endorse a candidate in the crowded Democratic primary.
Throughout the video, the Brooklyn native-turned-Manhattan resident repeatedly suggests he is the candidate who can keep New York City from turning into a playground for the rich.
“The very people who put everything they had into this city are getting priced right out of it,” he says in his campaign announcement video, before pitching his 64-part plan to save the city. “But it doesn’t have to be that way.”
Towards the end of the video, Weiner declares that New York City “should be the middle class capital of the world.”

p-89EKCgBk8MZdE.gif
 
Back
Top