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Zohran Mamdani, a 34-year-old state lawmaker, was elected New York's 111th mayor on Tuesday, riding a historic surge of enthusiasm as the nation's largest city embraced generational and ideological change. The Associated Press called the race just 35 minutes after polls closed, cementing a stunning upset that took root in June's Democratic primary. Then and now, Mr. Mamdani handily dispatched former Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, the scion of a New York dynasty, and the big-money super PACs backing him. Tuesday's results underscored how thoroughly Mr. Mamdani has built his own new coalition of support, uniting younger voters with working-class immigrant enclaves in Queens. But he also made gains in working-class Black and Latino communities compared with the primary. Here are seven takeaways from election night: Mamdani got the most votes since the 1960s. In an era of low turnout nationwide, participation in Tuesday's mayoral election in New York City was nothing short of electric, approaching numbers not seen in half a century. More than 2 million New Yorkers cast their ballots. That figure was almost double the 1,100,000 people who voted for mayor four years ago. In some areas of Brooklyn, Queens and Manhattan, participation approached presidential election levels. Mr. Mamdani drove the surge. He was the first candidate since John V. Lindsay in 1969 to win over one million votes in a mayoral election in the five boroughs. (Overall turnout that year, 2,458,203 people, still slightly topped Tuesday's total, though.) Mamdani built his own new Democratic coalition. For decades, Democrats in New York City have prevailed with a fairly static coalition: white liberals in Manhattan and Brooklyn, Black and Latino voters, ultra-Orthodox Jewish communities and a smattering of other immigrants. Early results suggest that Mr. Mamdani reworked the contours of that coalition, stitching together new alliances that could shift the city's political outlook for years to come.
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1 Zohran Mamdani, a 34-year-old state lawmaker, was elected New York's 111th mayor on Tuesday, riding a historic surge of enthusiasm as the nation's largest city embraced generational and ideological change. 2 The Associated Press called the race just 35 minutes after polls closed, cementing a stunning upset that took root in June's Democratic primary. 3 Then and now, Mr. Mamdani handily dispatched former Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, the scion of a New York dynasty, and the big-money super PACs backing him. 4 Tuesday's results underscored how thoroughly Mr. Mamdani has built his own new coalition of support, uniting younger voters with working-class immigrant enclaves in Queens. 5 But he also made gains in working-class Black and Latino communities compared with the primary. 6 Here are seven takeaways from election night: Mamdani got the most votes since the 1960s. 7 In an era of low turnout nationwide, participation in Tuesday's mayoral election in New York City was nothing short of electric, approaching numbers not seen in half a century. 8 More than 2 million New Yorkers cast their ballots. 9 That figure was almost double the 1,100,000 people who voted for mayor four years ago. 10 In some areas of Brooklyn, Queens and Manhattan, participation approached presidential election levels. 11 Mr. Mamdani drove the surge. 12 He was the first candidate since John V. Lindsay in 1969 to win over one million votes in a mayoral election in the five boroughs. 13 (Overall turnout that year, 2,458,203 people, still slightly topped Tuesday's total, though.) 14 Mamdani built his own new Democratic coalition. 15 For decades, Democrats in New York City have prevailed with a fairly static coalition: white liberals in Manhattan and Brooklyn, Black and Latino voters, ultra-Orthodox Jewish communities and a smattering of other immigrants. 16 Early results suggest that Mr. Mamdani reworked the contours of that coalition, stitching together new alliances that could shift the city's political outlook for years to come.