NYC NOW - New York’s GOP Gubernatorial Race and Financial Issues at The New School
Episode Date: December 10, 2025Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman will face Representative Elise Stefanik for the GOP’s ballot line for next year’s gubernatorial election. Plus, a storied leftist university faces a $48 mil...lion deficit amid planned layoffs.
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It'll be MAGA Republican versus MAGA Republican in New York's GOP gubernatorial race next year.
And the new school faces an identity crisis and financial woes.
From WMYC, this is NYC now.
I'm Jene Pierre.
City Comptroller and former mayoral candidate Brad Lander is running for Congress
in a district that includes Lower Manhattan and Northwest Brooklyn.
In a video announcement Wednesday morning,
Lander says he'll be an ally to Mayor Alexo Ron Mumdani
and a champion for all his neighbors in New York City.
I'm Brad Lander, Dad Lander,
council member Lander, Comptroller Lander,
and it would be an honor to serve you as Congress member Lander.
The announcement sets up a primary battle between Lander,
who is a prominent progressive and moderate Democrat Dan Goldman.
Progressives are hoping to build on Mumdani's stunning victory
in this year's mayoral race.
The left-leaning Working Families Party
has already voted to endorse Lander for the seat.
Now on to another race.
On yesterday's episode,
we mentioned Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakman
is running for the Republican nomination
for next year's gubernatorial election.
As of now,
Blakeman will face off against Representative
Elise Tophonic for the GOP's ballot line.
Blakman has been teasing a run for months,
but he made it official Tuesday on Fox and Friends.
We want to put New York first.
We want to make it more affordable.
We want to make New York safer.
And we want to make people in New York happy again.
If you're unfamiliar with the two-term executive, here's a bit of what you should know.
First off, Blakeman has been around New York politics for decades.
And he owns a couple businesses.
But he came in his county executive five years ago and really made a name for himself on the tax stuff, but also on the women's sports.
That's Bill O'Reilly. No, not the controversial commentator that you're probably thinking of.
This Bill O'Reilly is a Republican strategist with the November team.
He says Blakman's stance on women's sports really made him a national headline.
You may recall that controversial bill passed last year in Nassau County that bans transgender athletes
from participating in women's and girls' sports at county-owned facilities.
That kind of put them on the national calendar.
The thing that's most interesting is that Republicans took a weapon all over the
country and not just in the big races, but in one place where Republicans did well in New York
was Nassau County. O'Reilly says because of that, it makes sense that Blakeman would run for
governor. Although some political analysts have called Stefanik a favorite in the GOP race,
O'Reilly says Blakeman's announcement alters the race's dynamics. This is suddenly a very competitive
race because effectively Bruce Blakman owns Long Island, at least Stefanik owns upstate, and the battle
will be New York City and the Hudson Valley.
O'Reilly says Blakman's entry also guarantees that this will be a right-wing primary.
He says both Blakman and Stefonic are chasing the same type of MAGA Republican voters.
And that's not ideal for either candidate, but it's just the way it is.
Maybe they find a way to make it healthy and get some new issues out there.
Speaking of MAGA Republicans, it's no secret that President Trump will loom large over next year's gubernatorial election.
O'Reilly says Trump has a really good relationship with both Blakeman and Stefanic.
But it sounds to me as though he's made it.
clear that either one is fine with him and that he won't put his thumb on the scale for either
candidate.
That's Republican strategist Bill O'Reilly, partner with the November team.
In other news, Latinos are bearing the brunt of immigration enforcement in New York,
even though they only represent a quarter of non-citizens in the state.
That's according to a new report from the New York Immigration Coalition and researchers
at the University of Colorado Boulder.
Chloe East is an economics professor at the university
and co-author of the report.
And really, the reason we zoomed in on Latinos in the report
is that that was far in a way,
the group that is being impacted the most by ICE right now.
And so we felt like that was the main story to tell
and the main focus of the report.
The finding, for the first six months of the year,
largely matches the national picture.
The Department of Homeland Security did not comment on the report.
Still ahead, a look into the newest financial issues at the new school.
That's after the break.
Higher education throughout the country is going through a moment right now, to say the least.
Due to declining enrollment, scrutiny from the federal government, and even lawsuits, some schools are faced.
facing major financial challenges, forcing them to make tough decisions.
Here in New York City, the latest university in hot water is the new school, a private university
in the village with a progressive history.
There's a pause on admitting all but a few PhD students for next year, and the university's
president announced cuts to positions and closures of programs with low demand.
Voluntary separation and early retirement letters went out to faculty and staff last week,
and the university says layoffs will follow depending on how many people.
volunteer to leave. The American Association of University professors says 40% of full-time faculty
were offered these exit packages, which that association says is the largest attempt at firing
faculty in the country. WMYC education reporter Jessica Gould says that according to university
leaders, the new school is affected by the same trends that have been rocking colleges
across the country. Enrollment has plummeted in recent years. And university leaders, and university
leaders say this restructuring is necessary to stabilize the budget and then have a reset for the
future. School faculty is not happy, especially those who receive voluntary separation letters
that would take effect either as soon as January or in June. They say they're worried about their
jobs, but they also say they're worried about the direction of the university. The new school was
created by anti-war academics, who faced backlash for opposing the United States' entry,
into World War I more than a century ago.
In the 1930s, it became an academic home
for intellectuals who were in exile from Nazi Germany.
Over the years, the school has pioneered courses
in photography, film, jazz, and women's history,
and its activist bent has continued.
There were two pro-Palestinian encampments last year
when those encampments were sweeping the country,
including one specifically by faculty,
maybe the only one that was by faculty
at any campus across the country.
And President Trump included the new school on a list of his administration's campuses that he was scrutinizing.
Rachel Sherman, a sociology professor at the new school, is worried that these staff and program cuts will have a disproportionate effect on the school's most progressive departments.
They characterize our intentions only as economic.
But it does seem to be designed to minimize the power of the divisions that have historically been more politically.
motivated. Jessica says that a spokesperson for the university disagrees and says that
ideas that certain political views or elements of the university are being
targeted is completely false. She said the cuts are university-wide, not focused on any
certain divisions or disciplines, and that the school maintains a commitment to
free speech and inquiry. That's WMYC's Jessica Gould. We all want to stay
healthy this season, right? State health officials are urging New Yorkers to get their flu shots
before going home for the holidays. The latest state data shows a grim increase in the number of
residents who have contracted the flu in the last week of November. More than 14,000 New Yorkers.
I'm definitely not trying to be in that number, and I'm sure you're not either. But state health
officials say the vaccination rate this season is lagging compared to last year. This is just a
gender reminder. Do what you've got to do to stay healthy these days. Thanks for listening to NYC Now from
WMYC. I'm Jene Pierre. We'll be back tomorrow.
