For Black Women, Adrienne Adams Is More Than Just Another Candidate

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The New York City Council speaker, who officially launched her mayoral campaign on Saturday, would be the first woman of color to lead City Hall.

Adrienne Adams, wearing a pink pantsuit, raises her hands to her mouth in a sign of gratitude as people clap.
“No drama, no scandal, no nonsense, just competence and integrity,” Adrienne Adams said of her candidacy at a kickoff event in Queens in Saturday.Credit...Dave Sanders for The New York Times

Maya KingJeffery C. Mays

March 8, 2025, 3:43 p.m. ET

As Adrienne Adams officially kicked off her mayoral campaign on Saturday, she urged potential voters at a rally in Jamaica, Queens, to view her as an alternative to the city’s two most recognizable candidates, Mayor Eric Adams and former Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo.

But many of her supporters see her candidacy as something else: an opportunity for Democrats to elect a qualified Black woman to lead the country’s largest city, less than a year after the bruising loss of Kamala Harris, the first Black woman to lead a major party presidential ticket.

Wearing a pink pantsuit, Ms. Adams entered to cheers at the Rochdale Village Shopping Center in southeast Queens and danced with supporters.

“No drama, no scandal, no nonsense, just competence and integrity,” Ms. Adams said at the rally, summing up her candidacy.

Ms. Adams, the City Council speaker and a Queens native, faces a tough path to the mayor’s office amid a crowded primary field and her own considerable fund-raising lag. But to the city’s most steadfast Democratic voting bloc, Black women, Ms. Adams’s candidacy represents more than a litany of messaging and policy promises.

If elected, Ms. Adams would be the first woman of color to become mayor of New York City. So far, one other woman in the June 24 primary is vying for the job — Jessica Ramos, a Queens-based state senator who if elected would also be the city’s first Latino mayor.


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