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After Stringer, is there any progressive with a chance of

SHARE: In the Democratic primary for mayor, the battle for the race’s left lane may come down to two first-time candidates: Dianne Morales and Maya Wiley. If endorsements are any measure, New York City Comptroller Scott Stringer’s campaign is sputtering in the wake of an accusation of sexual assault, which he denies. Most of his high-profile endorsers pulled away from his campaign, including Rep. Jamaal Bowman, the Working Families Party and a slew of young, progressive legislators who were supposed to lend Stringer, a career Democratic insider, credibility with the left wing of the party. It’s possible, given the growing evidence that older Democrats are less moved by sexual harassment allegations than they used to be, that Stringer’s campaign will not entirely collapse, especially with the $7 million he still has in the bank. But Stringer was never at the front of the pack to begin with, typically placing third in recent polls behind Andrew Yang and Brooklyn Borough Pres

The U S formally recognized the Armenian genocide Why now, a century later?

The U.S. formally recognized the Armenian genocide. Why now, a century later? Ryan Gingeras © Afp Contributor#afp/AFP/Getty Images Armenians take part in a torchlight procession in Yerevan on April 23 to mark the 106th anniversary of World War I-era mass killings. (Karen Minasyan/AFP) On April 24, the Biden administration will formally recognize the Armenian genocide that took place a century ago. This will be the first U.S. administration to make this designation, and it’s not without controversy. America has long struggled with the implications associated with this deeply polarizing issue and the domestic and international complexities involved. But the U.S. acknowledgment of a genocide that began in 1915 reflects, fundamentally, an important shift in the 2021 relationship between the U.S. and Turkey.

Book Review: New York, New York, by Thomas Dyja

Four Decades of Success, Excess, and Transformation By Thomas Dyja You will have a hard time getting through Thomas Dyja’s “New York, New York, New York,” mostly because there is an idea on every page, if not in every paragraph — and usually attached to a perfect line from the host of sources he has collected for this history of New York City over its last four rollicking decades. Here is the journalist Michael Tomasky fretting that “there’s only so much wholesomeness New York can take,” the graphic designer Tibor Kalman advising us that Times Square “should be a zoo, like the rest of New York, but a well-maintained zoo instead of a depressed, unemployed and crack-smoking kind of zoo,” and the philanthropist Andrew Heiskell promising a crime-free Bryant Park: “All the hiding places have been eliminated.” Here is Spy magazine headlining Rudy Giuliani as “The Toughest Weenie in America,” Jules Feiffer calling Elaineâ�

New York City Lost a Record 631,000 Jobs to the Pandemic in 2020 So What s Next?

New York City Lost a Record 631,000 Jobs to the Pandemic in 2020 So What s Next?
nakedcapitalism.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from nakedcapitalism.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

New York City Lost a Record 631,000 Jobs to the Pandemic in 2020 What s Next?

New York City Lost a Record 631,000 Jobs to the Pandemic in 2020 What s Next?
thecity.nyc - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from thecity.nyc Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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