It’s always important for a big city to have a sharp money manager. Now, with New York’s ledgers in tatters following COVID-19’s arrival, choosing the right person to watch the books is even more crucial than usual.

The person who oversees City Hall’s wallet is called the comptroller, a position currently filled by Scott Stringer.

THE CITY Helps You Navigate the 2021 Elections

Our guide is here to make your decisions easier, with details on candidates, the jobs they’re running for, how to use the new ranked-choice voting system and more.

Eight Democrats are vying to replace the term-limited Stringer (who is running for mayor). And while the ultra-crowded mayor’s race will undoubtedly steal most of the attention this election cycle, choosing our next comptroller is critical for city voters.

The primary vote is set for June 22 of this year. Given New York’s firmly Democratic lean, whichever comptroller candidate nabs a win then will have a strong advantage heading into November’s general election. A Republican has not been elected comptroller since 1938.

Here’s what you need to know about the position and the race. We’ll update this guide as the campaign moves forward:

What is a comptroller anyway, and what do they do?

New York City’s comptroller is our municipal auditor and fiduciary.

The Office of the Comptroller does several things, but its chief responsibilities are to prepare audits and oversee how city agencies are spending their money, manage the city’s public pension funds — the largest in the world at $224.8 billion as of October, Stringer’s office says — and issue bonds to help pay for large projects. The comptroller also reviews city contracts.

To do all this and more, the comptroller employs a staff of about 800. The comptroller has another important role: serving as second in line of succession to the mayor, after the Public Advocate.

  • Want to know more? Here’s a comprehensive list of duties from the comptroller’s office.
  • This video from the city Campaign Finance Board offers a good explainer of the role.

The position’s history dates back to before New York City was incorporated into the five boroughs. But the job as we know it today was established in the City Charter revision of 1989, which abolished the powerful Board of Estimate at the Supreme Court’s behest.

In modern times, several comptrollers have tried to hopscotch from the office to City Hall, though it’s been nearly 50 years since one made the leap: Abe Beame.

Beame served as comptroller for two terms in the 1960s and, as mayor, served during the fiscal crisis of the mid-1970s when the city very nearly went bankrupt.

Since Beame, four city comptrollers — Harrison Goldin, Alan Hevesi, William Thompson and John Liu — have run for the top job. None have succeeded.

The next comptroller must contend with a new era of financial challenges. The city is facing historic financial challenges following the arrival of COVID-19. Unemployment and homelessness in New York are very high, and demand for local food relief is enormous.

Who’s running for Comptroller?

These are the candidates currently on the ballot in the June 22 primary for comptroller, according to the Board of Elections:

Brian Benjamin (D)

Benjamin, a Harlem native, is the current State Senator representing Harlem, East Harlem and the Upper West Side. The former investment banker and affordable housing developer pledged to return some donations in early January after THE CITY found donors named in campaign records who said they’d never given money to his campaign.

Daby Carreras (R)

Carreras is a money manager and East Harlemite. He has previously run for City Council, State Assembly and once served as vice president of the Manhattan Republican Party.

Michelle Caruso-Cabrera (D)

Caruso-Cabrera is a former longtime financial journalist for CNBC. She ran against Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez in a congressional Democratic primary bid last year, although she has formerly registered as a Republican.

Zachary Iscol (D)

Iscol is a former Marine who has worked on veteran mental health issues through his nonprofit Headstrong, according to this profile from City & State, and co-founded the armed services-focused media site Task & Purpose. Until late January, he had been a candidate for mayor.

Corey Johnson (D)

Johnson is the current City Council Speaker and council member representing Chelsea, Hell’s Kitchen and the West Village. He had joined the race for mayor briefly, but dropped out in mid-2020, then announced his new campaign for comptroller in March of this year.

Brad Lander (D)

Lander currently serves as the City Council member representing Carroll Gardens, Park Slope and Kensington. Previous to government work, he directed a community planning center at Pratt Institute.

Terri Liftin (D)

Liftin is an attorney and legal compliance expert who has worked for private investment firms and an asset management company.

Alex K. Pan (D)

Pan is a college student at Denison University according to his campaign’s Instagram page where he says he is a “son of immigrants” and “lifelong New Yorker.”

Reshma Patel (D)

Patel is the president of the Eleanor Roosevelt Democratic Club of Manhattan, board member for Chhaya CDC — an advocacy group for South Asian New Yorkers — and has worked in “public finance, e-commerce and data analytics,” according to her profile with the organization.

Kevin Parker (D)

Parker, a Brooklyn native, is the current State Senator representing Flatbush and surrounding neighborhoods from Ditmas Park to Park Slope. Before taking elected office, Parker worked for local officials, including the then-state Comptroller H. Carl McCall and then-Flatbush Council member Una Clarke.

Paul Rodriguez (C)

The Conservative Party has endorsed Rodriguez for comptroller, but no information about him or his campaign could be found.

David Weprin (D)

Weprin, a native of Queens, currently serves as the State Assembly member representing northeast Queens. He previously represented the area in the City Council, worked in the financial services industry and, in the 1980s, served on the state’s Banking Board.

The NYC Board of Elections has resources on how to register to vote here, and you can find important dates and deadlines here (state BOE) and here (city BOE).