With the Democratic convention ending, it's now official: two New Yorkers are running against each other for president for just the third time in history. And now, New Yorkers are weighing in. NY1's Vivian Lee has the story.

Customers at the 7th Avenue Donut Shop in Park Slope mulled over the implications of two New York candidates battling for the White House as they sipped their morning joe on Friday.

Because, New York being New York —  

"I'm sure there will be mudslinging back and forth," one customer said.

And, New York being New York —

"New York City has a concentration of government finance and business, so there's a greater likelihood that you'll have leaders of industry coming here," one Brooklynite said.

"Maybe two New Yorkers ended up being front runners because New York City is such a multicultural, important city in America, and also in the world," one woman said.

President Franklin Roosevelt defeated New York Gov. Thomas Dewey in the last presidential election between two New Yorkers, in 1944. The other time two New Yorkers ran against each other in the general election was 40 years earlier.

So what do these voters think the 2016 matchup says about the candidates, the parties who nominated them, and the place they call home?

"In my opinion, only one of them preserves New York values of [multiple] cultures, inclusion, welcoming immigrants, so I hope Hillary gets elected," one man said.

"She represents New York values; he just wants to be a bully," one woman said.

"Both of them are interested in their own personal interests," another customer said.

Because Park Slope, like the city as a whole, is a Democratic bastion, the support for Clinton here is not that surprising,

But there is some amazement that the Republicans nominated a New Yorker to oppose her.

"I think Republican-leaning people in lot of parts of the country would, you know, if you asked them four years ago if they'd be supporting a candidate from New York, they'd say, 'Absolutely not,'" one man opined. "But here's the guy who stands for the dream of a deregulated capitalist society that has no empathy for people."

The likelihood of a matchup between two New Yorkers increased as Donald Trump made his improbable rise during the primaries.

Now it's a reality, and voters say the stakes are high for the country, as well as New York.