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Ronnie Cho

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Ronnie Cho
Image of Ronnie Cho

Education

Bachelor's

Arizona State University

Personal
Profession
Network executive
Contact

Ronnie Cho was a Democratic candidate for District 2 representative on the New York City Council in New York. He was defeated in the primary election on September 12, 2017. Click here to read Cho's response to Ballotpedia's 2017 municipal candidate survey.

Biography

Email editor@ballotpedia.org to notify us of updates to this biography.

Cho attended Arizona State University.[1]

At the time of his 2017 run for city council, Cho was the vice president and head of public affairs for MTV. His experience also includes service as a board member for The Alliance for Youth Organizing and work as the associate director of public engagement for the Obama administration, a field director for Obama for America 2008, a campaign aide for presidential candidate and U.S. Sen. John Kerry (D), a community editor for The Daily Beast, a public safety and homeland security program analyst for the Federal Communications Commission, and an assistant director of legislative affairs for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.[1][2][3]

Elections

2017

See also: Mayoral election in New York, New York (2017) and Municipal elections in New York, New York (2017)

The following candidates ran in the Democratic primary for the District 2 seat on the New York City Council.[4]

New York City Council, District 2 Democratic Primary Election, 2017
Candidate Vote % Votes
Green check mark transparent.png Carlina Rivera 60.54% 8,354
Mary Silver 16.54% 2,282
Ronnie Cho 8.56% 1,181
Jorge Vasquez 7.54% 1,040
Jasmin Sanchez 4.62% 638
Erin Hussein 1.93% 267
Write-in votes 0.28% 38
Total Votes 13,800
Source: New York City Board of Elections, "2017 Primary: Certified Results," accessed September 28, 2017

Campaign themes

2017

See also: Ballotpedia's municipal government candidate survey

Cho participated in Ballotpedia's 2017 survey of municipal government candidates.[5] The following sections display his responses to the survey questions. When asked what his top priority would be if elected, the candidate made the following statement:

I believe the most pressing issue facing my neighborhood is affordability for both residents and small business owners. Mom and pop stores and families in District 2 are being priced out of our community and we cannot let District 2 become riddled with empty storefronts or chain stores or exclusively occupied by the ultra-wealthy in glass and steel condos.

The first piece of legislation I would introduce is a small business and minority and women business rent stabilization bill. Small businesses should not be subjected to the arbitrary rent increases as large commercial tenants; it is punitive toward their business success. We need to protect our small businesses, particularly our minority and women owned small businesses, from unscrupulous landlords who raise rents on our hardworking mom and pop shop owners to make way for national chain stores. We need to bolster and celebrate the diversity and unique character of our small businesses and local economy.[6]

—Ronnie Cho (September 6, 2017)[3]
Ranking the issues

The candidate was asked to rank the following issues by importance in the city, with 1 being the most important and 12 being the least important: city services (trash, utilities, etc.), civil rights, crime reduction/prevention, environment, government transparency, homelessness, housing, K-12 education, public pensions/retirement funds, recreational opportunities, transportation, and unemployment. This table displays this candidate's rankings from most to least important.

Issue importance ranking
Candidate's
ranking
Issue Candidate's
ranking
Issue
1
Housing
7
Environment
2
Unemployment
8
City services (trash, utilities, etc.)
3
K-12 education
9
Public pensions/retirement funds
4
Transportation
10
Crime reduction/prevention
5
Civil rights
11
Government transparency
6
Homelessness
12
Recreational opportunities
Nationwide municipal issues

The candidate was asked to answer questions from Ballotpedia regarding issues facing cities across America. The questions are in the left column and the candidate's responses are in the right column. Some questions provided multiple choices, which are noted after those questions.

Question Response
Is it important for the city’s budget to be balanced?
Answer options: Not important; Not important, but required by state law; A little important; A little important, but required by state law; Important; Very important
Important
Which level of government do you feel should set a minimum wage?
Answer options: None, Local, State, Federal
Local
How do you think your city should emphasize economic development?
Candidates could write their own answer or choose from the following options: Changing zoning restrictions, Create a more competitive business climate, Focusing on small business development, Instituting a citywide minimum wage, Recruiting new businesses to your city, Regulatory and licensing reforms, and tax reform
Focusing on small business development
What is the one thing you’re most proud of about your city?
I am proud of New York City’s progressive legacy from being the first in the country to set laws for higher labor standards and collective bargaining to the frontlines of progressive fights for women’s rights, LGBTQ equality and racial justice. But we need to do more now to push for a bigger bolder progressive agenda from single payer healthcare to legalizing recreational marijuana and economic justice that will make NYC work for everyone. Also I am super proud of the New York Yankees.
What is the one thing you’d most like to change about your city?
Residents across District 2 are been priced out and we need to protect our neighborhood's affordability. First, I promise to fight for tenants. I will create a public list of predatory landlords and lenders and pursue litigation where necessarily with harsh penalties. I will advocate for increased transparency and affordable housing ratios for developers who take advantage of tax abatements and incentives like J-51 and 421-a to pad their pockets. Second, we need to protect our small businesses from closing shop from rising rents and being hit with additional taxes. The economic vibrancy of our district allows us to maintain the unique character and diversity in our district without heeling to midtown developers. I will enact commercial rent stabilization so that the survival of our local mom-and-pop shops are not at the mercy of landlords. It is well past time that council representatives, especially those from Lower Manhattan, stand up and halt the midtown creep. We need to keep our community unique, affordable, and accessible to everyone.
Do you approve of the city's approach to policing and public safety? What changes, if any, do you think the city should make?
I believe the city could have a better approach to policing and public safety. We must get rid of broken windows policies. We need to create smarter laws that enhance our officers’ ability to effectively and safely do their jobs while rebuilding community trust in our police officers. We need to prioritize enforcement of laws that keep us safe from serious crimes over petty offenses that distracts officers from the police work that our community requires.
Do you approve of the city's sanctuary policy? What changes, if any, do you think the city should make?
I strongly stand with all immigrants and support New York City as a sanctuary city. My parents faced adversity when they came to this country and I understand firsthand how an inclusive and diverse community can support immigrant families like mine. America didn’t become a great nation by pushing people away, by antagonizing immigrants and folks who wanted to be Americans. We need to support programs that strengthen our protections of immigrant communities and live up to our New York values that embrace diversity.
Do you approve of the city's approach to public transportation? What changes, if any, do you think the city should make?
This truly has been the 'Summer of Hell' for commuters across all five boroughs. From the F train failure that happened right in District 2, the A train derailment in upper Manhattan, to the ongoing delays, we need serious capital funds to repair our ever-going, rusty transportation system. I believe we need to stop looking for blame by passing the buck. Governor Cuomo and Mayor de Blasio need to stop pointing fingers at each other for its funding problems and come together with viable solutions. The subway’s summer of hell is the result of an aging infrastructure system that isn’t seeing improvements because of the lack of political courage and vision in Albany and City Hall. The City Council should demand that the city’s MTA capital fund be used to make necessary repairs from fixing signals to rusting tracks and to take proactive measures where they can.

And with the impending closure of the L train, we need to put investment in long-term repairs and build out 21st century alternatives. From Vision Zero’s plan to expand bike paths as seen on 2nd Avenue to increasing ferry transportation across the East River, I am committed to seeing more affordable and alternative routes of transportation for all New Yorkers. The City Council should create dedicated bus lanes across the Williamsburg Bridge and increase the number of M14A, M14D and M9 buses. We should also explore increasing ferry service across the East River from Williamsburg to the East Village and possibly more creative solutions like a gondola/tramway adjacent to the Williamsburg Bridge similar to the one to and from Roosevelt Island and midtown Manhattan. I am committing to making sure we implement a transportation solution that increases accessibility, safety, reliability and sustainability.

Do you approve of the city's approach to housing policy? What changes, if any, do you think the city should make?
The city’s approach to housing needs vast improvements. First we need to protect the affordable housing we already have and ensure our eligible residents subscribe to the programs we have like SCRIE and DRIE.

Second, when constructing new developments, we should be increasing the minimum ratio of market-rate to affordable housing from 80:20 to possibly starting at 50:50. We need more affordable housing stock and 20% is simply not enough for our growing need. And we need to find creative solutions through community land trusts or other means to create affordable housing on unused, empty city lots.

And lastly, we need to have the political courage to stand up to the industry and ask more from developers when they take advantage of tax abatement laws like 421-A and J-51. Developers that take advantage of these tax benefits must also ensure they do not underpay workers, make conditions unsafe for laborers and provide additional investments that improve the surrounding community.


Cho provided the following additional comments with the survey:

New York City needs a new generation of leadership that is proactive, responsive and accessible.[6]

—Ronnie Cho (2017)[3]

Additional themes

Cho's campaign website highlighted the following issues. Click "show" on the boxes below for more information about his positions.[7]

Endorsements

2017

Cho received endorsements from the following in 2017:[3]

  • Run for Something
  • Former U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan
  • Former senior advisor to President Barack Obama David Axelrod
  • New York Assemblyman Ron Kim

Recent news

The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for the terms Ronnie Cho New York City Council. These results are automatically generated from Google. Ballotpedia does not curate or endorse these articles.

See also

New York, New York New York Municipal government Other local coverage
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External links

Footnotes

  1. 1.0 1.1 LinkedIn, "Ronnie Cho," accessed July 18, 2017
  2. NBC News, "Former Obama Staffer Enters Race for New York City Council," March 21, 2017
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Ballotpedia's municipal government candidate survey, 2017, "Ronnie Cho's Responses," September 6, 2017
  4. Ballotpedia staff, "Email correspondence with the New York City Board of Elections," July 14, 2017
  5. Note: The candidate's answers have been reproduced here verbatim without edits or corrections by Ballotpedia.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.
  7. Ronnie Cho, "Issues," accessed July 18, 2017