by Andrew Trunsky

 

Former presidential candidate Andrew Yang holds a commanding lead over his Democratic opponents in New York City’s mayoral race, according to a Thursday Data for Progress poll.

The poll found Yang with 26%, double the support of Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams. City Comptroller Scott Stringer was third with 11% and MSNBC analyst Maya Wiley was fourth with 10%, while every other candidate had single-digit support.

Yang leads among virtually every demographic, according to the poll: black, Asian, Hispanic and white voters as well as men, women and voters with and without college degrees.

Data for Progress surveyed 1,007 likely voters from Mar. 21 to Apr. 5, and the poll has a margin of error of three points.

Though Yang only joined the race in January, he has sailed to frontrunner status and has raised eye-popping amounts of money. He has been a fierce advocate for reopening the city from pandemic restrictions, publicly buying movie tickets when theaters reopened and clashing with teachers unions over the delayed return to in-person school.

Yang may also benefit from ranked-choice voting, a format set to debut in New York City this year where voters rank their preferred candidates instead of choosing just one. The poll found that 31% of voters preferred Yang as their second choice, 18 points ahead of Adams.

The race’s Democratic and Republican primaries are slated for June 22, and the general election is on Nov. 2. If Yang wins the Democratic primary, he would enter the general election as the heavy favorite in the liberal city.

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Andrew Trunsky is a reporter at Daily Caller News Foundation.
Photo “Andrew Yang” by Andrew Yang.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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