NEW YORK - However Anthony Weiner does when the polls close, he's certain to add drama to the most competitive New York City mayor's race in more than a decade.
As the scandal-lashed former congressman got ready for a first round of campaign events Thursday, his arrival in the race was being met with a mix of polite greetings, blowback and bring-it-on bravado from his now-rivals. Average New Yorkers were at no loss for opinions, either.
Weiner said he knows his run will be an uphill one, but he wants to bring his ideas into the race — and win.
"I think I have something to contribute. And I think that it's up to New Yorkers to decide whether I get a second chance or not, and I hope the answer's yes," the Democrat said in a telephone interview Wednesday.
After about a month of maybes, Weiner officially launched his comeback campaign with a video posted online late Tuesday, about two years after a series of tawdry tweets, and obfuscating explanations, capsized his promising congressional career.
Weiner, who ran for mayor in 2005 and nearly did in 2009, is getting into the race to succeed three-term Mayor Michael Bloomberg less than four months before the Democratic primary. He's arriving with a $4.8 million campaign war chest and possibly $1 million more in public matching money, a resume that includes seven terms in Congress, polls showing him ahead of all but one other Democrat and certainly no end of name recognition.
His participation makes a Democratic primary runoff more likely, and many political observers feel he could at least get to the second round. A Quinnipiac University poll released Wednesday found Weiner getting 15 percent of the Democratic primary vote, behind City Council Speaker Christine Quinn at 25 percent.
Elizabeth Fasolino, for one, is ready to give Weiner a chance to win her vote.