Harlem on The Ballot

— What the 2025 Election Means for Our Neighborhood By Darian James The 2025 New York City local election has…
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— What the 2025 Election Means for Our Neighborhood

By Darian James

The 2025 New York City local election has come and gone, but its impact is just beginning to be felt in Harlem. From a new slate of city council members to borough-wide budget shifts, the voices of Harlem voters helped shape a critical moment in the city’s future.

This year’s election saw record turnout in Central and East Harlem, driven by urgent concerns over affordable housing, youth services, and public safety reform. While many headlines focused on citywide contests, the true story was local: Harlem voters sent a message that they are tired of symbolic representation and hungry for tangible progress.

Among the winners is Councilmember-elect Jasmin Rivera, who flipped the East Harlem district on a platform of rent stabilization, expanded after-school funding, and protections for longtime residents at risk of displacement. Her win marks a generational shift, and for many young voters, a hopeful sign that lived experience matters more than party endorsements.

City Hall also has a new progressive majority that could shift Harlem’s slice of the capital budget — particularly for public transit and park improvements north of 110th Street. And while the mayor’s race was a nail-biter, Harlem’s priorities around community wellness, arts funding, and NYCHA reform are expected to remain front and center in upcoming budget talks.

The election is over — but the organizing must continue. Because Harlem’s future isn’t just decided at the ballot box. It’s shaped in block meetings, barbershops, churches, and cultural spaces like the very pages of this magazine.

JARVUSHESTER

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