Antonio Reynoso

Antonio Reynoso
Reynoso in 2018
19th Borough President of Brooklyn
Assumed office
January 1, 2022
DeputyDiana Richardson (2022)
Kimberly “Kim” Council (2023-present)[1]
Preceded byEric Adams
Member of the New York City Council
from the 34th district
In office
January 1, 2014 – December 31, 2021
Preceded byDiana Reyna
Succeeded byJennifer Gutiérrez
Personal details
Born (1983-05-09) May 9, 1983
PartyDemocratic
SpouseIliana Gomez
EducationLe Moyne College (BA)

Antonio Reynoso (born May 9, 1983) is an American politician and community organizer serving as borough president of Brooklyn since 2022. He is a member of the Democratic Party, and was elected Brooklyn borough president in the 2021 election.[2] He previously was a member of the New York City Council for the 34th district from 2014 to 2021. The district included portions of Bushwick, Greenpoint, and Williamsburg in Brooklyn and Ridgewood, Queens.

Early life and career

Reynoso was born in Brooklyn and raised in the Los Sures section of Williamsburg to immigrant parents from the Dominican Republic. He graduated from Le Moyne College with a bachelor's degree in political science.[3]

Reynoso started his political career as a community organizer for NYC ACORN;[3] one of his assignments was to organize childcare providers to join the United Food and Commercial Workers union.[4] In 2009, he became chief of staff to Diana Reyna, the member of the New York City Council for District 34.[3]

New York City Council

With Reyna prevented from running for reelection in 2013 due to term limits, Reynoso ran to succeed her[5] The district included Bushwick, Ridgewood, and Williamsburg.[4] Reynoso succeeded to office after defeating Vito Lopez in the Democratic primary.[6]

During both his terms, Reynoso served as chair of the City Council's Committee on Sanitation & Solid Waste Management.[4] He also co-chaired the council's Progressive Caucus.

Brooklyn Borough President

In July 2021, Reynoso won the Democratic Party's nomination for borough president of Brooklyn (formally known as Kings County). He defeated 13 other candidates in the Democratic primary.[7][8] In the final round (Round 11) of the ranked-choice voting election, he defeated Assemblywoman Jo Anne Simon, 54.9% to 45.1%.[7][8] In the preceding round, fellow City Councilmember Robert Cornegy was eliminated.[7][8] Other contenders eliminated in earlier rounds included Mathieu Eugene.[8]

Reynoso then easily won the November 2021 general election, defeating against Republican candidate Menachem M. Raitport and Voices for Change candidate Shanduke McPhatter.[4]

In October 2022, Reynoso fired his deputy borough president, Diana Richardson, a former Crown Heights assemblywoman, following a string of staff and constituent complaints about her behavior.[9]

Political positions

Ideologically, Reynoso is a progressive.[4][7] At age 22, before his election to the City Council, he co-founded New Kings Democrats, a progressive reform-oriented grouping of the Brooklyn Democratic Party; the faction has struggled for control of the borough's party organization, clashing with bosses Vito Lopez and Rodneyse Bichotte Hermelyn.[7][10][11]

Housing and land use

In 2019, as a city councilmember, Reynoso proposed a plan to create new historic districts to limit development in Bushwick, preserve manufacturing zoning, and allow no more than 2,000 new housing units, all at below-market rates (in contrast to a plan by Mayor Bill de Blasio to allow 5,613 new units of housing, including 1,873 units permanently earmarked for below-market-rate).[12]

In November 2021, upon winning election as borough president, Reynoso criticized past mayors for what he called overdevelopment, and that he wanted to "empower community boards to dictate what their communities look like in 10 years."[4] However, in 2023 and 2024, Reynoso supported more housing construction,[13][14] and proposed plans to upzone Brooklyn to permit more housing.[15][16] He also criticized NIMBYism and efforts to block housing construction based on notions of "neighborhood character."[13][14] In November 2023, he criticized Mayor Eric Adams for slow progress on addressing the New York City housing crisis, and suggested that New York City should eliminate single-family-exclusive zoning.[17]

As a city councilmember and as Brooklyn BP, Reynoso has supported initiatives to protect the safety of pedestrians and bicyclists,[11] including Vision Zero.[18] He supports the end of parking minimums and has criticized illegal parking, such as double parking and parking on sidewalks, parks, and bike lanes.[11] In January 2022, six days into his tenure as borough president, Reynoso put an end to illicit parking on the Brooklyn Borough Hall plaza, ending the widely criticized practice of his predecessor Adams, who allowed his employees to illegally park their private vehicles across the plaza during his tenure.[11][19] In 2024, after a series of pedestrian deaths caused by turning cars at intersections, Reynoso and other Brooklyn elected officials called for universal daylighting.[18]

Crime and policing

On the Council, Reynoso was the lead sponsor of the Right to Know Act; the act require New York Police Department officers to hand out business cards with their name and rank to persons they stop, and to inform persons stopped by police of their right to decline a consent search.[4][20] The bill, passed in response to NYPD's use of stop-and-frisk, was enacted in 2017 and took effect in 2018.[20]

In 2019, Reynoso voted to support New York Mayor Bill de Blasio's plan to eventually close Rikers Island, the city's long-troubled jail complex, and replace it with newly constructed borough-based jails.[7][21]

Election history

2013

New York City Council elections
District 34 Democratic primary, September 10, 2013[22]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Antonio Reynoso 6,205 50.2
Democratic Vito J. Lopez 4,551 36.8
Democratic Gladys Santiago 967 7.8
Democratic Humberto Soto 632 5.1
Democratic Write-ins 3 0.0
Total votes 12,358 100
New York City Council elections
District 34 election, November 5, 2013[23]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Antonio Reynoso 13,123
Working Families Antonio Reynoso 1,313
Total Antonio Reynoso 13,581 95.9
School Choice Gladys Santiago 557 3.9
n/a Write-ins 28 0.2
Total votes 14,166 100

2017

Democratic primary[24]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Antonio Reynoso (incumbent) 6,710 63.9
Democratic Tommy Torres 3,765 35.9
Democratic Write-ins 22 0.2
Total votes 10,497 100
General election[25]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Antonio Reynoso 14,358
Working Families Antonio Reynoso 2,210
Total Antonio Reynoso (incumbent) 16,568 99.1
Write-in 143 0.9
Total votes 16,711 100

2021

2021 Brooklyn Borough President Democratic primary results[26]
Party Candidate Maximum
round
Maximum
votes
Share in
maximum
round
Maximum votes
  First round votes   Transfer votes
Democratic Antonio Reynoso 11 107,963 54.9%
Democratic Jo Anne Simon 11 88,794 45.1%
Democratic Robert Cornegy 10 70,173 29.4%
Democratic Mathieu Eugene 9 27,175 10.2%
Democratic Khari Edwards 9 25,211 9.5%
Democratic Kim Council 8 20,959 7.7%
Democratic Robert Ramos Jr. 7 12,128 4.4%
Democratic Anthony Jones 6 10,392 3.7%
Democratic Trisha Ocana 5 9,570 3.4%
Democratic Robert Elstein 4 7,151 2.5%
Democratic Pearlene Fields 3 5,222 1.8%
Democratic Lamor Miller-Whitehead 2 4,084 1.4%
Write-in 1 706 0.2%
2021 Brooklyn borough president election[27]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Antonio Reynoso 235,118 72.84% −10.11%
Republican Menachem Raitport 66,490 20.60% +8.10%
Conservative Menachem Raitport 7,578 2.35% −0.25%
Total Menachem Raitport 74,068 22.94% +7.84%
Rent Is Too Damn High Anthony Jones 8,567 2.65% N/A
Voices for Change Shanduke McPhatter 4,415 1.37% N/A
Write-in 635 0.20%
Total votes 322,803 100.0%

References

  1. ^ "Office of the Brooklyn Borough President - Meet Deputy Borough President Kim Council". Office of the Brooklyn Borough President. Retrieved December 12, 2025.
  2. ^ "ANTONIO REYNOSO CRUISES TO VICTORY IN BOROUGH PRESIDENT'S RACE". Brooklyn Paper. November 2, 2021. Retrieved November 3, 2021.
  3. ^ a b c "Five Questions with Borough President Candidate Antonio Reynoso". September 30, 2020.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g M.E. Lewis (November 3, 2021). "Meet Brooklyn's New Borough President, Antonio Reynoso". Bushwick Daily.
  5. ^ Campanile, Carl (September 10, 2013). "Antonio Reynoso knocks off Vito Lopez in council race". New York Post. Retrieved August 5, 2014.
  6. ^ Kuo, Stephanie (September 13, 2013). "Antonio Reynoso Wins the 34th, Vetoes Vito". Greenpoint Gazette. Retrieved August 5, 2014.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Laura Glesby, Antonio Reynoso is the Likely Next Brooklyn Borough President; Here's What He Ran On, Gotham Gazette (July 5, 2021).
  8. ^ a b c d 2021 Primary, Official Ranked Choice Rounds - DEM Borough President Kings, Board of Elections in the City of New York.
  9. ^ "Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso fires deputy Diana Richardson over toxic work environment". New York Daily News. October 10, 2022.
  10. ^ Jeff Coltin, Velázquez, Reynoso endorse reformist district leaders in yet another strike at the Brooklyn Democratic Party, City & State (April 18, 2022).
  11. ^ a b c d Ben Brachfeld, Brooklyn beep Antonio Reynoso on community boards, county politics, and emulating his predecessors, (Brooklyn Paper (May 2, 2022).
  12. ^ Spivack, Caroline (January 13, 2020). "Plans to rezone Bushwick are dead, for now". Curbed NY. Archived from the original on January 14, 2020.
  13. ^ a b Zaveri, Mihir (February 13, 2024). "They're Starting a New York 'Housing League.' NIMBYs Not Allowed". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331.
  14. ^ a b Alena Botros (February 29, 2024). "Brooklyn's new borough president doesn't care about the 'character' of your neighborhood. That's 'not more important than putting people in homes'". Fortune.
  15. ^ "Antonio Reynoso has big plans for Brooklyn's future". Crain's New York Business. 2023.
  16. ^ Hogan, Gwynne (October 4, 2023). "Brooklyn Borough Prez's Vision: More Trees and Bike Lanes, Less Parking". The City.
  17. ^ Janaki Chadha (November 20, 2023). "Reynoso knocks Adams' 'City of Yes'". Politico Weekly New York Real Estate & Infrastructure.
  18. ^ a b Dave Colon, Seven Brooklyn Electeds Join Growing Calls For Universal Daylighting, Streetsblog New York City (January 17, 2024).
  19. ^ Kirstyn Brendlen, Brand-new beep Antonio Reynoso bans parking from Borough Hall plaza, Brooklyn Paper (January 6, 2022).
  20. ^ a b Ashley Southall, Right to Know Is Now the Law. Here's What That Means., New York Times (October 19, 2018).
  21. ^ Spivack, Caroline (July 9, 2019). "Rikers Island closure and borough-based jail plan, explained". Curbed NY. Archived from the original on July 9, 2019. Retrieved December 13, 2019.
  22. ^ NYC Board of Elections – District 34 Democratic primary
  23. ^ NYC Board of Elections – District 34
  24. ^ NYC Board of Elections – District 34 Democratic Primary
  25. ^ NYC Board of Elections – District 34
  26. ^ "DEM Borough President Kings". Vote NYC. New York City Board of Elections. July 20, 2021. Retrieved July 30, 2021.
  27. ^ "General Election 2021 - Kings County" (PDF). New York City Board of Elections. November 29, 2021.