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Asm. Jaime R. Williams

District 59 Democrat First elected 2015

Jaime R. Williams has represented AD-59 since 2015 in one of the most heavily Democratic districts in New York State, with a voter registration lean of D+52 — 65.2% Democrat versus 13.1% Republican — and has run uncontested in each of her last three general elections (2020, 2022, 2024); her 2026 outlook is rated Safe D across all modeled environments. The district, centered in Brooklyn, is majority Black at 53.9%, with a homeownership rate of 61.4%, a median household income of $91,506, and a poverty rate of 10.9%, reflecting a working- and middle-class urban constituency. Williams's 2025 legislative portfolio of 50 sponsored bills is dominated by Real Property Tax legislation at 15 bills, followed by Education, New York City Administrative Code, and Vehicle and Traffic law at 4 bills each, with additional sponsorship in Environmental Conservation, Public Authorities, and Social Services.AI

Topic Focus AI

Biomedical Research & Medical Device Development Consumer Credit Reporting Regulation Environmental Education & School-Based Learning Programs Horseshoe Crab Conservation & Marine Species Protection Rental Housing Credit Reporting Restrictions Residential Property Tax & Foreclosure Prevention

Topics extracted by AI from joint Senate-Assembly committee hearing transcripts and floor debate. Tag size reflects number of supporting citations.

Key Issues AI

Real Property Tax 15 bills
Education 4 bills
New York City Administrative Code 4 bills
Vehicle and Traffic 4 bills
Environmental Conservation 2 bills
Public Authorities 2 bills
Social Services 2 bills
Constitution, Concurrent Resolutions to Amend 1 bills

Key issue areas derived from floor debate speeches and sponsored bill law sections.

Legislative Activity (2025–2026)

Bills sponsored 50
Floor debate appearances 13
Years in office 11

Bill sponsorship from NYS Open Legislation API. Hearing appearances from joint Senate-Assembly committee transcripts. Floor debate from official Assembly session transcripts (Granicus, 2023–present).

Bill Focus Areas

Real Property Tax 15 bills
Education 4 bills
New York City Administrative Code 4 bills
Vehicle and Traffic 4 bills
Environmental Conservation 2 bills
Public Authorities 2 bills
Social Services 2 bills
Constitution, Concurrent Resolutions to Amend 1 bill

Grouped by law section from sponsored Assembly bills. Source: NYS Open Legislation API.

Floor Speeches: In Support (12) AI

A09458 Real property tax exemption for surviving spouses of police officers killed in the line of duty 2026-01-20 PASSED
A06799 Horseshoe Crab Protection Act (relating to the use of horseshoe crabs for bait) 2024-06-10 PASSED

Spoke about horseshoe crabs coming to Plumb Beach in Brooklyn to reproduce, noting school trips allow students to learn about the species. Emphasized the importance of preserving them for future generations while acknowledging concerns about overfishing.

A06799 Horseshoe Crab Protection Act (relating to the use of horseshoe crabs for bait) 2024-06-07 PASSED

Spoke about horseshoe crabs coming to Plumb Beach in Brooklyn to reproduce and the educational value for students. Noted the species' medical importance while supporting preservation for future generations.

A06799 Horseshoe Crab Protection Act (relating to the use of horseshoe crabs for bait) 2024-06-07 PASSED

Spoke about horseshoe crabs coming to Plumb Beach in Brooklyn to reproduce, enabling school trips for students to learn about the species. Noted the crabs' medical importance while supporting preservation for future generations.

A05918 An act to amend Chapter 548 of the Laws of 2004 amending the Education Law relating to certain tuition waivers for police officer students of the City University of New York, in relation to the effectiveness thereof 2024-06-05 PASSED

Floor Speeches: In Opposition (1) AI

A05697 Rental housing — prohibition on reporting negative rent payment history to consumer reporting agencies 2023-05-10 RECALLED

Argued that homeowners face high property taxes and foreclosure risks, and that credit reporting is already used for other late payments. Stated that everything on credit reports is reported as negative, so this bill is inconsistent.

Electoral History

General Elections

Year Winner Runner-up Margin
2024 Jaime R. Williams 100.0% (41,030) Uncontested
2022 Jaime R. Williams 100.0% (21,617) Uncontested
2020 Jaime R. Williams 100.0% (38,846) Uncontested
2018 Jaime R. Williams 80.9% (27,524) Brandon S. Washington 19.1% (6,485) 61.8pts
2016 Jaime R. Williams 78.1% (33,329) Jeffrey J. Ferretti 21.9% (9,348) 56.2pts
2014 Roxanne J. Persaud 73.6% (11,395) Jeffrey J. Ferretti 26.4% (4,079) 47.2pts
2012 Alan N. Maisel 91.5% (31,273) Robert Maresca 8.5% (2,921) 83.0pts
2010 Alan N. Maisel 86.0% (16,332) Robert Maresca 14.0% (2,656) 72.0pts
2008 Alan N. Maisel 94.9% (24,659) Edward P. Bracken 5.1% (1,316) 89.8pts
2006 Alan N. Maisel 93.5% (12,427) Stephen Walters 6.5% (871) 87.0pts
2004 Frank R. Seddio 96.6% (28,488) Robert J. Mahoney 3.4% (990) 93.2pts
2002 Frank R. Seddio 74.5% (12,314) Peter C. Evangelista 25.5% (4,221) 49.0pts
2000 John W. Lavelle 53.5% (19,667) Robert J. Helbock, Jr. 42.4% (15,613) 11.1pts
1998 Elizabeth А. Connelly 71.5% (18,025) Michael J. Attisano 25.3% (6,387) 46.2pts
1996 Elizabeth А. Connelly 69.8% (20,807) Steven J. Fiala 28.2% (8,394) 41.6pts

Special Elections

Year Winner Runner-up Margin
2006 Alan N. Maisel 84.9% (1,932) Alice Gaffney 8.9% (202) 76.0pts

Source: NYS Board of Elections certified results. ⚡ = margin under 10 pts. District history reflects 2022 redistricted boundaries.

Vulnerability Index

Base lean: D+59

Favorable D
Safe D
Neutral
Safe D
Favorable R
Safe D
  • Limited contested election data — registration lean used as primary signal
  • Ran uncontested in most recent election

Scenario model: ±5pt national environment shift applied to district base lean (D+59). Base lean blends voter registration (40%) with recent contested general election margins (60%), using up to the last 4 general elections with margins under 40 points. Ratings: Safe D/R = 15+ pts, Likely = 8–14 pts, Lean = 3–7 pts, Toss-up = within 2 pts (Assembly districts are smaller and more homogeneous than Senate districts, so tighter thresholds are used). Generic ballot from Silver Bulletin (Nate Silver), as of 5/21/2026. Not a prediction — reflects structural competitiveness under different cycle environments.

District 59 Profile

Population 112,820
Median income $91,506
Median rent $1,766
Homeownership 61.4%
Education (BA+) 34.6%
Poverty rate 10.9%
Uninsured rate 4.9%
Unemployment rate 6.9%

Source: U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates (2024).

Voter Registration

65%
13%
22%
Dem 65.2% Rep 13.1% Ind/Other 21.6%

Demographics

White 26.2%
Black 53.9%
Hispanic 8.7%
Asian 6.2%
Median age 41.8
Foreign born 38.5%
Limited English households 6.2%
Veterans 2.1%
Disability rate 11.6%

Commute Mode

Drive alone 37.2%
Public transit 40.5%

Source: U.S. Census Bureau, ACS 5-Year Estimates (2024). Race and ethnicity figures may not sum to 100% — Hispanic/Latino is an ethnicity category that overlaps with racial groups.

Lobbying Activity

No lobbying disclosures on record for this member in the available dataset.

Source: NY Commission on Ethics and Lobbying in Government via data.ny.gov.