Michelle Caruso-Cabrera

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Michelle_Caruso-Cabrera an entity of type: Thing

Michelle Caruso-Cabrera (born February 9, 1967) is an American politician and journalist. She was a regular CNBC contributor for two decades, including as co-host of Power Lunch and Worldwide Exchange. She unsuccessfully ran for the Democratic nomination for the 2021 New York City Comptroller election. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Michelle Caruso-Cabrera
rdf:langString Michelle Caruso-Cabrera
rdf:langString Michelle Caruso-Cabrera
rdf:langString Dayton, Ohio, U.S.
xsd:date 1967-02-09
xsd:integer 7376845
xsd:integer 1120898177
rdf:langString National Association of Hispanic Journalists Broadcast Journalist of the Year
xsd:date 1967-02-09
rdf:langString Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
rdf:langString John Cummings
rdf:langString Badrun Khan
rdf:langString Michelle Caruso-Cabrera
rdf:langString Wellesley College
rdf:langString Democratic Party
rdf:langString Republican Party
rdf:langString Total
rdf:langString Conservative Party of New York State
rdf:langString Serve America Movement
xsd:double 0.9
xsd:double 2.3
xsd:double 2.8
xsd:integer 5
xsd:double 18.2
xsd:double 24.6
xsd:double 27.4
xsd:double 71.59999999999999
xsd:double 74.59999999999999
xsd:integer 100
xsd:integer 2014
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Paulo Lima
rdf:langString Stephen Dizard
xsd:integer 1406 2000 3119 5963 11337 46577 52477 58440 62439 152661 213101
rdf:langString Michelle Caruso-Cabrera (born February 9, 1967) is an American politician and journalist. She was a regular CNBC contributor for two decades, including as co-host of Power Lunch and Worldwide Exchange. She unsuccessfully ran for the Democratic nomination for the 2021 New York City Comptroller election. A registered member of the Republican Party through 2015, Caruso-Cabrera switched and registered as a Democrat in 2016. She moved to Queens in 2019 and challenged incumbent Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez in the 2020 Democratic primary for New York's 14th congressional district, which covers portions of the Bronx and Queens. She received support from the Greater New York Chamber of Commerce for her candidacy, but was defeated in the primary after receiving 18.2% of the vote and coming in second, and came in third with 0.9% in the general election after becoming the candidate of the Serve America Movement.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 29662
xsd:gYear 1967

data from the linked data cloud