A brand new ballot exhibits Democratic mayoral front-runner Zohran Mamdani holding a large 25% lead over his predominant opponent, unbiased candidate Andrew Cuomo.
The ballot, launched early Thursday by Emerson School, PIX11 and The Hill, is an outlier from most different surveys, which have proven Mamdani main Cuomo by between 10 and 16% in subsequent week’s mayoral election.
Carried out between this previous Saturday and Monday, it exhibits Mamadani clinching 50% in comparison with 25% secured by Cuomo. Republican mayoral nominee Curtis Sliwa, who has constantly ranked third and final within the race, nets 21% help, with one other 5% of voters undecided, the brand new survey finds.
Along with placing Mamdani far forward of Cuomo, the ballot marks one of many first predicting that the Democratic nominee would appeal to help from a minimum of half of voters collaborating in Tuesday’s election.
Against this, the final Emerson/PIX11/The Hill ballot from Sept. 10 confirmed Mamdani main the race with 43% help, in comparison with Cuomo at 28% and Sliwa at 10%.
Spencer Kimball, govt director of Emerson School Polling, stated Mamdani’s surge and Cuomo’s setback within the newest survey can partially be attributed to the opinions of Black voters.
“Mamdani appears to have built a coalition across key demographics, increasing his margin among Black voters since last month, from 50% to 71%, whereas Cuomo dropped ten points among Black voters since September,” Kimball stated. “Mamdani continues to have a base of young voters; 69% of voters under 50 support him, whereas 37% of voters over 50 support Mamdani, while 31% support Cuomo and 28% Silwa.”
Emerson’s newest inquiry lands as tons of of hundreds of New Yorkers have already solid ballots within the high-stakes 2025 contest for Metropolis Corridor. Early voting began Saturday, and greater than 370,000 voters had solid ballots as of Wednesday evening.
The ballot, which has a margin of error of +/- 3.8%, requested a complete of 640 New Yorkers who had both already voted or had been very more likely to. These quizzed who had already voted supported Mamdani by a 33-point margin, 58% to 25%, whereas those that had but to solid their ballots broke for Mamdani by a 19-point margin, 45% to 26%, per the ballot.

