
 
		HITTING THE POLLS 
 COURIER LIFE, JUNE 18-24, 2021 7  
 ers with the 2017 mayoral race  
 yielding a 21.5 percent turnout, 
  compared to roughly 53.4  
 percent who voted for president  
 in 2020. 
 It  is also  the fi rst citywide  
 election  using  ranked  choice  
 voting, which allows people to  
 rank up to fi ve candidates for  
 municipal elections. City voters  
 adopted the new system  
 by referendum in 2019 with an  
 overwhelming majority of 73.5  
 percent. 
 At  a  poll  site  at New York  
 City College of Technology  
 in  Downtown  Brooklyn,  the  
 ranked  voting  debut  received  
 mixed reactions. 
 “That is cool,” said Michael  
 Bradshaw, an Adams voter, of  
 ranked choice voting. “It’s easier, 
  it’s a simple situation.” 
 One  Cobble  Hill  resident  
 said she supports the change,  
 but worried that it might confuse  
 some  voters,  especially  
 with  the  myriad  of  people  
 running for less-prominent  
 elected offi ces. 
 “It might be kind of intimidating  
 for a lot of people, especially  
 voting for councilmembers  
 that we  know  very  little  
 about,” said Simona McCray,  
 who  ranked  Garcia  as  her  
 fi rst choice, followed by city  
 Comptroller Scott Stringer. “I  
 believe  in  ranked  voting  but  
 there could be a lot of errors  
 when you’re fi lling  them  out,  
 you could get confused.” 
 A Brooklyn Heights man  
 liked the large choice of candidates  
 to pick from, but added  
 that the city should have stuck  
 with the old system. 
 “One vote, one person,  
 one candidate,” said Arthur  
 Fisch, who was about to cast  
 a ballot for Adams. “I think  
 it’s absurd, I think it’s totally  
 stupid and I don’t know if anybody  
 knows how it’s going to  
 work and I think the way the  
 other way worked, we should  
 keep it.” 
 While many voters had different  
 opinions on who should  
 run the city over the coming  
 four  years,  everyone  amNew- 
 York Metro spoke to agreed on  
 one thing: vote! 
 “We need to make good educated  
 choices about who we’re  
 voting for, why we’re voting  
 for them and hopefully in return  
 they  will  work  for  us,”  
 said Defreitas. 
 Clockwise from left: Gabe Salzer at his Red Hook polling site; Sandra  
 Bradshaw and her husband Michael voted at New York City College of  
 Technology in Downtown Brooklyn; Cobble Hill resident Simona McCray  
 outside her poll site in Downtown Brooklyn.  Photos by Kevin Duggan