Jon Stewart
š¤ PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And what about for you, Cameron?
Because I have to tell you, one of the most, I thought, shrewdest conversations
campaign moves, and this was in the primary, not in the general, is when you walked from the top of Manhattan all the way down to the bottom and met people.
You've got to be very confident in yourself to do that, because New Yorkers will generally tell you what they think when they see you.
And even when they are telling you something that's technically supportive, it sounds like you're being heckled.
I was... That is what we do.
I was on Nostra Nav a few days ago, and this woman just pulled up in her car.
She was like, I'm voting for you!
I was like, I don't... Thank you.
It just sounded like I was about to get my ass whooped.
But it was by my voter.
And New Yorkers, by the way, no one will be as mad at you if it doesn't go right as the people who love you now.
Have you felt that as well?
You know, it's often framed as a burden or as an obligation.
Right.
But frankly, I think it's an opportunity.
It's an opportunity to actually show that this whole campaign where we've talked about freezing the rent, making buses faster, free delivery, universal child care, these are not just slogans.
These are commitments.
And when we deliver them here in New York City, it will be also the delivery of a politics that can actually aspire for more than what you're living through.
And for so many people across the city, politics has just become synonymous with an argument of celebrate the little you have or lose that.