Nassau County Board of Elections Unofficial Results General Election, November 4, 2025
County Executive Votes Percentage
Bruce A. Blakeman (R) 171,113 55.92
Seth I. Koslow (D) 134,643 44.00
District Attorney
Anne T. Donnelly (R) 168,978 55.58
Nicole Aloise (D) 134,880 44.37
County Comptroller
Elaine R. Phillips (R) 167,868 55.65
Wayne H. Wink, Jr. (D) 133,639 44.31
County Clerk
Maureen C. O’Connell (R) 172,113 57.09
Joylette E. Williams (D) 129,241 42.87
Supervisor Town of Hempstead
John R. Ferretti (R) 88,534 53.25
Joe Scianablo (D) 77,639 46.70
Town Clerk Town of Hempstead
Kate Murray (R) 94,305 56.87
Yveline L. Dalmacy (D) 71,385 43.05
County Legislator District 7
Howard J. Kopel (R) 12,207 76.10
Alec J. Fischthal (D) 3,825 23.85
County Legislator District 10
Mazi Melesa Pilip. (R) 11,470 63.58
Paul W. Jordonne (D) 6,560 36.37
Board Of Elections In The City Of New York Unofficial Election Night Results General Election November 4, 2025
Mayor
Zohran Kwame Mamdani (D) 1,036,051 50.39
Andrew M. Cuomo (FAD) 854,995 41.59%
Curtis A. Sliwa (R) 146,137 7.11%
Eric L. Adams (SAE) 6,382 0.31%
Irene Estrada (C) 2,643 0.13%
Jim Walden (I) 2,170 0.11%
Joseph Hernandez (QOL) 1,253 0.06%
Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman has secured a second term in office, defeating his opponent, Democrat Seth Koslow.
County Executive Blakeman’s decisive victory in Nassau County, an area with 110,000 more registered Democrats than Republicans, comes after he beat popular incumbent Democrat Laura Curran four years ago.
Among his many accomplishments, Blakeman has touted: not raising taxes on the hard-working residents of the county; ensuring fairness and safety by banning biological males from competing in women’s sports; funding our police to keep Nassau the safest county in America; passing common-sense laws, like banning mask-wearing in public, to reduce hate-related crimes; and partnering with federal partners like ICE to remove dangerous and illegal criminals from our neighborhoods.
In an announcement following the election, County Executive Blakeman said he is proud to represent the people of Nassau County. “I am very grateful to the residents of Nassau County for giving me the honor to serve them again, and I will continue to fight to keep this the safest county in America without raising taxes,” County Executive Blakeman stated.
Bruce Blakeman has forged a distinguished career in public service. He was first elected to the Hempstead Town Council in 1993 and, shortly afterward, became the Presiding Officer of the Nassau County Legislature in 1995. He was an influential member of the Port Authority Board from 2001 to 2009, lending his homeland security expertise to the organization through tumultuous events, such as the September 11th terrorist attack in New York City.
Following his 2022 election victory to become Nassau County Executive, Blakeman moved quickly to cancel $150 million in tax hikes that his predecessor had planned. He has also bolstered public safety efforts by authorizing the hiring of over 600 police, corrections, and probation officers and opening a state-of-the-art Police Training Village to ensure local officers have the best resources to do their jobs safely and effectively.
Blakeman’s re-election comes at a historic moment, as he is the first Nassau County Executive to start a new term while sharing a political affiliation with the sitting U.S. President since Tom Gulotta was elected during the tenure of President George H.W. Bush in 1989. Blakeman has been a trusted ally of President Donald J. Trump and was instrumental in having him travel to Nassau County ahead of the 2024 U.S. Presidential election. Soon after, Trump became the first Republican to win the county since 1988.

{Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman Reiterates Commitment To Combating Antisemitic Acts Following Recent NYC Incident
Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman joined District Attorney Anne Donnelly, Police Commissioner Patrick Ryder, Comptroller Elaine Phillips, New York State Senators Jack Martins and Patricia Canzoneri-Fitzpatrick, and local religious and community leaders on Thursday, October 30, to reiterate Nassau County’s commitment to combating antisemitism.
The announcement followed an incident that took place on October 27th in Midtown Manhattan in which Rami Glikstein, an Israeli educator and former IDF lecturer visiting from Jerusalem, was assaulted by a man who was yelling antisemitic slurs. County Executive Blakeman said he and local officials will be responding by increasing patrols and security measures at houses of worship to prevent any crossover of these hateful acts into Nassau County.
“We will repel any attacks on our communities. We are especially mindful that there have been antisemitic attacks across the United States and internationally. But in a county with the third-highest Jewish population in the United States, we will not tolerate that here,” County Executive Blakeman stated.
The County Executive noted that he has made huge investments in public safety during his time in office, including authorizing the hiring of 600 new police, corrections, and probation officers and opening a new police training village. The Nassau County Police Department has also received funding to deploy specialized officers and utilize state-of-the-art tools to track and deter crime.
“We have a very specific mission given to us by the County Executive—that we will not tolerate any types of hate in this county,” said Police Commissioner Ryder. “We continue to grow in strength thanks to our County Executive.”
“We will not put up with hate in Nassau County. Period. My hate crime unit is fully staffed and ready,” added District Attorney Donnelly. “Everyone in Nassau County deserves to be safe.”


