New York City politics? Never boring. But this year’s primaries are something else—we’ve got disgraced politicians lining up for comebacks like it’s 1999. Anthony Weiner (yep, that guy), plus former Council members Andy King and Ruben Wills, all betting big that voters have short memories. Thing is, New Yorkers never forget. So what makes these guys think they’ve got a shot?
Remember when Weiner was the golden boy of New York politics? Congressman, mayoral contender—then boom, sexting scandals turned him into a late-night joke. Now he’s back, running in District 2. And get this—some people are actually listening. “He’s suffered enough,” one East Village voter told me. Others? They’re still cringing at the memory of those leaked photos.
King got booted from the Council in 2020—harassment claims, misused funds, the whole messy deal. But here’s the thing: in his old Bronx district, some folks still swear by him. “Andy delivered for us,” a local bodega owner said. Problem is, ethics violations stick like gum on hot pavement.
Wills actually went to prison—fraud, grand larceny, the works. Now he’s pitching himself as the redemption story. “People deserve second chances,” he keeps saying. But let’s be real: convincing voters you’ve changed after stealing their money? That’s a tough sell.
Okay, let’s break this down. On one hand, ego—nobody likes ending their career in disgrace. But there’s strategy too: their districts don’t have strong incumbents right now. Open seats mean opportunity. Still, the big question isn’t whether they can run—it’s whether anyone will actually vote for them.
Opponents are already running ads with their scandal headlines. Because in 2023? Your past is always one search away.
NYC’s moved left since these guys were last in office. Today’s voters care about clean records—not old-school political muscle.
Every speech, every interview—you know reporters are just waiting for them to slip up. And Twitter? Forget about it. One wrong move and it’s trending for all the wrong reasons.
Name recognition counts for something. And let’s face it—in local politics, sometimes voters care more about who gets their trash picked up than someone’s messy past.
People are tired of drama. Fresh faces with clean slates look real good compared to guys dragging baggage into office.
Marion Barry came back after prison—became D.C.’s mayor again. Eliot Spitzer won as comptroller. But for every Barry, there’s a dozen failed comebacks. The difference? Whether voters felt personally betrayed, or just politically disappointed.
Here’s the thing about political redemption—it’s not about what the candidate deserves. It’s about whether voters feel like giving it. These guys? They’re testing how forgiving New Yorkers can be. My guess? The city’s got a long memory—and low tolerance for repeat offenders.
Source: NY Post – US News
Discover the top 7 digital transformation trends in 2025, from AI-driven enterprises to hybrid workforces.…
BMW scales digital twin tech across 30+ sites, cutting real-world trials with simulations by 2025.
Another European state adopts Linux over Microsoft. Discover why this open-source shift is gaining traction.
Despite $10.6B FPI outflows, India's stock market surged 5% on $36.1B DII investments. Discover the…
Assam government initiates a drive to reclaim encroached land in Goalpara. Learn about the latest…
LME copper prices recover despite Middle East tensions and mixed China economic data. MCX copper…