Carr passed two pieces of legislation in his first term. The first required the
New York City Department of Buildings to give fee waivers for those seeking permits to build back after a fire after caused by a defect and to give permit fee waivers for those seeking to correct that same defect before a fire would happen in their homes. The second allowed the city to set a different interest rate on unpaid property taxes for individuals and families that entered into a repayment plan with the
New York City Department of Finance in order to give them a lower interest payment. As chair of the Italian Caucus, Carr has strongly supported the retention of Columbus Day as a holiday. He is a member of the LGBTQIA+ Caucus. In 2024, amid a housing shortage in New York City, Carr voted against a proposal (
City of Yes) to permit construction of 80,000 new housing units across the city over a 15-year period. He argued that the environmental effects of new housing had not been studied. Carr became the first gay person elected leader of the Republican caucus or Republican conference of the New York City Council. Councilwoman Ariola served as the minority leader until January 7, 2026. On Wednesday January 7, 2026, Carr was elected to his second term as minority leader of The New York City Council. With former councilwoman
Kristy Marmorato losing re-election to The New York City Council on Election Day 2025, councilwoman
Joann Ariola lost a vote during the private election.
Vicky Paladino,
Frank Morano and
Inna Vernikov supported Carr. He became the only openly gay person elected leader of the New York City Republican caucus twice within less than one year. == Electoral history ==