Tuesday’s election results were simply incredible. Two major citywide upsets. Two major milestones for civil rights and equality in New York City.  And seven inspiring, first-time candidates for City Council made it across the finish line.

The lesson is clear: when people organize and act, we can carry on the wave of progressive change that started with Barack Obama’s victory last November.

The Working Families Party started this election year with a simple idea.  If we have a community organizer in the White House, why not put a few community organizers in City Hall?

So we scoured the city, looking for neighborhood leaders, tenant activists, and even the occasional progressive policy advocate.  We found some incredible candidates. And after months of hard work – knocking on thousands of doors, recruiting hundreds of volunteers, after talking to voters day-in, day-out about the issues that matter in their community – we did it.

Here are the highlights:


On the City Council, there were even more progressive victories for WFP candidates:


Not every progressive winner was a newcomer - some very worthy D-WFP incumbents were also returned to office. And, one race where WFP stayed out deserves special mention: insurgent Margaret Chin became the first Asian American elected official in Manhattan.

We didn’t win every race. Four of our candidates - Richard Aborn, S.J. Jung, Lynn Schulman, and Mark Winston-Griffith - ran great campaigns and came close to pulling off big upsets.
It was a great night, but it’s only the beginning.  There’s lots more work to do, and as always, we’ll need your help every step of the way.

[By Dan Cantor - WFP Executive Director]

(Read more about this amazing progressive victory in an article by the New York Times.)

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