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Mark D. Levine (born April 30, 1969 [1]) is an American politician and educator serving as the 28th Borough President of Manhattan since 2022. Previously, he served as member of the New York City Council from 2014 to 2021, where he represented the 7th district covering Manhattan neighborhoods of Morningside Heights, West Harlem, Washington Heights, and part of the Upper West Side.
Elizabeth R. Caputo, former chair of Manhattan's Community Board 7 [1] [2] Brad Hoylman, state senator for the 27th district [1] [2] Ben Kallos, councilmember [1] [2] Mark Levine, councilmember [2] Guillermo Perez, candidate for New York State Assembly District 71 in 2018 [1] [3] Kimberly R. Watkins, President of Community Education Council [1] [2]
Brad Hoylman-Sigal, state senator from the 47th district (2013–present) and candidate for borough president in 2021 [1] Keith Powers , former Majority Leader of the New York City Council (2022–2024) from the 4th district (2018–present) [ 2 ]
Levine, chair of the Council’s Health Committee, cleared a path to the largely ceremonial post in the summer, when he topped state Sen. Brad Hoylman in a competitive Democratic primary election.
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Incumbent Democrat Mark Levine was term-limited and could not run for a third consecutive term. Levine was running for Manhattan Borough President . Shaun Abreu was considered the frontrunner in the race, while five of his opponents – Maria Ordoñez, Stacy Lynch, Marti Allen-Cummings, Dan Cohen, and Corey Ortega – formed a ranked-choice ...
On January 1, 1898, the boroughs of Manhattan, the Bronx, Brooklyn, Queens, and Richmond were created and consolidated into a unified city of New York. As part of the consolidation, all town and county governments within the city were dissolved, and their powers were given to the city and the boroughs.