See if your neighborhood voted Zohran Mamdani or Andrew Cuomo for NYC mayor in this results map

It’s over and Mam.
New Yorkers elected far-left Democrat Zohran Mamdani Tuesday in a historic victory – but not all neighborhoods voted the same way, according to a block-by-block voting map.
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Four boroughs opted in favor of the democratic socialist, while most of Staten Island went for independent candidate Andrew Cuomo, save for the majority of the North Shore, per the NYC Election Atlas published by the Center for Urban Research at CUNY’s Graduate Center.
Here’s how New Yorkers’ vote broke down:
Who was the most popular candidate by borough?
In Manhattan, Democratic nominee Mamdani swept most of the vote, wooing 50% or more voters in nearly every neighborhood save for Cuomo-heavy support in the Upper East Side, Midtown East, Flatiron, Tribeca, Murray Hill and Battery Park City.
Brooklyn saw additional Cuomo strongholds in Borough Park, South Williamsburg, Sheepshead Bay and Midwood. But Mamdani repped Bushwick, Williamsburg, Prospect Heights, Fort Greene and most of Crown Heights.
In Queens, Mamdani took Astoria, where he lives with his wife in a rent-controlled apartment, as well as Jamaica and Queensbridge. Cuomo, the Queens-born former Democratic New York governor, saw the most support in Glen Oaks and Kew Gardens Hills’ election districts.
In The Bronx, Parkchester rode for Mamdani while Cuomo won over a majority of Riverdale.
Staten Island was Cuomo’s, and he saw the most support in the borough’s Todt Hill area with more than 80% of ballots cast there going to the ex-governor.
Which neighborhoods went overwhelmingly for each candidate?
The neighborhood that overwhelmingly voted for Mamdani was a sliver of East Williamsburg bordering Bushwick, Brooklyn, with 91.4% of the vote (511 out of 559 votes), according to the Graduate Center map.
Williamsburg at large repped Mamdani through and through — with all but one voting district in the area punching above 50% of votes for the Democratic nominee, and more than a half-dozen voting districts coming in at 80%.
The mayor-elect also saw voting margins above 80% in Bedford-Stuyvesant and Greenpoint, Brooklyn, Jamaica, Queens, and Morningside Heights and the East Village in Manhattan.
Mamdani won over a majority of voters in election districts with more public transit riders, renters, NYCHA developments and across income levels, according to an analysis from nonprofit news outlet The CITY.
Cuomo, meanwhile, was the most popular in areas with more drivers and homeowners, the report found.
The voting district that repped Cuomo the strongest appears to be in South Williamsburg, where he swept 91.3% of the vote (334 of 366 votes) near Bedford Avenue. In Midtown East near Central Park, he represented more than 85% of the vote.
His other strongholds outside of Manhattan were Crown Heights, Borough Park, Bergen Beach and Midwood in Brooklyn and Kew Gardens Hills, Douglaston and Jamaica Estates in Queens.
The only voting sites that largely went to Republican nominee Curtis Sliwa — were Maspeth, Queens and Broadway Junction, Brooklyn, both of which only saw a single vote cast in total.
Sliwa — who got a measly 7.1% of the total vote — was also popular in the Queens locales of Roxbury, Broad Channel, Rockaway Park and Breezy Point, though he wasn’t able to crack more than 42% in any of the districts.
Cuomo, Mamdani enclaves in opposition-heavy neighborhoods
There were voting anomalies in virtually every borough, with several neighborhoods sporting bizarre enclaves of Mamdani and Cuomo supporters in a sea of opposition.
In a Washington Heights election district between West 163rd and 165th streets near Riverside Drive – home of the Fort Washington Senior Center – more than 67% of the vote went to Cuomo, despite being surrounded by other election districts that opted for Mamdani.
The only other election district that overwhelmingly opted for Cuomo above 125th Street in Manhattan was a five-block stretch of the West 180s near Yeshiva University, indicating his support among the Jewish community.
In Brooklyn, votes were split nearly evenly at NYCHA’s Williamsburg Houses public housing complex — in a section of otherwise overwhelmingly Mamdani-loving Williamsburg — where the Dem nominee got 48.8% to Cuomo’s 43.5%.
A section of Brighton Beach between Ocean Parkway and Brighton 6th Street swung 56% of votes for Mamdani – and only 32.5% for Cuomo – despite being surrounded by an area that overwhelmingly went for the independent.
In nearby Coney Island, most election districts saw Mamdani punching above 50%, and even rising to 62.8% of the vote along Stillwell Avenue.
Cuomo maintained a grip on Coney Island’s waterfront, nearby Sea Gate and Manhattan Beach.
Mamdani carried 50.4% of votes to Cuomo’s 42% and Sliwa’s 7.1% at midnight.
More than 2 million New Yorkers cast their vote in total, marking a historic turnout not seen since 1969.
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