Posted on November 5, 2009

Whites Become Minority on NYC Council for 1st Time

Deepti Hajela, NBC New York, November 4, 2009

A historic win for a black woman on Staten Island and a Chinese-American woman in Chinatown have helped make a little more election history–for the first time, people of color will hold the majority of seats on the New York City Council.

When newly elected members take office in January, the 51-person Council will have 27 members of color, accounting for slightly more than 50 percent.

The shift reflects demographic change citywide. Non-Hispanic whites make up 35 percent of the population, while Hispanics are 28 percent, non-Hispanic blacks are at 24 percent, and non-Hispanic Asians at 12 percent, according to Census estimates.

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Pushing the minorities into the majority, will be Margaret Chin, the first Chinese-American elected to represent Chinatown, and Debi Rose, the first African-American ever elected on Staten Island.

Both will be filling seats that were previously held by white men.

“It’s an indication that democracy is getting better,” said John Liu, the first Asian American on the council and now as comptroller-elect, the first Asian American to be voted into citywide office.

“When the high level offices in government are filled by people of different faces, it’s good for everybody.”

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Councilmember Charles Barron said the important step would be getting minority councilmembers into positions of leadership on important committees like finance and land use, and into positions like Council Speaker.

“I’m saying while the demographics have changed, so should the power equation change,” he said.

“New York City is now majority people of color,” Barron said, but “unless there are policy changes, budget priority changes, power position changes, it’s just numbers.”

Rose was hopeful the increasing presence of people of color would have an impact.

“By having minorities in the majority, the conversations change. In the committees, conversations will be different,” she said.

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