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SAT . A few weeks ago, Mamdani was ahead 46% to 33%, with Cuomo picking up ground after Mayor Eric Adams announced he would not seek re-election.

A trio of polls show Democratic nominee and front-runner Zohran Mamdani with varying leads over ex-Gov. Andrew Cuomo during the home stretch of the Big Apple’s mayoral race — ranging from a closer 10-point gap to a 25-point blowout.

A Quinnipiac University survey released Wednesday showed the race tightening, with Mamdani ahead of Cuomo by just 10 percentage points — 43% support to 33% with 14% of voters backing Republican nominee Curtis Sliwa.

A few weeks ago, Mamdani was ahead 46% to 33%, with Cuomo picking up ground after Mayor Eric Adams announced he would not seek re-election.

Democratic candidate for New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani smiles at a campaign event.
The Quinnipiac University survey had Mamdani with a 10-point lead over Cuomo. REUTERS

“Zohran Mamdani has a 10-point lead over Andrew Cuomo with Curtis Sliwa a distant third, but one wildcard remains. The percentage of likely voters not weighing in has increased a bit since earlier this month, suggesting there’s room for movement in the final stretch,” said Quinnipiac assistant director Mary Snow.

But Mamdani holds a yawning 25-point lead over Cuomo, who is running as an independent — 50% to 25%, according to the Emerson College/Pix11/The Hill poll released Thursday morning.

In that survey, 21% of supporters backed Sliwa, nearly splitting the anti-Mamdani vote with Cuomo. Sliwa’s backing was higher than in other surveys.

Since Emerson College’s prior poll last month, Mamdani’s support increased 7 points from 43% to 50%; Cuomo lost three points, 28% to 25%; and Sliwa gained 11 points, doubling from 10% to 21%.

James Messerschmidt Curtis, a NYC 2025 Mayoral candidate, in a red beret, dark suit, white shirt, and blue patterned tie.
The Emerson College/Pix11/The Hill poll had Sliwa getting 21 percent of voters. James Messerschmidt

Mamdani’s support jumped from 50% to 71% among black voters, consolidating the backing of a key constituency since defeating Cuomo in the Democratic primary.

A third poll conducted by the Marist Institute for Public Opinion and released Thursday morning comes out in the middle — showing Mamdani with a 16-point lead over Cuomo — 48% to 32% — with 16% support for Sliwa.

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A poll released Monday by Suffolk University showed that Cuomo had cut Mamdani’s lead in half from 20 points to 10 points.

“It’s Mamdani’s race to lose. Mamdani is in a strong position,” said Marist pollster Lee Miringoff.

Andrew Cuomo speaks to press and supporters at Casa Belvedere in Staten Island.
Marist Institute for Public Opinion’s most recent poll showed Cuomo getting just 32 percent of voters in a three-way race. LP Media

He said Cuomo and other critics have not been able to knock down Mamdani’s likability among voters.

A majority of likely voters — 57% — have a favorable view of Mamdani.

By comparison, 55% of city voters have an unfavorable view of Cuomo.

“Cuomo is upside down,” Miringoff said.

The Democratic Socialist is benefiting from the anti-Mamdani vote being split between Cuomo and Sliwa.

In a hypothetical head-to-head without Sliwa in the race, Mamdani leads Cuomo by only 7 points, 51% to 44%, in the Marist College survey.


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Without Cuomo in the race, Mamdani leads Sliwa 59% to 33%.

Mamdani also has a staggering lead among younger voters age 45 and under — 64% to 21% for Cuomo in the Marist poll.

Curtis Sliwa visiting a polling site in Staten Island.
Without Cuomo in the race, Mamdani leads Sliwa 59% to 33%, according to the Marist college poll. LP Media

Cuomo split voters over the age of 45 — with 39% for the former governor to 38% for Mamdani.

Mamdani also led by huge margins among liberal voters, while Cuomo led more narrowly among moderate voters. Sliwa garnered 45% of conservative voters, more than Cuomo or Mamdani.

A majority of Jewish voters — 55% — support Cuomo. But Mamdani had the backing of a third of Jews despite his bashing of Israel, in the Marist poll.

Andrew Cuomo speaks to press and supporters at Casa Belvedere in Staten Island.
Sliwa garnered 45% of conservative voters, more than Cuomo or Mamdani. LP Media

The Emerson College poll claims those who already voted early favored Mamdani by a 33-point margin, 58% to 25%, while those who have yet to vote break for Mamdani by 19 points, 45% to 26%.

Emerson queried 640 voters from Oct. 25-27, and the findings have a margin of error of plus or minus 3.8 percentage points.

The Marist poll interviewed 792 likely voters from Oct. 24-28 through live phone interviews, texts or online. It has a margin of error of plus or minus 4.2 percentage points.

Quinnipiac surveyed 911 New York City likely voters from October 23-27, with a margin of error of plus or minus 4 percentage points.

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