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De Blasio Dem nominee after Thompson concedes NYC mayoral race

Democratic New York City mayoral hopeful Bill Thompson ended his campaign on Monday

Public Advocate Bill de Blasio, Democratic nominee for New York City mayor, appeared with former New York City comptroller Bill Thompson, who withdrew his candidacy during a speech outside New York City Hall on Monday.
Andrew Burton/Getty Images

The runner-up in New York City's Democratic mayoral primary concluded his campaign Monday, clearing the way for a general election that will pit the two major-party opponents with vastly different visions of how the city should move forward after 12 years of Michael Bloomberg as mayor.

Democratic front-runner Bill de Blasio will face Republican nominee Joe Lhota now that the second-place finisher in the Democratic primary, Bill Thompson, has withdrawn. Thompson's decision eliminated a potential Oct. 1 runoff against de Blasio. That possibility had loomed as a significant distraction for Democrats, who are desperate to elect their first mayor since 1989 and were fearful that intra-party strife could provide a gift to Lhota and independent candidates.

"Bill de Blasio and I want to move the city forward," Thompson said at City Hall news conference Monday morning. "This is bigger than any one of us."

De Blasio has run an unabashedly liberal campaign, calling for a tax hike on the city's wealthiest neighborhoods to pay for universal pre-kindergarten and reforms to police tactics and demanding greater income equality to "put an end to the tale of two cities."

He also placed his interracial family at the center of his campaign. An ad narrated by his 15-year-old son helped fuel his meteoric rise from fourth to first in the primary's final month. He also received a boost in the campaign's final days when, in an interview, Bloomberg labeled de Blasio's campaign as "racist" and "class warfare," criticisms that galvanized de Blasio supporters.

Lhota, who served as the head the city's transit agency and was a one-time deputy mayor to Rudy Giuliani, has vowed to continue many of Bloomberg's policies.

He is an ardent defender of the police department's use of stop-and-frisk, a policy that allows officer to stop people deemed acting suspiciously, saying it helped drive down crime. A federal judge ruled that it discriminates against minorities and ordered a monitor to oversee changes to the policy.

Democrats outnumber Republicans 6-to-1 among registered voters, presenting Lhota with an uphill climb. However, the GOP's unlikely mayoral winning streak could continue if he "runs as a manager," according to Kellyanne Conway, a Washington-based pollster who has done polls the race.

"Managers tend to do pretty well in New York City," said Conway, who is not affiliated with any candidate. "He's literally the guy who can keep trains running on time and keep taxes low, and that has appeal to people."

De Blasio did not discuss either Lhota at the Monday rally. But Thompson's decision to drop out prevents would could have been a fortnight that cost Democrats time to campaign against Lhota.

In unofficial returns with 99 percent of precincts reporting, de Blasio had had 40.3 percent of the vote, slightly more than the 40 percent threshold needed to win outright. Thompson was second with 26.2 percent.

The Associated Press

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