logo
Why an Unknown Centrist Thinks He Can Become New York's Next Mayor

Why an Unknown Centrist Thinks He Can Become New York's Next Mayor

New York Times21-02-2025
When Eric Adams was indicted on federal corruption charges last fall, resulting in the city of New York being left more or less unmanaged, Jim Walden decided to run for mayor. It was a quixotic idea, one in which even his family did not see an instant logic.
While it was true that Idris Elba had played a version of him in the film 'Molly's Game,' the character was not, in fact, named 'Jim Walden.' Beyond the members of the American College of Trial Lawyers and the mob guys he consistently relocated from high ranches in Staten Island to the low-rise federal penal system, Mr. Walden remained largely unknown.
The first question for New Yorkers, he reasoned during an evening with potential supporters in a Brooklyn Heights townhouse a few weeks ago, was surely ' 'Who is Jim Walden?' ' The gathering was one of 85 he had planned all over the city through mid-March in the hope of answering that question sufficiently enough to quickly raise the money that would qualify him for the New York City Campaign Finance Board's matching funds program. In this instance, the crowd — wealthy, well-connected, civic-minded — was familiar with him. Mr. Walden and his wife and children live a few blocks away. With a view of Manhattan as his backdrop, he laid out the path by which he believes he can become mayor as an independent.
The answer to the question 'Who is Jim Walden' is not easily distilled. When he announced his candidacy in late November, he was flanked by older firefighters — he has the support of the union representing retired municipal workers — and also Jonovia Chase, a Black trans activist. For several years, Mr. Walden served in the U.S. attorney's office in the Eastern District, where he put away Anthony Spero, a Bonanno crime boss. Like many prosecutors, he is profoundly opposed to any vilification of the police. At the same time, he told me, he would not permit federal immigration agents in city jails, something Mr. Adams said he is preparing an executive order to allow.
'It's just a bad public policy to basically announce to all of the prisoners, 'Hey, those of you who are illegal, ICE is coming for you!' They know they are going back to a country where there may be extreme violence, where there may be a price on their head,' he said. 'You just don't want collateral enforcement in the secure domain of a jail,' the risk of rioting and needless violence being too great.
When I asked people who have attended the Walden talks what they came away with, they remarked on his air of competence and his personal story, which can seem self-mythologizing and contrived to inspire but has the virtue of being true. Mr. Walden grew up poor in Levittown, Pa., enduring the torments of an alcoholic father. After high school, he moved into a friend's basement. He dropped out of community college. When a high school friend, Sara Silver, came home for Thanksgiving break from Yale, she was determined to see Mr. Walden get into a four-year college.
She did some research and helped him apply to Hamilton, in upstate New York, where he did well but felt alienated by the money and preppiness. He proceeded to law school at Temple University, graduating in 1991.
'We went to a terrible, terrible high school,'' Ms. Silver told me. 'Jim says I saved him from a life of pumping gas. But no; I think I saved him from being a personal injury lawyer in Philadelphia,' she said. Ms. Silver is now the chief of staff on his campaign.
When he is questioned about crime arising from what can seem like an epidemic of psychological unraveling, he approaches the problem from an intimate vantage. He had a mentally ill sister who would become very aggressive when she was off her medication. She died 14 years ago in an altercation on the streets in Pennsylvania when she was living in an SRO and refusing treatment. Mr. Walden explained he believes in removing people with severe mental illness from the streets and providing them with compassionate care.
If that sounds like progressive boilerplate, he would also like to keep wealthy people in New York, to loosen regulations on small businesses, to see some property taxes lowered. He has a plan to rethink public housing, in need of so much repair, and work to make neighborhoods more economically integrated. The idea is modeled on the project for the Elliott-Chelsea Houses in Manhattan where residents voted in favor of private developers first erecting new apartment buildings on the site, incorporating market-rate units and then demolishing the old.
'The community has a very justifiable fear of dislocation,' Mr. Walden said. 'You would take that off the table by using 'build first' and giving tenants a bill of rights enforceable in courts.' Public housing residents would have the opportunity to buy into a plan like this rather than have something imposed on them. Some of his ideas, like developing Hart Island, a gravesite for the indigent, seem more mercurial.
Mr. Walden has never held elected office, but he has watched the mechanics of city governance from a short distance. Over two decades in private practice, he has sued the city over various troubling practices, in one instance bringing a class-action suit against the Department of Education on behalf of the parents of 23 bullied children. He also sued in the name of beleaguered tenants of the New York City Housing Authority, which resulted in lead inspections in thousands of apartments where children lived.
Other cases he has handled would not so easily win liberal admiration. He represented opponents of a bike lane on Prospect Park West (he lost) as well as Robert F. Kennedy Jr. in his attempt to stay on the ballot in New York State during his short-lived presidential bid.
That the city is in freefall — plagued by crises around housing, mental health, migrants and now a mayor who seems to have betrayed his constituents in order to avoid a trial — has emerged as a viewpoint from those with a particular set of grievances shared by both liberal New Yorkers and those on the right.
We are in a moment in which the traditional alliances no longer seem to hold. This could not have been clearer than it was last week, when the acting U.S. attorney for the Southern District — a member of the Federalist Society — resigned rather than submit to a Republican Justice Department's insistence that the charges against a Democratic mayor be dismissed.
'Voters are not necessarily ideological,' Stu Loeser, the media strategist and long-serving City Hall spokesman under Michael Bloomberg, told me when we talked about Mr. Walden's prospects. 'We know for a fact that there were A.O.C. Trump voters. What does an A.O.C. Trump voter do in a mayoral election?' The adoption of ranked-choice voting adds only more variables, less predictability. There are several strong progressive candidates in the Democratic field who could cancel each other out.
'If you had a choice between an assemblyman who led an anti-Israel march through Astoria four years ago and Curtis Sliwa and a moderate, technocratic lawyer who has worked for Democrats and Republicans,' Mr. Loeser said, 'it could work for the moderate, technocratic lawyer.' That was his characterization of Zohran Mamdani, who took part in a rally in Queens, two years before the events of Oct. 7 in the name of a free Palestine. Curtis Sliwa has been talked about as a likely Republican nominee. Andrew Cuomo, the disgraced former governor, is leading in certain polls, even though he has not yet entered the race. He could run away with the Democratic nomination or find that voters are unwilling to overlook past transgression.
Mr. Walden likes to talk about Kathryn Garcia, whom he supported in the last mayoral election. She was largely unknown when she entered the race but survived eight rounds of ranked-choice voting. In the end, she lost to Mr. Adams by only 7,000 votes.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Canadians in ICE detention centres left in legal limbo as families try to secure release
Canadians in ICE detention centres left in legal limbo as families try to secure release

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Canadians in ICE detention centres left in legal limbo as families try to secure release

Relatives of Canadians detained by ICE in the United States say they're furious and frustrated by the treatment of their loved ones and the battles they're having to fight for even the most basic information. Global Affairs Canada said it's aware of roughly 55 Canadians in U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody, though it said that the numbers can fluctuate. Cynthia Olivera — born in Mississauga, Ont., but living in Los Angeles — was arrested last month when she and her husband went to an immigration office to complete an interview for her U.S. citizenship application. Paula Callejas of Montreal was in the process of finalizing a work visa when she was arrested for a misdemeanor — and then transferred to an ICE facility. Olivera and Callejas's families told CBC News the weeks since their arrests have been a nightmare, filled with phone calls to lawyers and ICE bureaucracy. "We're completely concerned for her overall safety and health," a member of Callejas's immediate family told CBC News. CBC is not naming the family member over concerns they may have their own immigration issues while travelling to the U.S. Olivera's husband, Frank Olvera, said what was meant to be a routine immigration interview ended up feeling more like a trap. "We were flabbergasted," Olvera told CBC News. "No due process." Olivera, 45, moved to the U.S. with her family when she was young, her husband said. The two met in the '90s, married (she kept her last name), had children together and have been living in L.A. since then. "About two years ago, since the children are now older, we decided to hire a lawyer and start the immigration process the correct way," Olvera said. But instead of completing the interview, Olivera was arrested by immigration officials over a decades-old border issue, her husband said. "They lured us into our immigration appointment … took my wife, put her in handcuffs, swept her away," he said. "They didn't even give us an opportunity at the interview. Nothing." Olvera said that in 1999, Olivera had travelled to Canada to attend her mother's funeral and was initially denied re-entry because she was pregnant and told border agents she planned to have the child in the U.S. Olivera is now being held by ICE at a detention centre in El Paso, Texas, Olvera said. Earlier this year, U.S. President Donald Trump issued a raft of executive orders that aim to clamp down on illegal immigration and advance his goal of overseeing the largest deportation operation in American history. Stephen Miller, White House deputy chief of staff and the main architect of Trump's immigration policies, has pushed ICE to aim for at least 3,000 arrests a day, up from about 650 a day during the first five months of Trump's second term. Earlier this week, Trump and Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem toured a new immigration detention facility in Florida that officials have dubbed "Alligator Alcatraz." "We are going after murderers and rapists and traffickers and drug dealers and getting them off the streets and getting them out of this country," Noem said after the facility tour. Callejas was in the process of finalizing a work visa when she was charged with a misdemeanor in Florida. Although she pleaded not guilty to the charge, she was handed over to ICE and has been held for more than three months. The 45-year-old had been travelling to the U.S. in recent years with plans to expand her swimsuit business, according to her family. When reached for comment, ICE confirmed that both Callejas and Olivera are in custody but offered few details. Callejas's family said she has been transferred multiple times and last they heard she was in Arizona. But ICE told CBC News that it "seems" she is in El Paso. "We feel completely stressed out because we have no idea if one day she's going to be there or somewhere else," Callejas's relative said. Callejas's family is also now on the hook for her legal fees in both her criminal and immigration cases. They said they want her returned to Canada so she can deal with her misdemeanor charge. At least one Canadian detained by ICE was eventually released. Jasmine Mooney from B.C. was arrested and held for nearly two weeks after trying to get a work visa renewed. She returned to Canada in mid-March. Johnny Noviello, another Canadian citizen, died while in ICE custody last week. His death is under investigation. Olvera said his wife agreed to be deported so that she can at least continue her citizenship application in Canada before returning to her family. But he said there doesn't seem to be any urgency on ICE's part. "There is absolutely no reason why ICE cannot deport her. They're just taking their sweet old time and I don't know why," Olvera said. "We're willing to pay the ticket, whatever it takes. I'm willing to pay for an ICE agent to escort her to Canada if that's what's needed. I'm willing to pay for the ICE agent trip back." Like Callejas, Olivera has been transferred multiple times, her husband said. Both women's families raised concerns about the conditions of their detention. "The food is not great. The conditions of the sleeping arrangements — she tried to give us a hint that pretty much they get crammed up. It's really inhumane," Callejas's family member said, noting that all the calls are recorded. Olvera described a similar situation at the facility where his wife is being held. "It's horrible. They're treated like animals. Sometimes they get hot food, sometimes they don't," he said. Olvera — a third-generation American whose family immigrated from Mexico — said he typically votes Democrat but voted for Trump in November because he wanted a change. Now he appears to be questioning that decision. "I'm ashamed to be an American right now. I turn on the TV and I see them running around.… they're just chasing brown people nowadays," he said. On the day of his wife's arrest, Olvera said he and his lawyer weren't allowed to exit out the front of the building. "They escorted us out the back of the building by the trash cans, the loading dock," he said. "They didn't want to go back through the lobby where we entered from, because they're trapping a bunch of people at these immigration appointments." Unlike Olivera, Callejas may not want to return to the U.S. once her cases are resolved. "It was her dream to live in Florida just because of the business and [her] passion," the family member said. "After all of this, she's actually given up on that dream. She just wants to get out."

Bad Bunny calls out Trump's anti-immigrant policies using faux voice recording
Bad Bunny calls out Trump's anti-immigrant policies using faux voice recording

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

Bad Bunny calls out Trump's anti-immigrant policies using faux voice recording

Bad Bunny is celebrating the Puerto Rican diaspora and immigrant community this Fourth of July with a political statement. The Puerto Rican reggaeton star released the music video for "NUEVAYoL" off his latest album "DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS" on Friday morning, seemingly taking a stand against Donald Trump's anti-immigrant policies and rhetoric. Towards the end of the video, as people huddle around an old school radio, a voice meant to emulate Trump's very own can be heard saying: "I made a mistake. I want to apologize to the immigrants in America." "I'm in the United States. I know America is the whole continent," the faux Trump continues. "I want to say that this country is nothing without the immigrants. This country is nothing without Mexicans, Dominicans, Puerto Ricans, Colombians, Venezuelans, Cubans …" Recently, due to Trump's ongoing immigration crackdown, Southern California has been the epicenter of dozens of ICE raids since early June. On July 3, Congress passed Trump's "Big Beautiful Bill," which will allocate $45 billion for immigration detention centers as well as about $30 billion to hire more ICE personnel, for transportation costs and to maintain ICE facilities, according to NPR. Bad Bunny features Puerto Rico flag across Statue of Liberty in music video It wouldn't be a Bad Bunny music video without giving a nod to his Puerto Rican heritage. In the music video, the 31-year-old also features a powerful image of the Puerto Rican flag against the Statue of Liberty's forehead. Bad Bunny ended the "NUEVAYoL" music video with another message: "Juntos Somos Más Fuertes" ("Together We Are Stronger"). Bad Bunny's latest album "Debí Tirar Más Fotos" pays tribute to his Boricua roots and sees the singer incorporate traditional genres such as Plena, salsa and jibaro into his signature Latin urbano sound. The 17-track LP features collaborations with Puerto Rican acts including RaiNao, Omar Courtz and Dei V, and Los Pleneros de la Cresta. What happens now? Bad Bunny's residency is supercharging Puerto Rico's tourism. In honor of the album's release, Bad Bunny is hosting an estimated 600,000 concertgoers at his sold-out No Me Quiero Ir De Aquí concert residency, which will take place at the Coliseo de Puerto from July 11 to Sept. 14. "The idea for the residency was always there, for as long as I can remember," Bad Bunny told Variety in an interview. "But it became difficult to ignore, the more time passed. I'll admit, it was hard to complete my last tour, because all I wanted to do was move into this chapter." Watch Bad Bunny's new music video for 'NUEVAYoL': In May, Bad Bunny announced a world tour for "DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS" − but to many fans' surprise, it excluded the U.S. The tour will kick off Nov. 21 in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, before making its way through Latin America through late February. Bad Bunny will also perform in Sydney, Australia, for the first time, before a performance in Tokyo in March. He'll be hitting up Europe in June and July, visiting London, Marseille, Stockholm and Milan. Bad Bunny's residency is supercharging Puerto Rico's tourism With an estimated 600,000 attendees throughout the residency, the concert series is sparking what Glorianna Yamín, vice president of marketing at Discover Puerto Rico, called a "peak period for tourism." Halfway around the world, Hawaii's high levels of tourism are negatively impacting the islands. From overcrowded trails to traffic congestion, the Pacific islands have been actively seeking visitors who want to create a deeper connection with Hawaii. Puerto Rico, for its part, is paying attention. "It's definitely a change for the industry," Yamín told USA TODAY. "The entire tourism industry is getting ready." It's not just about the crowds. Discover Puerto Rico (DPR), the island's destination marketing organization, is using this moment to highlight the importance of responsible and sustainable tourism. Bad Bunny in Puerto Rico: Expect higher prices for flights, hotels this summer More: Bad Bunny fans won't want to leave Puerto Rico after visiting these 17 places "We are making sure that we're educating those visitors; first, so they behave as they should, but also so they're intrigued about our culture, our music, our history, our gastronomy … things Bad Bunny touches on in his album and already has momentum with," Yamín said. Contributing: Edward Segarra, Josh Rivera, USA TODAY

Canadians in ICE detention centres left in legal limbo as families try to secure release
Canadians in ICE detention centres left in legal limbo as families try to secure release

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Canadians in ICE detention centres left in legal limbo as families try to secure release

Relatives of Canadians detained by ICE in the United States say they're furious and frustrated by the treatment of their loved ones and the battles they're having to fight for even the most basic information. Global Affairs Canada said it's aware of roughly 55 Canadians in U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody, though it said that the numbers can fluctuate. Cynthia Olivera — born in Mississauga, Ont., but living in Los Angeles — was arrested last month when she and her husband went to an immigration office to complete an interview for her U.S. citizenship application. Paula Callejas of Montreal was in the process of finalizing a work visa when she was arrested for a misdemeanor — and then transferred to an ICE facility. Olivera and Callejas's families told CBC News the weeks since their arrests have been a nightmare, filled with phone calls to lawyers and ICE bureaucracy. "We're completely concerned for her overall safety and health," a member of Callejas's immediate family told CBC News. CBC is not naming the family member over concerns they may have their own immigration issues while travelling to the U.S. Olivera's husband, Frank Olvera, said what was meant to be a routine immigration interview ended up feeling more like a trap. "We were flabbergasted," Olvera told CBC News. "No due process." Olivera, 45, moved to the U.S. with her family when she was young, her husband said. The two met in the '90s, married (she kept her last name), had children together and have been living in L.A. since then. "About two years ago, since the children are now older, we decided to hire a lawyer and start the immigration process the correct way," Olvera said. But instead of completing the interview, Olivera was arrested by immigration officials over a decades-old border issue, her husband said. "They lured us into our immigration appointment … took my wife, put her in handcuffs, swept her away," he said. "They didn't even give us an opportunity at the interview. Nothing." Olvera said that in 1999, Olivera had travelled to Canada to attend her mother's funeral and was initially denied re-entry because she was pregnant and told border agents she planned to have the child in the U.S. Olivera is now being held by ICE at a detention centre in El Paso, Texas, Olvera said. Earlier this year, U.S. President Donald Trump issued a raft of executive orders that aim to clamp down on illegal immigration and advance his goal of overseeing the largest deportation operation in American history. Stephen Miller, White House deputy chief of staff and the main architect of Trump's immigration policies, has pushed ICE to aim for at least 3,000 arrests a day, up from about 650 a day during the first five months of Trump's second term. Earlier this week, Trump and Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem toured a new immigration detention facility in Florida that officials have dubbed "Alligator Alcatraz." "We are going after murderers and rapists and traffickers and drug dealers and getting them off the streets and getting them out of this country," Noem said after the facility tour. Callejas was in the process of finalizing a work visa when she was charged with a misdemeanor in Florida. Although she pleaded not guilty to the charge, she was handed over to ICE and has been held for more than three months. The 45-year-old had been travelling to the U.S. in recent years with plans to expand her swimsuit business, according to her family. When reached for comment, ICE confirmed that both Callejas and Olivera are in custody but offered few details. Callejas's family said she has been transferred multiple times and last they heard she was in Arizona. But ICE told CBC News that it "seems" she is in El Paso. "We feel completely stressed out because we have no idea if one day she's going to be there or somewhere else," Callejas's relative said. Callejas's family is also now on the hook for her legal fees in both her criminal and immigration cases. They said they want her returned to Canada so she can deal with her misdemeanor charge. At least one Canadian detained by ICE was eventually released. Jasmine Mooney from B.C. was arrested and held for nearly two weeks after trying to get a work visa renewed. She returned to Canada in mid-March. Johnny Noviello, another Canadian citizen, died while in ICE custody last week. His death is under investigation. Olvera said his wife agreed to be deported so that she can at least continue her citizenship application in Canada before returning to her family. But he said there doesn't seem to be any urgency on ICE's part. "There is absolutely no reason why ICE cannot deport her. They're just taking their sweet old time and I don't know why," Olvera said. "We're willing to pay the ticket, whatever it takes. I'm willing to pay for an ICE agent to escort her to Canada if that's what's needed. I'm willing to pay for the ICE agent trip back." Like Callejas, Olivera has been transferred multiple times, her husband said. Both women's families raised concerns about the conditions of their detention. "The food is not great. The conditions of the sleeping arrangements — she tried to give us a hint that pretty much they get crammed up. It's really inhumane," Callejas's family member said, noting that all the calls are recorded. Olvera described a similar situation at the facility where his wife is being held. "It's horrible. They're treated like animals. Sometimes they get hot food, sometimes they don't," he said. Olvera — a third-generation American whose family immigrated from Mexico — said he typically votes Democrat but voted for Trump in November because he wanted a change. Now he appears to be questioning that decision. "I'm ashamed to be an American right now. I turn on the TV and I see them running around.… they're just chasing brown people nowadays," he said. On the day of his wife's arrest, Olvera said he and his lawyer weren't allowed to exit out the front of the building. "They escorted us out the back of the building by the trash cans, the loading dock," he said. "They didn't want to go back through the lobby where we entered from, because they're trapping a bunch of people at these immigration appointments." Unlike Olivera, Callejas may not want to return to the U.S. once her cases are resolved. "It was her dream to live in Florida just because of the business and [her] passion," the family member said. "After all of this, she's actually given up on that dream. She just wants to get out."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store