NYC, Election Day
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FOX 5 New York on MSN
NYC mayoral debate tonight: Here's what was said
Cuomo and Mamdani go back and forth. “Zohran your resume could fit on a cocktail napkin, and Andrew your failures could fill a public school library in New York City," Sliwa said.
With early voting starting on Saturday, Oct. 25, NYC mayoral candidates debate for the last time on Oct. 22 before voters head to polls.
Before elections on Nov. 4, the candidates will face each other in a second debate that promises to be as fiery as the first one. What to know.
FOX 5 New York on MSN
Candidates prepare for final debate l Oct. 22 election update
With Election Day in NYC just 13 days away, Zohran Mamdani, Andrew Cuomo and Curtis Sliwa will meet for the final time on the debate stage.
Just The News on MSN
Watch Live: Mamdani faces off against Sliwa and Cuomo in NYC mayoral debate
The debate takes place at 30 Rock and there is no audience in the studio. The debate is hosted by NBC 4 New York/WNBC, Telemundo 47/WNJU, and Politico New York.
He was the overwhelming favorite heading into the Democratic Primary, but lost decisively. Now, heading into the first general election debate — Andrew Cuomo is the decided underdog in the New York City mayor’s race.
Cuomo hopes to close the gap, Sliwa refuses to bow out despite mounting pressure, and Mamdani leans on momentum from progressives. Three rivals, one last chance to win over New York.
Former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, independent candidate for mayor of New York City, called his opponent and Democratic candidate Zohran Mamdani "very divisive" and said he doesn't understand the "New York way," during a wide-ranging interview with "ABC News Live Prime" anchor Linsey Davis just days before Election Day.
The first New York mayoral debate has already taken place. Here's where to watch it and how to watch the next one.
Zohran Mamdani, Curtis Sliwa and Andrew Cuomo, the three candidates in New York City’s mayoral race, clashed during the final NYC mayoral debate last week. As Cornell voters prepared to cast their ballots on Nov. 4, students from New York City expressed mixed reactions to the arguments made onstage and the candidates' campaigns.