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67% of voters say New York’s cost of living is out of control: poll

67%-of-voters-say-new-york’s-cost-of-living-is-out-of-control:-poll
67% of voters say New York’s cost of living is out of control: poll

Two-thirds of state voters believe New York’s cost of living is out of control, a new survey released Tuesday found.

The Siena College poll asked voters if the Empire State’s cost of living was on the right track or heading in the wrong direction.

The result: only 27% of the 806 respondents said the cost of living in New York is on the right track, while 67% said it’s going in the wrong direction.

Governor Kathy Hochul delivers remarks at the FIFA World Cup press conference at Staten Island University Hospital Park Baseball Field on April 27, 2026.

Despite voters’ views that New York is failing to address the fundamental issues of the high cost of living and housing, Gov. Hochul is still in the driver’s seat for her re-election bid to win a second, four-year term this fall, the poll shows. Susan Watts/Office of Governor Kathy Hochul

The dire results cut across partisan and ideological lines: 59% of Democrats, 79% of Republicans, and 71% of independent or non-party-affiliated voters said costs in New York are too high.

Meanwhile, in a related question, only 31% of voters said New York was creating enough affordable housing, while 57% said the effort is going in the wrong direction.

Nearly 70% of Republicans, two-thirds of independents and a plurality of Democrats agree housing costs are too damn high.

A majority of New Yorkers — 53% — said reducing crime is headed in the wrong direction, while 38% said crime fighting is on the right track.

Voters were more split on whether New York was providing a quality education, safeguarding the environment, improving the state’s transportation infrastructure and providing access to quality health care. Democrats were more positive than Republicans and independents on these issues.

Candidate for NY governor Bruce Blakeman (pictured) came to Brighton Beach to protest the performance of Uzbek pop star Yulduz Usmanova

Hochul leads rival, Republican Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman, 49% to 33%, with the remainder undecided or preferring someone else. Gregory P. Mango for NY Post

“A majority of Democrats think the state is on the right track on five issues, but even Democrats agree with Republicans and independents that the state is headed in the wrong direction on housing and cost of living,” Siena pollster Steven Greenberg said.

Despite voters’ views that New York is failing to address the fundamental issues of the high cost of living and housing, according to the poll, Kathy Hochul is still in the driver’s seat for her re-election bid to win a second, four-year term this fall.

Hochul leads Republican nominee Bruce Blakeman, the current Nassau County executive, 49% to 33%, with the remainder undecided or preferring someone else.

NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani, along with NYPL President Anthony Marx, Bronx Congressman Richie Torres, staff and residents of 355 East 165th Street in the Bronx, NY on May 4, 2026, announced free Internet for low income New Yorkers.

Big Apple Mayor Zohran Mamdani is still viewed favorably – but barely – by a plurality of voters statewide, 43% favorable to 40% unfavorable. James Messerschmidt for the NY Post

Blakeman’s big challenge: nearly two-thirds of voters — 64% — said they don’t know or are unfamiliar with him.

One eye-opener: only 43% of voters said they would re-elect state Democratic Attorney General Letitia James, while 41% of respondents prefer someone else.

Saritha Komatireddy, a former federal prosecutor and chief of staff at the Drug Enforcement Agency, is James’s Republican challenger.

Democratic state Comptroller Tom DiNapoli, in office since 2007, is seeking a fifth term.

Nearly 70% of Republicans, two-thirds of independents and a plurality of Democrats agree housing costs are too damn high.

Nearly 70% of Republicans, two-thirds of independents, and a plurality of Democrats agree that housing costs are too high. vichie81 – stock.adobe.com

But only 28% of voters said they would re-elect DiNapoli, 29% preferred someone else, and 43% had no opinion.

DiNapoli faces his first serious Democratic primary since his initial election, challenged by former affordable housing nonprofit executive Drew Warshaw and tech executive and former Kansas legislator Raj Goyle.

Businessman Joseph Hernandez is the Republican nominee for comptroller.

New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani is still viewed favorably – but barely – by a plurality of voters statewide, 43% favorable to 40% unfavorable.

Locally, 56% of city voters view him favorably compared to 34% who don’t.

That’s a higher popularity than Hochul, who is viewed favorably by just 46% of Big Apple voters while 37% rated her unfavorably.

New York Sen Chuck Schumer, the Democratic minority leader, remains unpopular. Only 33% of voters have a favorable view of Schumer, while 52% had an unfavorable view of the veteran senator.

The Siena University Poll surveyed 806 state-registered voters from April 27 to 30. It has a margin of error of +/- 4.2 percentage points.

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