
"The tallies are in from the nine-day early voting period that ended Sunday afternoon: More than 732,000 New Yorkers have already turned out to cast their ballots, accounting for nearly 14 percent of the more than 5.3 million registered voters in the city, according to THE CITY's analysis of the latest city Board of Elections data. Sixty-five percent as many people have already voted this year as the 1,125,258 who voted altogether in 2021's"
"The 2025 early voting numbers suggest overall turnout could approach 2 million people - a level the city hasn't come close to since David Dinkins and Rudy Giuliani faced off in 1989 and again in 1993. Early voting peaked over the final weekend, with 103,597 New Yorkers voting on Saturday, and another 150,053 on Sunday - the two highest turnout days of the early voting period that had begun the previous weekend."
More than 732,000 New Yorkers cast early ballots during the nine-day period, about 14% of the city's roughly 5.3 million registered voters. Early voting totals so far represent roughly 65% of the 1,125,258 voters who turned out in the 2021 general election. Current early figures suggest overall turnout could approach 2 million, a level not seen since 1989 and 1993 mayoral contests. Early voting peaked the final weekend with 103,597 votes on Saturday and 150,053 on Sunday. Brooklyn accounted for 33% of early votes, led by Windsor Terrace and Park Slope; Manhattan had the highest share of registered voters voting early, led by the Upper East Side. Multi-generational households in neighborhoods such as Jackson Heights and Washington Heights also showed notable early turnout.
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