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Jessica Ramos
Jessica Ramos
from Wikipedia

Jessica Ramos (born June 27, 1985) is an American politician from the state of New York.[1] A Democrat, she has represented District 13, which includes the Queens neighborhoods of Corona, Elmhurst, East Elmhurst, and Jackson Heights, in the New York state senate since 2019.[2][3][1]

Key Information

Ramos was a candidate in the Democratic primary for mayor of New York City in 2025; her campaign began in September 2024.[4] On June 6, 2025, she endorsed former Governor of New York Andrew Cuomo, but remained on the ballot.[5] She placed ninth in the first round.

Early life and education

[edit]

Ramos was born at Elmhurst Hospital and raised in Astoria, Queens, New York City. She is the daughter of Colombian immigrants.[6] Exposed to civic life at an early age, Ramos participated in community activities with the Colombian immigrant community's local civic groups and later on as a Democratic district leader and community board member.[7] She graduated from the Academy of American Studies and attended Hofstra University, discontinuing her studies to work in the office of then-New York City Council Member Hiram Monserrate[8][9] (whom she now denounces).[10]

Career

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Ramos worked in New York City Hall where she was initially a communications adviser and ultimately became director of Latino media from April 2016 to December 2017.[clarification needed] In this role, Ramos was the city's top Latinx spokeswoman and liaison to the Spanish-language press.[11] Before joining city government, Ramos was the communications director for Build Up NYC, an advocacy organization for construction, building, and maintenance workers. She has also done communications work with a local chapter of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees and a regional branch of the Service Employees International Union.[11]

Ramos has served on Queens Community Board 3, and she was a Queens County Democratic district leader from 2010 to 2014.[11]

New York Senate

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In January 2018, Ramos announced her candidacy for New York state senate, challenging Jose Peralta, a former member of the Independent Democratic Conference, in the Democratic Party primary election.[12] Ramos defeated Peralta[13] and won the general election.[14] Her campaign was endorsed by New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio,[15] The New York Times,[16] and U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand.[17]

Committees

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In the Senate, Ramos serves as chair on the Committee on Labor.[18] She is a member of the following committees:[19]

  • Budget and Revenue Committee
  • Cannabis Committee
  • Commerce, Economic and Small Business Committee
  • Corporations, Authorities and Commissions Committee
  • Finance Committee
  • Judiciary Committee
  • State-Native American Relations Committee
  • Transportation Committee
  • Legislative Women's Caucus
  • Select Majority Task Force on Diversity in the Judiciary
  • Select Majority Task Force on Minority and Women-Owned Business Enterprises

Tenure

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She co-sponsored a bill to decriminalize sex work, known as Cecilia's Act, it would uphold all felony anti-trafficking statutes that are designed to hold traffickers accountable.[20][21] In 2023, Ramos criticized Governor Kathy Hochul's proposals to ease housing construction in New York because not all local labor unions supported the proposals.[22] That same year, Ramos called for "good cause eviction" tenant protections to be included in any budget housing proposal.[23]

Ramos told people that she was frustrated with Assemblywoman Catalina Cruz for inviting Ramos to a bogus event called a "loot out" in the neighborhood of Corona, Queens.[24]

In 2025, Ramos introduced the "Recourse Act," which would allow the New York State Governor to withhold state tax dollars if the U.S. President cuts federal spending the city relies on for supporting critical agencies, saying, "If Trump cuts our funding, then we will withhold our taxes."[25]

Metropolitan Park development

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She is opposed to building Metropolitan Park in Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, an integrated resort next to Citi Field with a casino proposed by Mets owner Steve Cohen.[26] New York state officials announced in April 2022 that they would issue three casino licenses in Downstate New York.[27][28] Following this announcement, in 2023, New York Mets owner Steven A. Cohen proposed a redevelopment of the parking lot west of Citi Field.[29][30]

In February 2025, the City Planning Commission voted in favor of approving zoning changes which would allow for the project to be built. The area is zoned as parkland and zoning changes are needed to allow the project to move forward. Neighboring community boards have also voted in favor of the proposed development.[31][32] In March 2025, the New York City Council voted 41–2 to approve the zoning changes.[33] Later that month, fellow state senator John Liu announced that he would introduce a bill to reclassify the zoning as commercial space.[34][35][36] In late April 2025, a State Senate committee voted 4–3 to advance a bill allowing the Willets Point section of the park to be rezoned to permit commercial use.[37][38] In May 2025, the bill passed both chambers of the New York State Legislature. [39][40][41][42]

2025 New York City mayoral campaign

[edit]

On September 13, 2024, Ramos announced that she would run in the Democratic primary in the 2025 New York City mayoral election, challenging incumbent mayor Eric Adams. She received support from organized labor, including United Auto Workers Region 9A, Teamsters Local 808, The Chelsea Reformed Democratic Club of New York, and Teamsters Local 804.[43] Voting in the primary is done by ranked choice, and on May 29, 2025, the Working Families Party announced its fifth-choice ranked endorsement of Ramos.[44]

By June 2025, her campaign had struggled to gain traction. It did not qualify for matching funds or for the second primary debate; and it had less than $10k cash on hand according to campaign finance reports.[45][46] Politico's New York Playbook PM newsletter reported that the campaign actually had outstanding debts totalling over $250,000 due to a vendor dispute which had not yet been filed with the New York City Campaign Finance Board, which could result in thousands of dollars' worth of fines.[47]

Cuomo endorsement and reactions

[edit]

On June 6, 2025, Ramos endorsed former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo in the Democratic primary, while remaining on the ballot herself. The move surprised many, inasmuch as Ramos had been one of the first elected officials to call on Cuomo to resign in 2021, and had previously compared Cuomo's mental state to Joe Biden's by opining that his "mental acuity is in decline". She is considered a political progressive.[48][45] NYC journalists speculated that the endorsement could be a move aimed at giving Ramos a path to a high-level role in Cuomo's mayoral administration.[49]

The Working Families Party, which had endorsed Ramos a week earlier, announced in a statement, "We are sad and disappointed that State Sen. Jessica Ramos has decided to endorse the candidate favored by Trump's billionaire donors. But we won’t be distracted by this desperate move"; however, it declined to state whether the group would rescind its fifth-place ranking for Ramos.[50] United Auto Workers Region 9A, which had previously voted unanimously to endorse Ramos, announced that it would rescind its endorsement, stating in a release, "Opposing Andrew Cuomo is a non-negotiable for our membership."[51] Jews for Racial and Economic Justice Action, the Jim Owles Liberal Democratic Club, state assemblymember Emily Gallagher, Professional Staff Congress, state senator Gustavo Rivera and Downtown Women for Change all announced that they would drop Ramos from their endorsement slates the same day.[52]

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who had left Ramos out of her endorsement slate the day before, reacted on Twitter by quote tweeting a video of Cuomo refusing to mutually endorse Ramos with "lol. lmao." while actress and former gubernatorial candidate Cynthia Nixon quote tweeted a previous post by Ramos critiquing Cuomo saying "I'm choosing to remember the Jessica Ramos who ran to break up the IDC, supported the women who were sexually harassed, remembered the people Cuomo sent to die in nursing homes & always called out Cuomo's corruption, mismanagement & lies. I’ll miss that Ramos, where did she go?💔"[47]

References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Jessica Ramos (born June 27, 1985) is an American politician serving as a Democratic member of the New York State Senate from the 13th district, encompassing neighborhoods in Queens such as Corona, East Elmhurst, and Jackson Heights, since 2019. Born in Elmhurst to Colombian immigrant parents—one an undocumented seamstress and the other a printing pressman—she was raised in Astoria and attended Queens public schools before residing in Jackson Heights with her two sons. Prior to her Senate tenure, Ramos worked as a communications strategist supporting labor unions like SSEU Local 371 and 32BJ SEIU, and served as Director of Latino Media for New York City under Mayor Bill de Blasio, reaching 1.87 million Spanish-speaking residents. She achieved prominence in 2018 by defeating incumbent Senator Jose Peralta in the Democratic primary, securing the seat in the general election and becoming a key figure in ousting members of the Independent Democratic Conference. As chair of the Senate Committee on Labor, Ramos has prioritized legislation advancing workers' rights, immigrant protections, and community organizing efforts reflective of her background in advocating for working families. In 2025, amid a brief candidacy for New York City mayor, she endorsed former Governor Andrew Cuomo despite prior criticisms of him, a move that elicited backlash from progressive allies and underscored her pragmatic approach over ideological purity.

Early Life and Background

Childhood in Ecuador and Immigration to the US

Jessica Ramos was born on June 27, 1985, at Elmhurst Hospital in , New York, to undocumented parents who had recently immigrated from . Her mother crossed the border alone at age 24, arriving without legal authorization, while her father worked as a printing pressman after settling in the city. The family resided in , where Ramos spent her childhood in a working-class immigrant , attending local public schools. Her parents' undocumented status shaped early family dynamics, with her mother employed as a seamstress supporting the amid economic precarity common to recent arrivals from during the . No records indicate Ramos herself lived in or any country outside the during her childhood; her upbringing occurred entirely in neighborhoods with significant and broader Latin American immigrant populations. This U.S.-born experience as the daughter of unauthorized entrants from informs her later advocacy, though primary accounts emphasize domestic rather than foreign childhood elements.

Education and Early Employment

Ramos attended public schools in , including those in Astoria where she was raised. She subsequently enrolled at , initially pursuing studies aligned with international business or aspirations in . Ramos discontinued her university studies without completing a degree to accept a position in the office of member , beginning her early professional involvement in local politics and communications around the mid-2000s. In this role, she engaged in community issues and political operations, marking her entry into public-facing work before advancing to broader advocacy and media positions in government.

Union and Advocacy Career

Work as Domestic Worker

Ramos's early professional experiences centered on and labor advocacy rather than personal employment as a . Born to undocumented immigrant parents—a seamstress and a pressman—she grew up in and became involved in as a teenager, serving as president of the NYC Colombian Liberal Youth Council in 2002 and later the NYC Colombian Liberal Party in 2005. In her initial labor roles, Ramos collaborated with groups like Build Up NYC and unions such as SSEU Local 371 and 32BJ SEIU, focusing on organizing for construction workers, building maintenance staff, and public school cleaners. These efforts exposed her to the challenges faced by low-wage service employees, shaping her advocacy for broader worker protections without direct involvement in domestic household labor. Her background as the first American-born in her family instilled a commitment to immigrant labor issues, which later extended to sponsoring protections for domestic workers, such as annual requirements for their employers via bill S4515 in 2025, though this built on her organizing foundation rather than personal domestic work experience.

Role in 32BJ SEIU and Community Organizing

Ramos held the position of Communications Specialist and Member Communications Coordinator at 32BJ SEIU, the Service Employees International Union's building service workers division, from 2011 to 2014. In this capacity, she supported campaigns that secured labor contracts for building maintenance workers, office cleaners, and public school cleaners, emphasizing protections for wages, benefits, and workplace rights. Her communications work involved coordinating member outreach and messaging to advance these organizing drives within New York City's service sector workforce. Beyond 32BJ SEIU, Ramos collaborated with SSEU Local 371, representing social service employees, and Build Up NYC, an advocacy group for construction, building, and hotel maintenance workers, where she focused on contract negotiations and labor conditions. These roles built on her prior experience in union communications, including stints with the de Blasio administration, honing skills in mobilizing low-wage workers amid New York's competitive service industries. In parallel with her union involvement, Ramos participated in Queens community organizing through local governance and nonprofit boards. She served on Queens Community Board 3, addressing neighborhood issues in Elmhurst and Corona, and as Democratic District Leader for the 39th Assembly District, coordinating political engagement. Additional board service included the Jackson Heights Beautification Group, promoting environmental and aesthetic improvements, and Farmspot CSA, supporting initiatives. These efforts complemented her labor advocacy by fostering coalitions among immigrant-heavy communities on economic and quality-of-life concerns.

Political Rise

2018 New York State Senate Special Election

In the 2018 Democratic primary for New York State Senate District 13, Jessica Ramos challenged incumbent José Peralta, who had previously been a member of the Independent Democratic Conference (IDC), a group of Democratic senators that allied with Republicans to maintain GOP control of the chamber despite Democrats holding a nominal majority. Ramos, a former communications aide to Mayor Bill de Blasio and community organizer, campaigned on progressive priorities including stronger tenant protections, increased public school funding, and opposition to IDC-style collaborations that she argued undermined Democratic control of Albany. Her challenge aligned with a broader wave of insurgent campaigns targeting ex-IDC members amid voter frustration over prolonged Republican influence in the Senate. On September 13, 2018, Ramos defeated Peralta in the primary, receiving 12,550 votes (54.8%) to Peralta's 10,362 votes (45.2%), with a total of 22,912 votes cast. Peralta conceded the following day and endorsed Ramos, though he later appeared on the general election ballot as the Party nominee. In the , 2018, , Ramos, running on the Democratic and Working Families lines, secured victory with approximately 90% of the vote in the heavily Democratic district encompassing parts of including Corona, East Elmhurst, and Jackson Heights. Peralta received about 10% on the line, reflecting minimal opposition in the lopsided race. Ramos assumed office on January 1, 2019, contributing to Democrats' expanded majority that year.

Initial Representation of District 13

Jessica Ramos was elected to represent in the November 6, 2018, general election, defeating Republican Anthony Yelverton after securing the Democratic nomination in the September 13, 2018, primary against incumbent José Peralta. She assumed office on January 1, 2019, succeeding Peralta, whose alignment with the Democratic Conference had drawn criticism from progressive challengers. spans portions of western in , encompassing neighborhoods such as Corona, East Elmhurst, Jackson Heights, and parts of Elmhurst and Woodside. The area features a densely populated, urban environment with a high concentration of immigrants and working-class residents, including significant numbers employed in service, construction, and retail sectors. Early in her tenure, Ramos focused on labor protections reflective of her prior role organizing domestic workers with 32BJ SEIU. Appointed chair of the Senate Labor Committee in 2019, she advanced an agenda emphasizing wage security and workplace safety for low-wage earners prevalent in her district. Notable sponsorships included S.2844B, which sought to create lien remedies for unpaid wages and grounds for employee attachments against employers, and measures expanding access for injured employees. While many of these bills stalled in committee amid the 2019 session's packed Democratic agenda, Ramos co-sponsored broader reforms, such as enhancements to the Domestic , building on state expansions of and anti-discrimination provisions for household employees. Ramos also addressed district-specific challenges like housing affordability and public transit reliability through constituent engagement. In a December 2019 town hall, she highlighted pushes for to cover uninsured immigrants and support for to fund MTA improvements serving commuters in traffic-congested . Leveraging the Senate's Democratic majority flip in 2018, she backed session accomplishments including implementation (S.1102) and reform measures aimed at reducing disparities affecting minority communities in her district. These efforts marked an initial shift toward progressive policies, though critics noted implementation challenges, such as rising subway delays despite funding pledges.

Senate Service (2019–Present)

Committee Assignments and Leadership

Jessica Ramos has served on several committees in the since assuming office in 2019, with assignments reflecting her background in labor organizing. She was appointed chair of the shortly after her , a position she has held through the 2025-2026 legislative session, overseeing legislation on worker protections, wage standards, and union rights. In this role, Ramos has advanced bills such as expansions to fair labor practices for farmworkers, drawing on her prior experience as a and . Beyond her chairmanship, Ramos holds memberships on multiple standing committees, contributing to policy areas including fiscal oversight, , and justice reform. Her assignments have included the on Budget and Revenue, where she addresses state spending and taxation; the on Cannabis, focusing on and ; the on Commerce, and ; and the on Corporations, Authorities and Commissions, which examines public entities and utilities. Additional roles encompass the on , handling appropriations and revenue proposals; the on Judiciary, reviewing legal and matters; and the on Transportation, dealing with and transit issues.
CommitteeRoleSession Applicability
LaborChair2019–present
Budget and RevenueMemberCurrent
MemberCurrent
Commerce, and MemberCurrent
Corporations, Authorities and CommissionsMemberCurrent
MemberRecent sessions
MemberRecent sessions
TransportationMemberRecent sessions
Ramos' leadership in the Labor Committee has positioned her as a key figure in Democratic efforts to strengthen worker safeguards, though her endorsements and policy stances have occasionally drawn intra-party criticism. No further statewide leadership roles, such as positions, are documented in her service record. Ramos has sponsored over 100 bills since 2019, primarily focusing on enhancing labor protections, expanding , increasing taxes on high earners, and providing safeguards for tenants and immigrants. Notable among these is S.8188A (2019), the Farm Laborers Fair Labor Practices Act, which extended overtime pay, rights, and other labor standards to agricultural workers previously excluded under state law; the bill passed both chambers and was signed into law by Governor on November 8, , after initial passage in 2019. She also advocated for the inclusion of the Excluded Workers Fund in the 2021 state budget, providing $2.1 billion in aid to undocumented workers ineligible for federal relief, which was enacted to deliver one-time payments of up to $15,600 per eligible individual based on documented lost earnings. Other key sponsored measures include S.165 (2025), establishing the "Billionaire Mark-to-Market Tax Act" to impose taxes on unrealized capital gains for individuals with net worth over $100 million, which remains in committee; and S.173 (2025), creating an for workers ineligible for standard benefits, such as independent contractors, also pending. These efforts reflect a consistent emphasis on redistributive policies and worker entitlements, though many have not advanced beyond introduction due to fiscal or partisan hurdles. In recent sessions, Ramos co-sponsored and helped pass the Retail Worker Safety Act (S.6844B, 2023), mandating panic buttons for retail employees facing threats and requiring threat assessments by large retailers, signed into law on November 17, 2023. She has introduced bills like S.4472A (2025) for automatic subsidy rate increases tied to market costs and S.4519 (2025) allowing for employees prevailing in wage kickback lawsuits, both aimed at bolstering low-wage worker remedies but stalled in labor committees. Housing-related sponsorships include S.7977 (2025), extending eviction protections for tenants facing utility shutoffs, underscoring her advocacy for renter safeguards amid New York City's affordability crisis. Ramos's voting record aligns closely with progressive Democratic priorities, showing near-unanimous support for bills expanding government intervention in labor markets, tenant rights, and . In the 2025 session, she voted yes on A.174 (passed June 13, 2025), prohibiting rent minimums in loans to prevent practices; yes on A.56 (June 12, 2025), capping landlord fees for bounced checks at actual costs; and yes on S.8421 (June 12, 2025), amending regulations to enhance protections. On civil liberties, she supported S.3967 (June 11, 2025), granting legal immunity to sex workers in certain circumstances, and S.410 (June 11, 2025), barring courts from reducing jury awards in cases absent exceptional reasons. In and safety, affirmative votes included S.6698 (June 12, 2025) for minimum in and S.54 (June 12, 2025) repealing the voluntary intoxication defense in criminal cases. Environmentally, she backed S.8012 (June 10, 2025) adjusting valuations for projects to incentivize . Critics from conservative scorecards, such as the John Birch Society's Freedom Index, rate her low (e.g., opposing limits on in votes like S.1529, passed May 6, 2025), highlighting her pattern of favoring expansive state roles over fiscal restraint. Overall, her record demonstrates fidelity to left-leaning positions, with rare deviations reported in tallies.

Key Political Positions

Labor and Economic Policies

As Chair of the Labor Committee since 2019, Jessica Ramos has focused on expanding worker protections, enhancing enforcement of labor laws, and strengthening union rights. Her legislative efforts emphasize safety in high-risk sectors, including retail and warehousing, where she co-sponsored bills signed into law in 2024 prohibiting unsafe productivity quotas in warehouses and requiring retail employers to implement violence prevention plans, programs, and incident reporting logs. These measures, passed in June 2023 as part of the state budget, apply to businesses with 10 or more employees and include penalties for non-compliance, aiming to reduce injury rates across industries. Ramos has sponsored multiple bills to bolster compensation and recourse for workers, such as S8441 (2025), which allows certain injured employees or their representatives to pursue claims or civil lawsuits for damages, and S4478 (2025), mandating the Department of Labor to provide minors seeking with a multilingual document outlining workplace rights, including wage, hour, and safety entitlements. She also advanced S169 (2025), suspending certificates of authority for employers violating laws or tax obligations, and legislation creating a dedicated Worker Protection and Labor Enforcement Fund to support Department of Labor investigations into violations. In June 2024, she partnered with the Department of Labor for community outreach in to educate immigrant workers on protections against exploitation, underscoring enforcement priorities. On wages, Ramos has advocated raising the state beyond Kathy Hochul's proposed $16.39 (indexed to starting 2027), pushing for $21.25 by 2030 in 2023 negotiations and supporting indexing mechanisms to prevent erosion by rising costs, as in her 2022 bill with Assemblymember Latoya Joyner. She sponsored measures eliminating exemptions for workers with disabilities and issued statements during 2024 talks urging faster increases to address 's impact on low-wage earners. Regarding unions, Ramos backs reforms like S6378 (2024), improving application under Section 224-a to ensure fair pay on public projects while reducing administrative burdens, and has rallied for workers' rights to organize and bargain, including protections for federal workers amid policy shifts. Her positions align with organized labor, including 32BJ SEIU, prioritizing employee leverage in employer disputes over business flexibility.

Criminal Justice and Public Safety

Ramos supported New York State's 2019-2020 bail reform measures, which eliminated cash bail for most and non-violent offenses to reduce pretrial incarceration disparities. She affirmed her vote for the reforms, stating, "When I voted for bail reform, I did the right thing," emphasizing over incarceration for public safety. In March 2022, Ramos opposed Governor Kathy Hochul's proposed modifications to the law, describing them as yielding to "bad-faith smears" while pledging to address safety concerns without undermining the reforms' core intent. On police accountability, Ramos voted for the full repeal of Civil Rights Law Section 50-a on June 9, 2020, removing shields for disciplinary records and enabling greater public scrutiny of officer misconduct. That same day, she endorsed a package of police reform bills passed by the Senate Democratic conference, including measures to limit police interactions and enhance oversight. Ramos introduced Senate Bill S.8516 in June 2020 to prohibit police use of , , and other chemical or kinetic weapons against civilians during protests or . Ramos has sponsored promoting alternatives to traditional incarceration, such as the Treatment Not Jails Act (S.399), which seeks to divert individuals with or substance use issues into community-based treatment programs rather than county jails, with implementation requirements for each county by 2026. She also co-sponsored S.2574, establishing an Office of Special Investigation under the Attorney General to probe deaths involving . Additional bills include abolishing citizen's arrests (S.1500) and policies restricting sustained noise weapons by police (S.1095). In her broader public safety framework, Ramos advocates a "holistic approach" beyond punitive measures, incorporating safe streets, , and services to prevent . During her 2025 mayoral campaign, she proposed community-based violence interruption programs to combat and increased resources for crisis response teams as alternatives to police deployment. Critics, including advocates, have linked her support to post-2020 crime spikes in , citing rearrest data from the showing elevated among released defendants, though Ramos attributes such issues to underlying socioeconomic factors rather than the policies themselves.

Housing, Development, and Environmental Issues

Ramos has advocated for strengthened tenant protections, cosponsoring the Housing Stability and Tenant Protection Act of 2019, which reformed rent regulations to limit increases, eliminate certain landlord loopholes like vacancy bonuses, and repeal the Urstadt Law to enable local rent stabilization expansions. She sponsored S.7977 in 2025 to extend landlord-tenant safeguards to cooperative housing residents by broadening the definition of "landlord." Additionally, she introduced S.2523 for a jobs and housing pilot program linking construction employment to addressing shortages, and supported the Tenant Opportunity to Purchase Act to allow tenants first refusal on properties, aiming to preserve affordability and prevent displacement. On development, Ramos opposed Amazon's HQ2 proposal in Long Island City, criticizing the $3 billion in public subsidies as "corporate welfare" amid Queens' affordability challenges, contributing to its withdrawal in February 2019. She joined rallies against Amazon's planned Woodside distribution center in 2019, highlighting concerns over working conditions and community impacts. Ramos introduced S.2510-A in 2023 to mandate enhanced public participation plans for major development projects, requiring detailed community engagement to increase oversight. Regarding environmental issues, Ramos backs the Superfund Act to hold large oil companies financially accountable for climate damages. She sponsored establishing the New York Youth Climate Corps to expand service opportunities for young adults in low-carbon projects. Other bills include the Accelerate Solar for Affordable Power Act to boost distributed solar capacity targets via commission directives, and S.6879 in 2025 linking environmental conservation with labor protections. Her environmental voting record, as scored by advocacy groups, emphasizes support for bills on , , and sustainable transportation.

Immigration and Social Policies

Ramos has sponsored legislation aimed at restricting federal in sensitive public spaces. In October 2025, she introduced S.8522, which prohibits Immigration and Customs Enforcement () officers from entering hospitals to inquire about individuals' immigration status or to effectuate arrests based on such status, thereby protecting patients, staff, and visitors regardless of legal status. She also sponsored S.8539, the New York State -Free Zones Act, which bars the use of state or municipal property—including schools, hospitals, and courthouses—for civil immigration enforcement activities, such as detentions or interviews related to proceedings. These bills build on New York's existing sanctuary state framework, reflecting Ramos's emphasis on shielding immigrant communities from federal actions, a stance she attributes to her parents' experiences as Colombian immigrants who advocated for dual citizenship rights. In response to heightened federal immigration scrutiny under Republican administrations, Ramos has criticized policies like those initiated during the Trump era as "cruel and inhumane," proposing measures to expand local protections against such enforcement. Her legislative efforts prioritize limiting cooperation between state entities and federal authorities, though critics argue these could hinder public safety by obstructing information-sharing on criminal aliens, as evidenced by data from cities with similar non-cooperation policies showing elevated undocumented migrant involvement in certain crimes. On broader social policies, Ramos advocates for enhanced LGBTQ+ rights and inclusive education. She co-sponsored S.8884, establishing a state program for and non-binary wellness and equity, focusing on healthcare access and anti-discrimination measures tailored to these groups. has also supported bills mandating comprehensive sexuality education in grades K-12, including S.2584 (2021), which requires curricula covering topics such as consent, healthy relationships, reproductive health, and affirmative representations of LGBTQ+ identities, with opt-out provisions for parents but standardized content aligned with progressive health guidelines. These initiatives aim to foster inclusivity but have drawn opposition from groups citing insufficient evidence of long-term benefits in reducing teen pregnancy or STI rates compared to abstinence-focused alternatives, per reviews of similar programs in states like . Ramos extends her focus to family and supports. In 2021, she proposed universal childcare as a means to alleviate economic burdens on working families, tying it to broader labor protections. During her 2025 mayoral campaign, she outlined plans to address mental illness through job creation and root-cause interventions rather than solely expanding institutional care, emphasizing as a stabilizing factor amid rising homelessness and crime linked to untreated conditions in . In healthcare, her sponsorship of expansions, such as allowing injured employees alternative damage claims, underscores a pro-labor approach to social safety nets.

Controversies and Criticisms

Disputes Over District Development Projects

Ramos played a prominent role in opposing Amazon's planned HQ2 campus in , announced in November 2018, which promised up to 25,000 jobs but included nearly $3 billion in state and city incentives. She joined a of local elected officials and activists who argued the deal lacked enforceable commitments on wages, union rights, and community investments, viewing the subsidies as corporate welfare that burdened taxpayers without sufficient oversight. Ramos participated in rallies and public campaigns against the project, including protests at related Amazon facilities, emphasizing accountability for public funds. The opposition contributed to Amazon's withdrawal in February 2019, a decision critics attributed to politicized resistance that forfeited economic growth, while supporters hailed it as a victory against unchecked corporate influence. In December 2019, Ramos led protests against Amazon's proposed last-mile delivery stations in Woodside and other areas, citing concerns over worker conditions, , and environmental impacts in densely populated neighborhoods. Labor advocates aligned with her highlighted reports of inadequate safety measures and high injury rates at similar facilities, though Amazon defended the plans as essential for efficient urban logistics. These actions underscored ongoing tensions between rapid expansion and local quality-of-life priorities. More recently, in May 2024, Ramos formally opposed the $8 billion Metropolitan Park and entertainment complex proposed by New York Mets owner Steve Cohen near in Corona, refusing to sponsor required parkland alienation legislation. She argued the project risked displacing residents, exacerbating housing costs, and prioritizing gambling over sustainable investments like schools and parks, advocating instead for community-driven alternatives. Proponents, including Cohen's team, countered that it would generate thousands of union jobs and $500 million annually in for , accusing opponents of blocking economic revitalization in an underinvested area. Ramos's stance, reiterated in a May 2025 Senate vote against related bills, drew praise from anti-casino groups but criticism from business leaders for hindering post-pandemic recovery. Despite her opposition, competing casino bids advanced in other regions by 2025, highlighting fragmented support for downstate gaming expansion.

Andrew Cuomo Endorsement and Progressive Backlash

On June 6, 2025, New York State Senator Jessica Ramos, a Democratic candidate in the 2025 New York City mayoral primary, endorsed former Governor Andrew Cuomo's bid for mayor, despite her prior role as one of his sharpest critics during his tenure and resignation amid sexual harassment allegations. Ramos, who had previously condemned Cuomo's leadership style and pushed for his accountability in the state Senate, announced the endorsement via a joint statement with Cuomo's campaign, praising his experience in addressing urban challenges like crime and housing while affirming her intent to remain in the race to amplify working-class voices. The move came one day after Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez endorsed Ramos's progressive rival Zohran Mamdani and followed a June 4 debate among nine Democratic candidates, positioning it as a strategic pivot amid Cuomo's frontrunner status in early polling. The endorsement triggered immediate backlash from progressive organizations and figures, who viewed it as a betrayal of Ramos's earlier insurgent credentials, including her 2018 upset victory over an establishment incumbent. The New York , a key progressive ally that had backed Ramos's senatorial and mayoral campaigns, rescinded its endorsement, citing Cuomo's history of scandals and policy clashes with left-leaning priorities such as . Similarly, Region 9A and other labor and advocacy groups withdrew support, with critics arguing the alliance undermined efforts to block Cuomo's return to power after his 2021 resignation. Assemblymember , a socialist mayoral contender, publicly expressed disappointment, stating the endorsement contradicted Ramos's past opposition to Cuomo and failed to align with voter demands for accountability. Ramos defended the decision as pragmatic, emphasizing Cuomo's proven executive record on issues like and public safety over ideological purity, though detractors framed it as opportunistic amid her campaign's fundraising and polling struggles against Cuomo's lead. The fallout highlighted tensions within New York Democrats between establishment moderates and the progressive wing, with some analysts attributing Ramos's shift to personal or district-specific grievances, including disputes over development projects in , rather than a wholesale ideological reversal. By late June 2025, the episode had eroded portions of Ramos's progressive base, complicating her mayoral bid while bolstering Cuomo's cross-endorsement narrative in a crowded primary.

Empirical Critiques of Supported Policies

Ramos has vocally defended New York's 2019 bail reform legislation, which eliminated cash bail for most misdemeanor and nonviolent felony offenses, arguing it addressed systemic inequalities in pretrial detention. However, synthetic control analyses evaluating the reform's short-term effects have identified statistically significant increases in certain crime rates post-implementation, including murder, larceny, and motor vehicle theft, relative to synthetic counterfactuals constructed from comparable jurisdictions. These findings suggest the policy's release mechanisms may have contributed to elevated recidivism risks, particularly among repeat offenders; one examination of released violent defendants with prior records documented a 66.6% reoffense rate within two years. While some evaluations report neutral or reductive impacts on overall rearrests in urban areas, the divergence in outcomes underscores debates over deterrence erosion, with broader New York crime trends—such as a 30-40% rise in homicides and shootings from 2019 to 2021—aligning temporally with the reforms amid reduced pretrial holds. In housing policy, Ramos has championed "good cause" eviction protections, which would mandate landlord justification for non-renewals and cap rent increases outside stabilized units, positioning it as essential for tenant stability statewide. Empirical reviews of analogous rent control expansions, including second-generation controls with vacancy decontrol limits, demonstrate consistent supply-side distortions: regulated markets experience 10-20% reductions in rental housing stock over time due to conversion to owner-occupied units, deferred maintenance, and deterred new investment. Studies attribute these effects to weakened landlord incentives for upkeep and expansion, leading to heightened vacancy mismatches and elevated market rents for unregulated units, as observed in New York City's existing rent-stabilized portfolio where supply growth lagged demand by over 500,000 units since 2010. Critics of good cause extensions, drawing on cross-jurisdictional data from places like San Francisco and Cambridge, warn of amplified shortages and quality degradation without compensatory deregulation, potentially pricing out low-income renters long-term.

2025 New York City Mayoral Campaign

Campaign Announcement and Core Platform

State Senator Jessica Ramos formally announced her candidacy for the Democratic nomination in the 2025 New York City mayoral election on September 13, 2024, positioning herself as a champion for working families against incumbent Mayor . In her launch, Ramos highlighted the city's affordability crisis, pledging to prioritize policies that support labor, child care, and economic security for low- and middle-income residents. Ramos's core platform centered on expanding access to and services to bolster family stability and workforce participation. She proposed universal , rebuilding the 3-K program, and extending pre-K access to newborns by the end of her second term, framing these as investments in economic productivity. On housing, she advocated reviving a Mitchell-Lama-style program using , union pension funds, and city capital budgets to create permanently affordable rentals and promote modest homeownership opportunities, while opposing of NYCHA properties. For public safety, Ramos called for professionalizing the NYPD through higher base pay, redesigned deployment strategies, and shifting non-violent calls—such as crises—to expanded social workers and upskilled EMS personnel, rather than cutting police resources. She proposed declaring a and implementing the "Harmony N.Y.C." plan to integrate wellness services citywide, alongside a Youth Jobs Guarantee aiming for 100% employment or participation among 16- to 24-year-olds by 2030. Funding these initiatives would involve raising personal income taxes on the ultra-wealthy and reforming property taxes, while maintaining rates and increasing per-student spending.

Fundraising, Polling, and Strategic Challenges

Ramos's mayoral campaign encountered significant fundraising hurdles, culminating in total receipts of $288,832, with disbursements exceeding $414,000 and only $136 remaining in cash on hand by the final disclosures. This figure paled in comparison to leading competitors, who raised millions through established donor networks; for context, frontrunners like and benefited from surges in contributions that enabled robust advertising and organizational efforts. The campaign received no public , relying instead on 2,121 contributions averaging $20,360, predominantly from within ($225,112) but insufficient to match the scale of rivals' hauls reported in early 2025 filings. Public polling reflected these constraints, with Ramos consistently absent from the top tiers in surveys leading to the June 24 Democratic primary. In the Marist Institute's June 2025 poll, for example, commanded nearly 40% first-choice support among likely Democratic voters, while trailed closely; Ramos registered negligible backing, underscoring her struggle for name recognition beyond her Queens Senate district. Earlier assessments, such as the Manhattan Institute's February 2025 survey of 618 likely voters, similarly highlighted a fragmented field dominated by higher-profile entrants, where Ramos's support hovered in low single digits. Strategically, Ramos faced a crowded primary featuring eleven Democrats, including heavyweights like Cuomo and Mamdani, which diluted media attention and voter outreach opportunities for lower-funded candidates. Her campaign's emphasis on Queens-specific working-class priorities, such as public employment initiatives, failed to gain citywide traction amid broader debates on , , and fiscal management. A pivotal challenge arose on June 6, 2025, when Ramos endorsed Cuomo—despite her progressive credentials—while opting to remain on the ballot; this move provoked criticism from allies like Assemblymember , who decried it as misaligned with anti-Cuomo sentiment in left-leaning circles, potentially eroding her base without bolstering her standings. These factors contributed to her marginal performance in the ranked-choice primary, where Mamdani secured victory with 573,169 final votes after eliminations, leaving Ramos among the also-rans in a race that exposed the perils of limited resources and inconsistent positioning.

Key Endorsements, Debates, and Voter Reactions

Ramos participated in the first Democratic primary debate for the 2025 New York City mayoral election on June 4, 2025, hosted by and , where candidates including faced intense scrutiny over past governance issues, though Ramos herself drew limited direct focus amid the field's emphasis on , , and Cuomo's record. A second debate occurred later that week, with Ramos continuing to pitch her platform on expansion and integration, but her performances did not significantly shift polling dynamics in a crowded field of nine Democrats. On June 6, 2025, Ramos unexpectedly endorsed Cuomo for the Democratic nomination, reversing her prior criticisms of him as a "bully" whose "mental acuity is in decline" during his governorship, a move tied to her district's casino development interests involving Cuomo ally Steve Cohen. This endorsement, the only one Cuomo received from a rival , prompted immediate progressive backlash, with the New York , Region 9A, Citizen Action of New York, and the Professional Staff Congress rescinding prior support for Ramos and redirecting endorsements to alternatives like Michael Blake. Voter reactions to Ramos's campaign and Cuomo endorsement were predominantly negative among progressive and labor constituencies, with Queens Assemblymember Zohran Mamdani expressing disappointment and framing it as inconsistent with anti-Cuomo sentiment, while online forums reflected frustration over perceived opportunism amid her low fundraising and polling—trailing far behind frontrunners with minimal viability for victory. Despite remaining in the race, the endorsement effectively positioned her as a non-competitive endorser of Cuomo, alienating base supporters without gaining broader traction in a primary dominated by ideological divides. By October 2025, post-primary analyses highlighted her campaign's diminished relevance, with general election focus shifting to Cuomo, Mamdani, and Republican Curtis Sliwa.

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