A Winnable Path for New York — Why an Independent Campaign Matters Now

New York voters are tired of being told they only have two choices — and both are failing them.

Based on recent public polling trends, voter registration data, and issue-based shifts we’re seeing across the state, it’s clear that a large and growing share of New Yorkers no longer feel represented by either major party. That frustration is not theoretical. It shows up in turnout, trust levels, and issue priorities — from affordability and public safety to foreign policy and government accountability.

While early head-to-head polls between the Democratic and Republican frontrunners show a familiar two-party split, those same polls also reveal something important: neither side is consolidating a true majority, and enthusiasm remains soft.

That’s where an independent campaign becomes viable.

What the data tells us

When voters are modeled in a three-way race — Democrat, Republican, and a serious independent option — the landscape changes:
• A large independent bloc emerges that is not loyal to either party
• Significant numbers of Democrats and Republicans express openness to an alternative focused on results, not party talking points
• The leading candidates’ support shows a clear ceiling, while the independent lane shows room to grow

This isn’t about slogans or personality politics. It’s about math, turnout, and trust.

Why this campaign connects

This campaign is resonating because it speaks to voters who feel ignored:
• New Yorkers crushed by the cost of living
• Families worried about safety but tired of empty rhetoric
• Voters uneasy with endless political dysfunction and foreign entanglements
• Independents, moderates, and working-class voters who don’t see themselves in party leadership anymore

I’m not running as “anti-Democrat” or “anti-Republican.”
I’m running for New Yorkers — with published plans, clear execution paths, and accountability that doesn’t depend on party loyalty.

This race is winnable — together

No independent wins alone. This path only works if New Yorkers come together across boroughs, regions, and backgrounds to demand something better than the same recycled choices.

If we unite around affordability, safety, dignity, and honest government — and refuse to be divided into red vs. blue — this race becomes competitive and winnable.

That’s not hype.
That’s math, momentum, and reality.

New York doesn’t need louder politics.
It needs better leadership.

Jason S. Arnold
Independent Candidate for Governor of New York
A Winnable Path for New York — Why an Independent Campaign Matters Now New York voters are tired of being told they only have two choices — and both are failing them. Based on recent public polling trends, voter registration data, and issue-based shifts we’re seeing across the state, it’s clear that a large and growing share of New Yorkers no longer feel represented by either major party. That frustration is not theoretical. It shows up in turnout, trust levels, and issue priorities — from affordability and public safety to foreign policy and government accountability. While early head-to-head polls between the Democratic and Republican frontrunners show a familiar two-party split, those same polls also reveal something important: neither side is consolidating a true majority, and enthusiasm remains soft. That’s where an independent campaign becomes viable. What the data tells us When voters are modeled in a three-way race — Democrat, Republican, and a serious independent option — the landscape changes: • A large independent bloc emerges that is not loyal to either party • Significant numbers of Democrats and Republicans express openness to an alternative focused on results, not party talking points • The leading candidates’ support shows a clear ceiling, while the independent lane shows room to grow This isn’t about slogans or personality politics. It’s about math, turnout, and trust. Why this campaign connects This campaign is resonating because it speaks to voters who feel ignored: • New Yorkers crushed by the cost of living • Families worried about safety but tired of empty rhetoric • Voters uneasy with endless political dysfunction and foreign entanglements • Independents, moderates, and working-class voters who don’t see themselves in party leadership anymore I’m not running as “anti-Democrat” or “anti-Republican.” I’m running for New Yorkers — with published plans, clear execution paths, and accountability that doesn’t depend on party loyalty. This race is winnable — together No independent wins alone. This path only works if New Yorkers come together across boroughs, regions, and backgrounds to demand something better than the same recycled choices. If we unite around affordability, safety, dignity, and honest government — and refuse to be divided into red vs. blue — this race becomes competitive and winnable. That’s not hype. That’s math, momentum, and reality. New York doesn’t need louder politics. It needs better leadership. Jason S. Arnold Independent Candidate for Governor of New York
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