- Source: 1977 New York City mayoral election
The New York City mayoral election of 1977 occurred on Tuesday, November 8, 1977. U.S. Representative Ed Koch defeated Secretary of State Mario Cuomo in both the Democratic Party primary and the general election, with Cuomo running on the Liberal Party ticket.
In the Democratic primary on September 8, incumbent mayor Abraham Beame was challenged by five other Democrats, including Representative Ed Koch, New York Secretary of State Mario Cuomo, and feminist activist and former Representative Bella Abzug. In the initial primary, Koch won a narrow victory over the field despite carrying none of New York's five boroughs and only 19.8% of the popular vote. Because no candidate received over forty percent of the vote, a runoff vote was held between Koch and Cuomo, who had already won the Liberal Party nomination. Koch defeated Cuomo by winning narrow victories in every borough but Staten Island.
In the general election, which Cuomo decided to contest on the Liberal ticket, Koch was again victorious, coming within a few hundred votes of an outright majority. Republican Roy M. Goodman and Conservative Barry Farber finished a distant third and fourth, respectively.
Background
In October 1975, with the city on the verge of bankruptcy, Mayor Beame asked the federal government for a bailout. President Gerald Ford refused, leading to the memorable New York Daily News headline: "Ford to City: Drop Dead". As a result, Mayor Beame laid off many police officers and other city employees, which was followed by an increase in crime. (The next month, Ford relented in part, signing the New York City Seasonal Financing Act of 1975, which extended $2.3 billion in federal loans to the city for three years.)
A 982-page report from the Securities and Exchange Commission blamed Beame's mismanagement for the city's financial mess, which his opponents seized on as an electoral issue. Beame's struggles with the economy and crime, which had led to a decrease in the population of New York City, encouraged several Democrats to challenge him.
Liberal Party convention
The Liberal Party convention was held on May 19, 1977. Cuomo defeated Abzug for the nomination.
= Results
=Source: OurCampaigns.com
Democratic primary
The Democratic primary was held on September 8, 1977.
= Candidates
=Bella Abzug, former U.S. Representative from the West Side and candidate for U.S. Senate in 1976
Herman Badillo, U.S. Representative from the South Bronx
Abraham Beame, incumbent Mayor of New York City
Mario Cuomo, Secretary of State of New York
Joel Hartnett, civic watchdog
Ed Koch, U.S. Representative from Greenwich Village
Percy Sutton, Manhattan Borough President
Withdrew
Edward N. Costikyan, reformer, attorney, and Beame's 1965 campaign manager (endorsed Koch)
Abzug represented parts of Manhattan and the Bronx in the U.S. House. In 1975, she left her seat to run for the U.S. Senate but was narrowly defeated in the Democratic primary by Daniel Patrick Moynihan.
Cuomo, a liberal from Queens, had been appointed Secretary of State by Governor Hugh Carey in 1976, after losing the election for lieutenant governor in 1974.
Ed Koch, a Jewish politician from Greenwich Village, began his career as "just a plain liberal," but shifted rightward, towards being a "liberal with sanity".
= Campaign
=Koch ran to the right of the other candidates, on a "law and order" platform. A major blackout affected New York City from July 13, 1977 to July 14, 1977. The blackout was localized to New York City and the immediate surroundings, and resulted in citywide looting. According to historian Jonathan Mahler, the blackout and the subsequent rioting helped catapult Koch and his message of restoring public safety to front-runner status. Mayor Beame accused Con Edison, the power provider for New York City, of "gross negligence". Koch criticized Beame for losing control of the streets and failing to ask Governor Carey to call in the National Guard.
= Endorsements
=Abzug – Local 1199, 10,000 hospital workers; Marine Engineers Benevolent Association, Shirley MacLaine, Marlo Thomas
Badillo – WCBS Radio, the West Brooklyn Independent Democrats, several Hispanic labor organizations, Chita Rivera, Raul Julia
Beame – Central Labor Council, ILGWU, UFT, TWU, John DeLury, Bert Powers, Stanley Steingut, Donald Manes
Cuomo – Governor Carey, Mario Biaggi, The New York Times, The Liberal Party, Village Voice, former Mayor Robert F. Wagner, Jr., 26 labor organizations
Harnett – Don Pippin of "A Chorus Line," Phil Newman, business
Koch – Stephen J. Solarz, New York Post, New York Daily News, Citizens Union, Bess Myerson
Sutton – Representative Charles Rangel, Amsterdam News, New York Voice, Ellen Sulzberger Straus, Nicholas Katzenbach, Allied Health Services Union, New York Ministerial Alliance, Baptist Ministers Conference of Greater New York and Vicinity
= Polling
== Results
=Source: OurCampaigns.com
Results by borough
= Democratic runoff campaign
=As no candidate obtained the needed 40%, a runoff election was scheduled. The runoff election was held on September 19, 1977 between the top two vote getters, Koch and Cuomo.
= Results
=Source: OurCampaigns.com
= Democratic primary results by borough =
Republican primary
The Republican primary was held on September 8, 1977.
= Candidates
=Barry Farber, talk radio host
Roy M. Goodman, State Senator from Manhattan
= Results
=Source: OurCampaigns.com
General election
= Candidates
=Vito P. Battista, former Republican Assemblyman from Brooklyn (United Taxpayers)
Elijah C. Boyd (U.S. Labor)
Mario Cuomo, Secretary of State of New York (Liberal)
Barry Farber, talk radio host (Conservative)
Catarino Garza (Socialist Workers)
Roy M. Goodman, State Senator from Manhattan (Republican)
Ed Koch, U.S. Representative from Greenwich Village (Democratic)
William Lawry (Libertarian)
Kenneth F. Newcombe (Communist)
Louis P. Wein (Independence)
= Campaign
=Though Koch won the runoff convincingly, Cuomo remained in the race as the Liberal Party nominee.
Though Governor Carey had persuaded Cuomo to run for mayor in the first place, he threw his support to Koch and urged Cuomo to stand down for the sake of party unity. Cuomo refused.
While Koch had a reputation as a crusading reformer, that summer he quietly promised plum city jobs to the political powerbrokers in the boroughs in exchange for their support. Cuomo ran on banning the death penalty, which backfired with New Yorkers during a time of high crime rates. Cuomo then went negative with ads that likened Koch to unpopular former mayor John Lindsay. His supporters used the inflammatory slogan "Vote for Cuomo, Not the Homo". Meanwhile, Koch backers accused Cuomo of anti-Semitism and pelted Cuomo campaign cars with eggs.
= Polling
== Results
=Source: OurCampaigns.com
= Results by borough
=Other vote was: Kenneth F. Newcombe – Communist – 5,300; Catarino Garza – Socialist Workers – 3,294; Vito Battista – United Taxpayers Party – 2,119; Louis Wein – Independent – 1,127; William Lawry – Free Libertarian – 1,068; Elijah Boyd – Labor – 873. Cuomo's total vote included 522,942 Liberal and 64,971 Neighborhood Government.
References
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- 1977 New York City mayoral election
- New York City mayoral elections
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- 2025 New York City mayoral election
- List of mayors of New York City
- 2009 New York City mayoral election
- 2001 New York City mayoral election
- 1989 New York City mayoral election
- 1993 New York City mayoral election
- 2021 New York City mayoral election