«I don't know what his strategy is,» Mr. Díaz told Politicker last night at a de
Blasio endorsement event when asked for his thoughts on the Carrión campaign.
Not exact matches
De
Blasio has held private fundraisers in advance of next year's race, but the
endorsement is the first public
event of the mayor's re-election.
How Mr. de
Blasio ultimately makes the
endorsement — through a press release or at some kind of
event — and if he will have any role as a Clinton surrogate are not immediately clear.
Mr. Jeffries, speaking at an
endorsement event for Hillary Clinton ahead of the first televised debate of the Democratic presidential primary, implied that Mr. de
Blasio, who is planning an Iowa forum on income inequality for December, should stay home.
The
event highlighted the fact that de
Blasio — who worked at the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development while Cuomo headed it under the Clinton administration — has so far withheld his
endorsement of Hillary Clinton.
At
events in which he accepts those
endorsements, whether union halls or a Bronx church, de
Blasio has showcased what his administration has delivered for New Yorkers — universal pre-kindergarten, more affordable housing, neighborhood policing along with lower crime, and more.