New York City's June 22 mayoral primary is quickly approaching. We asked leading Democratic candidates about everything from police reform and climate change to their favorite bagel order and workout routine.
The race to become New York City’s next mayor is one of the most consequential political contests in a generation. But voters are still getting to know the candidates.
Here’s an overview of what we learned in our interviews: nyti.ms/3hxVAju
Eric Adams is running as a blue-collar New Yorker who will improve public safety. A former police officer, he is a sharp critic of police brutality, but does not support the “defund the police” movement. nyti.ms/2RgBv6x
Andrew Yang, a former Democratic presidential candidate, has proposed some bold, if unorthodox, ideas. He's never worked in city government and is running as an outsider. His signature plan is to give $2,000 a year to the city's poorest residents. nyti.ms/2RpT4Rx
Kathryn Garcia is a respected expert in city operations who is focused on combating climate change and helping small businesses. She speaks often of her experiences growing up in a diverse foster family. nyti.ms/2Rso8Ab
Maya Wiley, a former civil rights lawyer, is running as an expert on criminal justice who is focused on progressive issues like inequality. She wants to cut the NYPD budget and has proposed a “New Deal” for New York to create 100,000 jobs. nyti.ms/2RVcKN3
Raymond McGuire, a former Wall Street executive, has support from business leaders and Gwen Carr, the mother of Eric Garner. He often mentions his working-class roots in Dayton, Ohio, where he was raised by a single mother. nyti.ms/3ykFNu0
Dianne Morales, a former nonprofit executive, has called for providing poor and working-class New Yorkers with a guaranteed minimum income, funding social services by cutting the police budget, and desegregating schools. nyti.ms/3htQ5lP
Shaun Donovan, a former White House budget director, touts his experience managing budgets and expanding affordable housing. He speaks often about his time working in the Obama administration. nyti.ms/3eQriqi
Scott Stringer is a government veteran who is running on progressive issues like climate change and affordable housing. He has been accused of making unwanted sexual advances by a worker on his 2001 public advocate race, allegations he has denied. nyti.ms/2RY3eJ2
Watch our full interviews with New York City’s leading mayoral candidates here: nyti.ms/3tSooWo
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Apple has compromised on data security to placate Chinese authorities, according to internal company documents reviewed by The New York Times and interviews with current and former Apple employees and security experts. nyti.ms/3ooN87g
As Apple’s CEO Tim Cook touts his commitment to civil liberties and privacy, Apple has risked the data of its Chinese customers and has aided government censorship in the Chinese version of its App Store. nyti.ms/3ooN87g
Our analysis found that tens of thousands of apps have disappeared from the Chinese App Store, including foreign news sources, gay dating services and encrypted messaging apps. Apple has also blocked tools for organizing pro-democracy protests and skirting internet restrictions.
It’s Tax Day, the deadline for filing your 2020 taxes. It was pushed back to make it easier for taxpayers to get a handle on their finances, as well as changes that took effect this year with the signing of the American Rescue Plan. nyti.ms/2Qpan4G
The federal government and most U.S. states pushed back the tax filing date to May 17, but others have gone their own way. It’s a good idea to double-check deadlines. nyti.ms/2RhBEXp
There have been plenty of tax changes since the pandemic. Stimulus payments, retirement withdrawals and unemployment insurance could cut your bill or even generate extra refunds. nyti.ms/3webG5E
A U.S. government program intended to protect wild horses is instead subsidizing their path to destruction. nyti.ms/3wbUIEW
The Bureau of Land Management, which cares for the nation’s wild horses, created an Adoption Incentive Program to move a huge surplus of mustangs and burros out of government corrals and into “good homes.”
Records show that instead of going to “good homes,” truckloads of horses were dumped at slaughter auctions as soon as their adopters received federal money. nyti.ms/3wbUIEW
With Covid-19 cases decreasing in the U.S., and masks no longer required everywhere, a sense of normalcy is starting to return. The New York Times asked 723 epidemiologists what it will really take for us to get there, and how long. nyti.ms/3bvV9Cp
One key to normalcy is young children getting vaccinated, respondents said. Though kids are less likely to develop severe cases of Covid-19, scientists said their immunity was important because they could be hosts for the virus and a way for it to develop new variants.
Vaccines haven't been approved for children under 12, but 85% of respondents said it would still likely be safe to gather for Fourth of July. A slightly higher share said schools could fully open in the fall, and that families could gather indoors for the winter holidays.
NYT Investigation: They died in police custody — at least 47 Black people in the past 25 years; 15 since 2015.
When blame was put on sickle cell trait, a condition mostly found in Black people that is almost always benign, it often ended further scrutiny. nyti.ms/3ouLL7r
These are the cases we found in which the sickle cell trait was cited as a cause or major factor in the deaths.
In roughly two-thirds, the person who died had been forcefully restrained by the authorities, pepper-sprayed or shocked with stun guns. nyti.ms/3eMEBYE
What we found:
▪️ 19 deaths involved restraints that could hinder breathing.
▪️ 5 were initially ruled homicides.
▪️ 21 involved stun guns or pepper spray.
▪️ 2 involved bites from police dogs.
▪️ The rest were labeled undetermined, accidental or natural. nyti.ms/3eMEBYE
Exclusive: A network of conservative activists, aided by a British former spy, mounted a campaign during the Trump administration to discredit perceived enemies of Donald Trump in government, according to documents and people involved in the operations. nytimes.com/2021/05/13/us/…
The campaign included a planned sting operation against Trump’s national security adviser at the time, H.R. McMaster, and secret surveillance operations against FBI employees, aimed at exposing anti-Trump sentiment in the bureau’s ranks. nyti.ms/33E6Cvp
The efforts against the FBI were run by Project Veritas, a conservative group that has a history of conducting sting operations on media organizations and Democratic politicians. The group did not respond to specific questions about the operations. nyti.ms/33E6Cvp