fbpx
Wikipedia

2013 New York City Comptroller election

The 2013 election for New York City Comptroller was held on November 5, 2013, along with elections for Mayor, Public Advocate, Borough Presidents, and members of the New York City Council.

2013 New York City comptroller election

← 2009 November 5, 2013 2017 →
 
Candidate Scott Stringer John Burnett
Party Democratic Republican
Alliance Working Families Conservative; School Choice
Popular vote 827,562 171,635
Percentage 80.4% 16.7%

Borough results
Stringer:      50–60%      70–80%      80–90%

Comptroller before election

John Liu
Democratic

Elected Comptroller

Scott Stringer
Democratic

The first-term incumbent Comptroller, John Liu, did not run for re-election, as he decided to run in the 2013 election for Mayor of New York City.[1] The Democratic Party nomination was won by Scott Stringer, who defeated former Governor Eliot Spitzer, who resigned in disgrace in 2008. John Burnett was the Republican nominee.

On Election Day, Stringer handily defeated Burnett and various third-party candidates, winning 80.4% of the vote.

Democratic primary edit

New York City borough President Scott Stringer was considered to be the front runner for the Democratic nomination, having raised nearly $3.5 million as of July 7, 2013. When former New York governor Eliot Spitzer announced his intention to run for the office, he brought a larger challenge to Stringer. In 2008, while governor, Spitzer resigned amid a prostitution scandal. His name recognition as a former governor was expected to help him in the election, while the scandal was expected to harm his chances. "I'm hopeful there will be forgiveness, I am asking for it," Spitzer said, commenting on the scandal.[2] "Politics is a contact sport," Spitzer said on July 8, on radio's The Bill Press Show. "I made significant errors. I stood up, accepted responsibility, resigned. It's now been five years, I hope the public will extend its forgiveness to me."[3]

Coincidentally, Spitzer was running against Kristin M. Davis (who was running as a Libertarian), his former madam who had helped him get call girls as governor. She spent three months in prison for running an escort service. "This is going to be the funnest campaign ever," she told The New York Daily News. "I’ve been waiting for my day to face [Spitzer] for five years," Davis said. "I sat ... in Rikers Island, I came out penniless and nothing happened to him. The hypocrisy there is huge."[4][5]

Stringer's campaign immediately responded to Spitzer's candidacy. On July 8, his campaign manager released a statement saying, "Scott Stringer has a proven record of results and integrity and entered this race to help New York's middle class regain its footing. By contrast, Eliot Spitzer is going to spurn the campaign finance program to try and buy personal redemption with his family fortune. The voters will decide." The statement alluded to Spitzer's family fortune.[6] Prior to Spitzer's announcement, Stringer had already received several endorsements from candidates in the mayoral election, most of whom did not withdraw their endorsements after Spitzer's announcement. One of the first to publicly state her support of Stringer was Christine Quinn, who is the Speaker of the New York City Council. She stated, "Scott Stringer has been an exceptional borough president with the highest ethical standards. He has my full support and I will do whatever I can to help him become the next comptroller of the City of New York."[7]

Spitzer appeared on CNBC's Morning Joe on July 9, and was visibly emotional when asked about what he had learned the past five years.[8]

Stringer's fundraising soared dramatically after Spitzer's announcement. During the week of July 8, Stringer raised over $100,000. In all, Stringer had spent just over $679,000 and had $3 million on hand. Spitzer declared that he could use his family fortune to finance his campaign. Although he hired staffers to collect petitions, Spitzer's campaign did not list any major spending during the then most recent filing period.[9]

On July 11, a deadline passed for candidates to file an ethics report. Several of the candidates, most notably Spitzer, did not file the report in time. Not filing a report can lead to a fine of between $250 and $10,000. However, there was a 1-week grace period before any penalties were enforced. A lawyer representing Spitzer's campaign said the candidate was "very busy" last week working on filing petitions with the signatures he needed to secure a spot on the Democratic ballot. A spokesperson for Stringer's campaign stated, "The old Eliot Spitzer supported stringent ethics disclosure. Just as we've seen on his decision to abandon campaign spending limits he once supported, it's increasingly clear that Eliot Spitzer believes there are two standards in public life—one for him, and one for everyone else."[10] Even with that news, Spitzer was still leading in polls conducted.[11]

In an ad that began airing during the week of July 22, 2013, Spitzer admitted that he "failed-big time." He went on to say, "I hurt a lot of people. When you dig yourself a hole, you can either lie in it the rest of your life, or do something positive. That's why I'm running... Everyone, no matter who you are, deserves a fair shot. I'm asking voters to give the same for me."[12]

News coverage about the election (and, more specifically, Spitzer's attempt at redemption) were mixed. On July 18 CNN host Jake Tapper talked about Spitzer's "incredibly reckless and ... very illegal" prostitution scandal. In an interview on The Colbert Report, comedian Stephen Colbert noted Spitzer's lead in the polls by asking, "Do you [Spitzer] think that signals progress for our country or the slow decay of our moral values?" After Spitzer began laughing, Colbert declared, "This isn't Charlie Rose motherf**ker!" Speaking about Spitzer's own qualifications Colbert asked if Spitzer was "at once and the same time above and below this job?" He later asked, "Shouldn't the job of comptroller go to someone who has shown a modicum of self-comptrol? Why should the people trust you?" "The totality of a record," Spitzer suggested, such as his time as Attorney General, make him a suitable candidate. In 2010, after the initial scandal, Colbert told him he could be honest with him because Spitzer had "no public image to uphold."[13] However, Politico blogger Gary Bauer suggested that, unlike Anthony Weiner (who was running for mayor), Spitzer seemed to be redeeming himself.[14] Similarly, the Los Angeles Times noted that, while Spitzer's past had hurt him, voters were beginning to forgive him, noting that, unlike Weiner, Spitzer stopped his behavior immediately after leaving office.[15][dubious ]

Stringer defeated Spitzer in the primary election, 52.1%-47.9%.[16]

Candidates edit

Declared edit

Withdrew edit

Declined edit

Polling edit

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Eliot
Spitzer
Scott
Stringer
Other Undecided
PPP September 7–8, 2013 683 ± 3.8% 45% 41% 14%
Quinnipiac September 13, 2013, at the Wayback Machine September 6–8, 2013 782 ± 3.5% 43% 50% 1% 7%
Marist September 3–6, 2013 556 ± 4.2% 47% 45% <1% 7%
Quinnipiac August 28–September 1, 2013 750 ± 3.6% 45% 47% 7%
Siena August 19–28, 2013 505 ± 4% 50% 35% 15%
amNewYork/News 12 August 22–27, 2013 600 ± 4% 46% 43% 10%
Quinnipiac August 22–27, 2013 602 ± 4% 46% 46% 8%
Marist August 12–14, 2013 355 ± 5.2% 53% 34% 1% 11%
Quinnipiac August 7–12, 2013 579 ± 4.1% 56% 37% 7%
Siena August 2–7, 2013 505 ± 4% 44% 35% 2% 19%
Marist July 24, 2013 551 ± 4.2% 49% 32% 2% 17%
Quinnipiac July 18–23, 2013 507 ± 4.4% 49% 45% 6%
Quinnipiac July 19, 2013, at the Wayback Machine July 8–14, 2013 738 ± 3.6% 48% 33% 1% 19%
Marist July 8–9, 2013 546 ± 4.2% 42% 33% 1% 24%

Results edit

2013 New York City Comptroller Election Democratic Primary Results[23][16]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Scott Stringer 314,285 52.1
Democratic Eliot Spitzer 288,739 47.9

Republican primary edit

John Burnett, a Wall Street financier, ran unopposed for the nomination of the Republican Party. In mid-July 2013, he announced he would release his personal tax returns.[24] New York Republican consultant William F. B. O'Reilly opined that Burnett would have a reasonably strong chance of success in the election if Spitzer won the Democratic primary.[25][26]

Candidates edit

Nominee edit

  • John Burnett, financier[27]

Major third parties edit

Besides the Democratic and Republican parties, the Conservative, Green, Independence and Working Families parties are qualified New York parties. These parties have automatic ballot access.

Conservative edit

Nominee edit

  • John Burnett, financier[24]

Green edit

Nominee edit

Working Families edit

Nominee edit

Minor third parties edit

Any candidate not among the six qualified New York parties (Democratic, Republican, Conservative, Green, Independence and Working Families) must petition their way onto the ballot; they do not face primary elections.

Libertarian edit

Nominee edit

  • Hesham El-Meligy, activist[30]

Withdrew edit

Socialist Worker edit

Nominee edit

  • John W. Studer

School Choice edit

Nominee edit

  • John L. Burnett

War Veterans Party edit

Nominee edit

Results edit

On Election Day, Stringer handily defeated Burnett and various third-party candidates,[32] winning 80.4% of the vote. Burnett received 16.7% of the vote.[33]

General election results[33]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Scott Stringer 776,700 75.48%
Working Families Scott Stringer 50,862 4.94%
Total Scott Stringer 827,562 80.43%
Republican John Burnett 141,854 13.79%
Conservative John Burnett 28,574 2.78%
School Choice John Burnett 1,207 0.12%
Total John Burnett 171,635 16.68%
Green Julia Willebrand 20,566 2.00%
Libertarian Hesham El-Meligy 5,349 0.52%
Socialist Workers John Studer 2,013 0.20%
War Veterans Richard Bozulich 1,240 0.12%
Write-ins 614 0.06%
Total votes 1,028,979 100%

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Resnick, Gideon (July 8, 2013). "John Liu Says Eliot Spitzer and Anthony Weiner Are a 'Huge Affront to Women'". Politicker.
  2. ^ "Ex-Gov. Spitzer plans run for NYC comptroller". USA Today. July 7, 2013.
  3. ^ Reiss, Adam, Payne, Ed (July 8, 2013). "Spitzer seeks return to politics -- as NYC comptroller". CNN.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ "Kristin Davis, Ex-Madam, Running For NYC Comptroller Against Eliot Spitzer". Huffington Post. July 8, 2013.
  5. ^ a b Dover, Sara (July 7, 2013). "Disgraced ex-Gov. Eliot Spitzer re-enters politics in NYC comptroller bid". CBS News.
  6. ^ Campbell, Colin (July 8, 2013). "Scott Stringer Comes Out Swinging Against Eliot Spitzer". Politicker.
  7. ^ Katz, Celeste (July 7, 2013). "NY Mayor Hopefuls Rally To Scott Stringer's Side As Eliot Spitzer Jumps into Comptroller Race". New York Daily News.
  8. ^ Edelman, Adam. "Choked up Eliot Spitzer says he failed electorate, family but deserves forgiveness: 'You go through that pain and you change'". NY Daily News. Retrieved July 10, 2013.
  9. ^ Sale, Anna (July 15, 2013). . WNYC. Archived from the original on August 8, 2013. Retrieved July 19, 2013.
  10. ^ Saul, Michael Howard (July 15, 2013). "Spitzer, Other Candidates Miss Deadline for Filing Ethics Report". The Wall Street Journal.
  11. ^ Peltz, Jennifer (July 15, 2013). "Spitzer, Weiner Top Names in New Poll of NYC Races". New York 4.
  12. ^ Boerma, Linda (July 22, 2013). "Eliot Spitzer's new ad for comptroller: "I failed, big time"". CBS News. Retrieved July 22, 2013.
  13. ^ "Stephen Colbert Grills Eliot Spitzer, Declares 'This Ain't Charlie Rose, Motherf**ker' (VIDEO)". The Huffington Post. July 18, 2013. Retrieved July 19, 2013.
  14. ^ Bauer, Gary (August 15, 2013). "Why Anthony Weiner sinks while Eliot Spitzer soars". Politico. Retrieved August 19, 2013.
  15. ^ Tangel, Andrew (August 15, 2013). "Eliot Spitzer seeks political revival after prostitution scandal". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved August 19, 2013.
  16. ^ a b (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on September 6, 2020. Retrieved April 24, 2019.
  17. ^ Barbaro, Michael, Chen, David W. (July 7, 2013). "Spitzer Rejoins Politics, Asking for Forgiveness". New York Times.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  18. ^ Enquist, Erik (April 28, 2013). "For Scott Stringer, winning's the easy part". Crain's New York Business.
  19. ^ Campbell, Colin (July 10, 2013). "Dan Garodnick Exits Stage Right". Politicker.
  20. ^ Katz, Celeste (December 4, 2012). "Brooklyn City Councilman Domenic Recchia: I'm Not Running For Comptroller". NY Daily News.
  21. ^ Seifman, David (January 29, 2013). "Weiner's test run". New York Post.
  22. ^ Seifman, David (February 24, 2013). "Lucky first Stringer". New York Post.
  23. ^ "Live Results: New York City Primary Elections". The Huffington Post. September 10, 2013.
  24. ^ a b "Ex-N.Y. Gov. Spitzer releases tax returns". USA Today. July 17, 2013.
  25. ^ O'Reilly, William F. B. (July 13, 2013). "O'Reilly: Can a Republican become NYC comptroller?". News Day. Retrieved July 23, 2013.
  26. ^ George, Robert A. (July 10, 2013). "The real comptroller surprise". New York Post. Retrieved July 23, 2013.
  27. ^ Katz, Celeste (June 13, 2013). "Republican Wall Street Vet John Burnett Ready To Jump into Race For NYC Comptroller". New York Daily News.
  28. ^ "Spitzer: Petition Signatures Collection For NYC Comptroller Campaign 'Going Well'". The Huffington Post. July 11, 2013.
  29. ^ Enquist, Erik (December 10, 2012). "Working Families Party Backing Scott Stringer For NYC Comptroller". NY Daily News.
  30. ^ Staten Island Advance/Jan Somma-Hammel. "Staten Island interfaith activist Hesham El-Meligy is Libertarian Party candidate for NYC comptroller". SILive.com. Retrieved August 12, 2013.
  31. ^ Nelson, Steven (August 26, 2013). "Spitzer's Ex-Madam Kristin Davis Slips Out of Comptroller Race". US News.
  32. ^ Goldberg, Dan. "Scott Stringer coasts to victory to become city comptroller". Politico PRO.
  33. ^ a b "2013 New York City Comptroller election" (PDF).

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Scott Stringer for NYC Comptroller
  • John Burnett for NYC Comptroller
  • Julia Willebrand for NYC Comptroller

2013, york, city, comptroller, election, 2013, election, york, city, comptroller, held, november, 2013, along, with, elections, mayor, public, advocate, borough, presidents, members, york, city, council, 2013, york, city, comptroller, election, 2009, november,. The 2013 election for New York City Comptroller was held on November 5 2013 along with elections for Mayor Public Advocate Borough Presidents and members of the New York City Council 2013 New York City comptroller election 2009 November 5 2013 2017 Candidate Scott Stringer John Burnett Party Democratic Republican Alliance Working Families Conservative School Choice Popular vote 827 562 171 635 Percentage 80 4 16 7 Borough resultsStringer 50 60 70 80 80 90 Comptroller before election John Liu Democratic Elected Comptroller Scott Stringer Democratic The first term incumbent Comptroller John Liu did not run for re election as he decided to run in the 2013 election for Mayor of New York City 1 The Democratic Party nomination was won by Scott Stringer who defeated former Governor Eliot Spitzer who resigned in disgrace in 2008 John Burnett was the Republican nominee On Election Day Stringer handily defeated Burnett and various third party candidates winning 80 4 of the vote Contents 1 Democratic primary 1 1 Candidates 1 1 1 Declared 1 1 2 Withdrew 1 1 3 Declined 1 2 Polling 1 3 Results 2 Republican primary 2 1 Candidates 2 1 1 Nominee 3 Major third parties 3 1 Conservative 3 1 1 Nominee 3 2 Green 3 2 1 Nominee 3 3 Working Families 3 3 1 Nominee 4 Minor third parties 4 1 Libertarian 4 1 1 Nominee 4 1 2 Withdrew 4 2 Socialist Worker 4 2 1 Nominee 4 3 School Choice 4 3 1 Nominee 4 4 War Veterans Party 4 4 1 Nominee 5 Results 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksDemocratic primary editNew York City borough President Scott Stringer was considered to be the front runner for the Democratic nomination having raised nearly 3 5 million as of July 7 2013 When former New York governor Eliot Spitzer announced his intention to run for the office he brought a larger challenge to Stringer In 2008 while governor Spitzer resigned amid a prostitution scandal His name recognition as a former governor was expected to help him in the election while the scandal was expected to harm his chances I m hopeful there will be forgiveness I am asking for it Spitzer said commenting on the scandal 2 Politics is a contact sport Spitzer said on July 8 on radio s The Bill Press Show I made significant errors I stood up accepted responsibility resigned It s now been five years I hope the public will extend its forgiveness to me 3 Coincidentally Spitzer was running against Kristin M Davis who was running as a Libertarian his former madam who had helped him get call girls as governor She spent three months in prison for running an escort service This is going to be the funnest campaign ever she told The New York Daily News I ve been waiting for my day to face Spitzer for five years Davis said I sat in Rikers Island I came out penniless and nothing happened to him The hypocrisy there is huge 4 5 Stringer s campaign immediately responded to Spitzer s candidacy On July 8 his campaign manager released a statement saying Scott Stringer has a proven record of results and integrity and entered this race to help New York s middle class regain its footing By contrast Eliot Spitzer is going to spurn the campaign finance program to try and buy personal redemption with his family fortune The voters will decide The statement alluded to Spitzer s family fortune 6 Prior to Spitzer s announcement Stringer had already received several endorsements from candidates in the mayoral election most of whom did not withdraw their endorsements after Spitzer s announcement One of the first to publicly state her support of Stringer was Christine Quinn who is the Speaker of the New York City Council She stated Scott Stringer has been an exceptional borough president with the highest ethical standards He has my full support and I will do whatever I can to help him become the next comptroller of the City of New York 7 Spitzer appeared on CNBC s Morning Joe on July 9 and was visibly emotional when asked about what he had learned the past five years 8 Stringer s fundraising soared dramatically after Spitzer s announcement During the week of July 8 Stringer raised over 100 000 In all Stringer had spent just over 679 000 and had 3 million on hand Spitzer declared that he could use his family fortune to finance his campaign Although he hired staffers to collect petitions Spitzer s campaign did not list any major spending during the then most recent filing period 9 On July 11 a deadline passed for candidates to file an ethics report Several of the candidates most notably Spitzer did not file the report in time Not filing a report can lead to a fine of between 250 and 10 000 However there was a 1 week grace period before any penalties were enforced A lawyer representing Spitzer s campaign said the candidate was very busy last week working on filing petitions with the signatures he needed to secure a spot on the Democratic ballot A spokesperson for Stringer s campaign stated The old Eliot Spitzer supported stringent ethics disclosure Just as we ve seen on his decision to abandon campaign spending limits he once supported it s increasingly clear that Eliot Spitzer believes there are two standards in public life one for him and one for everyone else 10 Even with that news Spitzer was still leading in polls conducted 11 In an ad that began airing during the week of July 22 2013 Spitzer admitted that he failed big time He went on to say I hurt a lot of people When you dig yourself a hole you can either lie in it the rest of your life or do something positive That s why I m running Everyone no matter who you are deserves a fair shot I m asking voters to give the same for me 12 News coverage about the election and more specifically Spitzer s attempt at redemption were mixed On July 18 CNN host Jake Tapper talked about Spitzer s incredibly reckless and very illegal prostitution scandal In an interview on The Colbert Report comedian Stephen Colbert noted Spitzer s lead in the polls by asking Do you Spitzer think that signals progress for our country or the slow decay of our moral values After Spitzer began laughing Colbert declared This isn t Charlie Rose motherf ker Speaking about Spitzer s own qualifications Colbert asked if Spitzer was at once and the same time above and below this job He later asked Shouldn t the job of comptroller go to someone who has shown a modicum of self comptrol Why should the people trust you The totality of a record Spitzer suggested such as his time as Attorney General make him a suitable candidate In 2010 after the initial scandal Colbert told him he could be honest with him because Spitzer had no public image to uphold 13 However Politico blogger Gary Bauer suggested that unlike Anthony Weiner who was running for mayor Spitzer seemed to be redeeming himself 14 Similarly the Los Angeles Times noted that while Spitzer s past had hurt him voters were beginning to forgive him noting that unlike Weiner Spitzer stopped his behavior immediately after leaving office 15 dubious discuss Stringer defeated Spitzer in the primary election 52 1 47 9 16 Candidates edit Declared edit Eliot Spitzer former Governor of New York 17 Scott Stringer Manhattan Borough President 18 Withdrew edit Daniel Garodnick New York City Councilman 19 Declined edit John Liu incumbent Comptroller running for Mayor Domenic Recchia New York City Councilman running for Congress 20 Anthony Weiner former U S Representative running for Mayor 21 David Yassky Chairman of the New York City Taxi and Limousine Commission and candidate for Comptroller in 2009 22 Polling edit Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror EliotSpitzer ScottStringer Other Undecided PPP September 7 8 2013 683 3 8 45 41 14 Quinnipiac Archived September 13 2013 at the Wayback Machine September 6 8 2013 782 3 5 43 50 1 7 Marist September 3 6 2013 556 4 2 47 45 lt 1 7 Quinnipiac August 28 September 1 2013 750 3 6 45 47 7 Siena August 19 28 2013 505 4 50 35 15 amNewYork News 12 August 22 27 2013 600 4 46 43 10 Quinnipiac August 22 27 2013 602 4 46 46 8 Marist August 12 14 2013 355 5 2 53 34 1 11 Quinnipiac August 7 12 2013 579 4 1 56 37 7 Siena August 2 7 2013 505 4 44 35 2 19 Marist July 24 2013 551 4 2 49 32 2 17 Quinnipiac July 18 23 2013 507 4 4 49 45 6 Quinnipiac Archived July 19 2013 at the Wayback Machine July 8 14 2013 738 3 6 48 33 1 19 Marist July 8 9 2013 546 4 2 42 33 1 24 Results edit 2013 New York City Comptroller Election Democratic Primary Results 23 16 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Scott Stringer 314 285 52 1 Democratic Eliot Spitzer 288 739 47 9Republican primary editJohn Burnett a Wall Street financier ran unopposed for the nomination of the Republican Party In mid July 2013 he announced he would release his personal tax returns 24 New York Republican consultant William F B O Reilly opined that Burnett would have a reasonably strong chance of success in the election if Spitzer won the Democratic primary 25 26 Candidates edit Nominee edit John Burnett financier 27 Major third parties editBesides the Democratic and Republican parties the Conservative Green Independence and Working Families parties are qualified New York parties These parties have automatic ballot access Conservative edit Nominee edit John Burnett financier 24 Green edit Nominee edit Julia Willebrand activist candidate for Mayor in 2001 and candidate for New York State Comptroller in 2006 28 Working Families edit Nominee edit Scott Stringer Manhattan Borough President 29 Minor third parties editAny candidate not among the six qualified New York parties Democratic Republican Conservative Green Independence and Working Families must petition their way onto the ballot they do not face primary elections Libertarian edit Nominee edit Hesham El Meligy activist 30 Withdrew edit Kristin M Davis former Madam with ties to Eliot Spitzer s prostitution scandal and Anti Prohibition Party nominee for Governor in 2010 5 31 Socialist Worker edit Nominee edit John W Studer School Choice edit Nominee edit John L Burnett War Veterans Party edit Nominee edit Richard Bozulich publisherResults editOn Election Day Stringer handily defeated Burnett and various third party candidates 32 winning 80 4 of the vote Burnett received 16 7 of the vote 33 General election results 33 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Scott Stringer 776 700 75 48 Working Families Scott Stringer 50 862 4 94 Total Scott Stringer 827 562 80 43 Republican John Burnett 141 854 13 79 Conservative John Burnett 28 574 2 78 School Choice John Burnett 1 207 0 12 Total John Burnett 171 635 16 68 Green Julia Willebrand 20 566 2 00 Libertarian Hesham El Meligy 5 349 0 52 Socialist Workers John Studer 2 013 0 20 War Veterans Richard Bozulich 1 240 0 12 Write ins 614 0 06 Total votes 1 028 979 100 See also edit nbsp New York City portal New York City Comptroller Government of New York City 2013 New York City mayoral election 2013 New York City Public Advocate electionReferences edit Resnick Gideon July 8 2013 John Liu Says Eliot Spitzer and Anthony Weiner Are a Huge Affront to Women Politicker Ex Gov Spitzer plans run for NYC comptroller USA Today July 7 2013 Reiss Adam Payne Ed July 8 2013 Spitzer seeks return to politics as NYC comptroller CNN a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Kristin Davis Ex Madam Running For NYC Comptroller Against Eliot Spitzer Huffington Post July 8 2013 a b Dover Sara July 7 2013 Disgraced ex Gov Eliot Spitzer re enters politics in NYC comptroller bid CBS News Campbell Colin July 8 2013 Scott Stringer Comes Out Swinging Against Eliot Spitzer Politicker Katz Celeste July 7 2013 NY Mayor Hopefuls Rally To Scott Stringer s Side As Eliot Spitzer Jumps into Comptroller Race New York Daily News Edelman Adam Choked up Eliot Spitzer says he failed electorate family but deserves forgiveness You go through that pain and you change NY Daily News Retrieved July 10 2013 Sale Anna July 15 2013 After Spitzer Stringer s Fundraising Soars WNYC Archived from the original on August 8 2013 Retrieved July 19 2013 Saul Michael Howard July 15 2013 Spitzer Other Candidates Miss Deadline for Filing Ethics Report The Wall Street Journal Peltz Jennifer July 15 2013 Spitzer Weiner Top Names in New Poll of NYC Races New York 4 Boerma Linda July 22 2013 Eliot Spitzer s new ad for comptroller I failed big time CBS News Retrieved July 22 2013 Stephen Colbert Grills Eliot Spitzer Declares This Ain t Charlie Rose Motherf ker VIDEO The Huffington Post July 18 2013 Retrieved July 19 2013 Bauer Gary August 15 2013 Why Anthony Weiner sinks while Eliot Spitzer soars Politico Retrieved August 19 2013 Tangel Andrew August 15 2013 Eliot Spitzer seeks political revival after prostitution scandal Los Angeles Times Retrieved August 19 2013 a b 2013 September Primary election PDF Archived from the original PDF on September 6 2020 Retrieved April 24 2019 Barbaro Michael Chen David W July 7 2013 Spitzer Rejoins Politics Asking for Forgiveness New York Times a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Enquist Erik April 28 2013 For Scott Stringer winning s the easy part Crain s New York Business Campbell Colin July 10 2013 Dan Garodnick Exits Stage Right Politicker Katz Celeste December 4 2012 Brooklyn City Councilman Domenic Recchia I m Not Running For Comptroller NY Daily News Seifman David January 29 2013 Weiner s test run New York Post Seifman David February 24 2013 Lucky first Stringer New York Post Live Results New York City Primary Elections The Huffington Post September 10 2013 a b Ex N Y Gov Spitzer releases tax returns USA Today July 17 2013 O Reilly William F B July 13 2013 O Reilly Can a Republican become NYC comptroller News Day Retrieved July 23 2013 George Robert A July 10 2013 The real comptroller surprise New York Post Retrieved July 23 2013 Katz Celeste June 13 2013 Republican Wall Street Vet John Burnett Ready To Jump into Race For NYC Comptroller New York Daily News Spitzer Petition Signatures Collection For NYC Comptroller Campaign Going Well The Huffington Post July 11 2013 Enquist Erik December 10 2012 Working Families Party Backing Scott Stringer For NYC Comptroller NY Daily News Staten Island Advance Jan Somma Hammel Staten Island interfaith activist Hesham El Meligy is Libertarian Party candidate for NYC comptroller SILive com Retrieved August 12 2013 Nelson Steven August 26 2013 Spitzer s Ex Madam Kristin Davis Slips Out of Comptroller Race US News Goldberg Dan Scott Stringer coasts to victory to become city comptroller Politico PRO a b 2013 New York City Comptroller election PDF Further reading editPaterson David Black Blind amp In Charge A Story of Visionary Leadership and Overcoming Adversity New York New York 2020External links editScott Stringer for NYC Comptroller John Burnett for NYC Comptroller Hesham El Meligy for NYC Comptroller Julia Willebrand for NYC Comptroller Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2013 New York City Comptroller election amp oldid 1223554119, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.