Welcome to ‘New York’s Election Newspaper’


The New York Daily News is based on its inheritance as a “New York Journal of the Home City” to become “New York’s Election Newspaper”, with improved coverage according to the town hall candidates in 2025 on the campaign track and deeply arriving in New York districts while voters are confronted with a critical decision.
From Thursday and for the coming months, this change will be reflected in a new flag on the first page of the news.
The campaign, a turning point, has raised questions about the future of the city in the midst of conflict crises: affordability, anti -Semitism, immigration, housing, an epidemic of untreated mental illness. Everything taking place in a context of dissent in Washington, deep budget cuts and an aggressive repression of immigration.
It is a battle that will be fought in the streets and districts of the city, demanding local experience and expertise that journalists and publishers of the New York Daily News are unique.
The New York Times and the Wall Street Journal have reduced their metro sections. The position has its favorite candidates. The Daily News is the best positioned newspaper to provide in -depth and impartial coverage.
Over the next four months, its readers will see and hear the candidates in real time. They will hear their New York colleagues while they will take care of promises and politicians, attacks and responses. Our award -winning opinion will provide information and analyzes.
The Daily News also plans to offer readers an interactive pipeline to politicians, using our reach to highlight the requests and questions of the candidates seek to represent.
This is an election that is monitored across the country. Can a democratic socialist candidate succeed in the global financial center? Does the Democratic Party derive to the left while the Republican Party swings? The flaws that have long crossed American society are irreparably broken?
If this counts for New Yorkers, it is important for daily news. Our coverage will offer an essential service while New Yorkers are preparing to make a choice that will have implications for the decades to come.
– Andrew Julien, editor -in -chief
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