State Senator Brad Hoylman-Sigal delivers remarks on Election Evening as he was elected Manhattan borough president.
Donna Aceto
In entrance of a packed crowd of supporters at Harlem Tavern on election night time, State Senator Brad Hoylman-Sigal declared victory and made historical past within the common election for Manhattan borough president, making him New York Metropolis’s first out borough president.
Hoylman-Sigal, a Democrat who has served within the State Senate since 2013, has represented the west aspect of Manhattan for over a decade, first within the twenty seventh district and later within the redrawn forty seventh district. He has helped go over 350 payments in Albany, based on his marketing campaign web site, together with the Gender Expression Non-Discrimination Act (GENDA), the repeal of the ban on Strolling Whereas Trans, and the state’s ban on conversion remedy practiced on minors. He has additionally been a robust advocate for youth entry to gender-affirming care.
By midnight, Hoylman-Sigal had obtained 80% of the 478,368 votes counted throughout Manhattan, based on unofficial election outcomes. Standing subsequent to Manhattan District Lawyer Alvin Bragg, he addressed his supporters.
“History is happening in Manhattan tonight,” declared Hoylman-Sigal, who will take workplace in January. “I know that we have a lot of work to do, but we are united, we are going to overcome the divisions that we’ve all felt over the last six months.”
“I, as Manhattan borough president, am going to make it part of my mission to protect the most vulnerable in our borough and certainly, queer homeless youth are at the top of that list because they need help,” Hoylman-Sigal mentioned. “We know there’s a war on transgender young people and LGBTQ kids, and sadly that’s reflected in rates of suicide ideation, poverty and homelessness.”
Brad Hoylman-Sigal (left) together with his husband, David Sigal, on election night time.Donna Aceto
Hoylman-Sigal’s high precedence is creating reasonably priced housing, he mentioned, acknowledging that “the rates of homelessness and poverty among LGBTQ homeless youth are greater than in the general population, particularly in LGBTQ communities of color.”
Jeffrey LeFrancois, a Hell’s Kitchen resident who voted for Hoylman-Sigal, praised the incoming borough president.
“Brad has been in the trenches for a long time,” LeFrancois mentioned. “He’s not someone who people vote for because he’s a member of [the LGBTQ] community, but because he’s overwhelmingly qualified for the jobs he runs for.”
“LGBTQ hate crimes persistently remain near the top of our docket for hate crime,” Bragg mentioned. “So we know it’s an underreported crime and we want to encourage people to come forward, work with our office.”
The bustling restaurant, stuffed to the brim with supporters, politicians, and political insiders, together with Congressmember Jerrold Nadler, out homosexual Assemblymember Tony Simone, and Assemblymembers Linda Rosenthal and Micah Lasher.
Proper as Hoylman-Sigal was about to take to the stage, the room erupted in cheers when the TV screens behind him introduced that Democratic nominee and State Assemblymember Zohran Mamdani, an LGBTQ ally, was the projected winner of the mayor’s race.
“The rates of HIV among communities of color are still extremely worrisome, and we need to do more to make certain that PEP and PrEP are widely available. I’d like to see the end of copays and move toward a healthcare system that doesn’t discriminate,” Hoylman-Sigal mentioned. “With a Mamdani administration that has already made some of those tenets part of their broader policy, I’m hopeful that we can get some of that done.”
Hoylman-Sigal and Mamdani have already got the shared expertise of serving within the New York State Legislature — simply in numerous homes — and Hoylman-Sigal mentioned they’ve a robust relationship.
“There’s a natural kinship that I hope to build upon and benefit our community in Manhattan, but in every borough as well,” Hoylman-Sigal emphasised.
Under, see some extra images from the election night time social gathering:
Assemblymember Linda Rosenthal, Manhattan District Lawyer Alvin Bragg, and Manhattan Borough President-Elect Brad Hoylman-Sigal be a part of palms on election night time.Donna Aceto
Congressmember Jerrold Nadler (second from left) with different attendees on election night time.Donna Aceto
Brad Hoylman-Sigal reacts to the election outcomes on tv.Donna Aceto
A vigorous crowd at Harlem Tavern.Donna Aceto
Assemblymembers Tony Simone and Al Taylor.Donna Aceto




