Governor Kathy Hochul’s veto of state legislation affecting New York City’s charter revision process has preserved the mayor’s authority to sideline City Council-backed ballot proposals, a move that strengthens the hand of Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani before he takes office.
The bill would have limited a mayor’s ability to block charter amendments proposed by the City Council by creating a separate charter revision commission with competing questions. Under current rules, a mayor can effectively “bump” council-backed proposals from the ballot by convening such a commission, as Mayor Eric Adams did this year.
Hochul rejected the measure earlier this month, arguing that changing the process could have broader consequences beyond New York City. In her veto message, Hochul cautioned that allowing multiple sets of proposals on the ballot could lead to “voter confusion and the passage of inconsistent policies.”
City Council leaders criticized the decision, contending it weakens the legislature’s role in shaping voter-approved changes to the city’s governing document. Speaker Adrienne Adams emphasized the importance of fairness between branches of government, highlighting that there should be “equal time and equal opportunity for ballot proposals from the co-governing branch of the city.”
The veto leaves intact a system that allows the incoming mayor to advance his own policy priorities through charter questions while limiting competing proposals from the Council.






