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Legionnaires’ Disease Is Back in NYC — And the Silence from Democrats Is Deafening

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A third person has now died, and at least 67 others have been sickened, from a growing Legionnaires’ disease cluster in Harlem, according to WNBC. The outbreak, which began in the Sugar Hill area, has continued to expand as health officials race to identify the source — but oddly, the political class isn’t racing to address it.

For those unfamiliar, Legionnaires’ disease is a severe form of pneumonia caused by inhaling water droplets contaminated with Legionella bacteria. It spreads through systems like cooling towers, fountains, hot tubs, and air conditioning units — not person-to-person. It’s particularly dangerous for the elderly and immunocompromised, and it can be fatal.

So yes — this is a serious public health crisis. A deadly airborne bacteria moving through a densely populated area of New York City, and no one seems to want to talk about it.

Which brings us to the high-stakes, high-profile NYC mayoral race.

While candidates debate policing tactics and housing reform, a literal outbreak is unfolding under their noses, and not one major Democratic candidate has made it an issue. Why? Possibly because it raises uncomfortable questions:

  • What’s the city’s protocol for preventing Legionnaires’?
  • Have routine inspections been skipped or defunded?
  • Who’s accountable for poor infrastructure maintenance in vulnerable communities like Harlem?

And maybe most importantly:
If this outbreak were happening downtown, would the political class still be this silent?

Public health should be nonpartisan — but silence from leadership is a choice. And in the middle of an election season, it’s a telling one.

Meanwhile, the cluster keeps growing.

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