Candidates •
Ruth Messinger,
Manhattan Borough President •
Al Sharpton, Baptist minister, activist, and founder of
National Action Network •
Sal Albanese, New York City councilman
Withdrew •
Fernando Ferrer,
Bronx Borough President (1987–2001)
(endorsed Messinger) Declined •
David Dinkins, former New York City mayor (1990–1993) and Manhattan Borough President (1986–1989) •
Alan Hevesi, New York City Comptroller (1994–2001) •
Carl McCall, New York State Comptroller (1993–2002) •
Mark Green,
New York City Public Advocate •
Peter Vallone Sr.,
New York City Council •
Bill Bratton, former New York City Police Commissioner (1994–96, 2014–16)
Campaign The primary campaign was largely uneventful until April, due to former mayor David Dinkins opting out of a potential third rematch against Rudy Giuliani. Messinger, the front-runner, ignored her opponents in favor of attacking Giuliani. Sharpton, for his part, ran a "street-corner, subway-stop campaign that raised little money, aired no television commercials and hired no consultants." Instead, he relied on his high name recognition among New Yorkers from his organization on behalf of
Tawana Brawley,
Yusef Hawkins, and the
Central Park Five and his prior runs for United States Senate in 1992 and 1994. After the Board of Elections cancelled the run-off, Sharpton filed suit, charging "such substantial fraud and irregularities in the conduct of the primary election ... that it is impossible to render a determination as to who was rightfully nominated." Sharpton claimed, among other things, that non-Democrats were allowed to vote, that more votes were counted in some districts than there were voters, that some registered voters were wrongly turned away from polling locations, and that some voting machine were broken. Though she agreed that the vote-counting process "took too long", Messinger claimed victory on the basis of the Board of Elections decision. ==General election==