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In his campaign for re-election, Mayor Eric Adams says heβs running on his record β¦ against a guy who has no record.
Heβs referring, of course, to Zohran Mamdani, the 33-year-old socialist nepo baby who won this weekβs Democratic primary. The State Assemblyman has barely held a job and has been absent for about 50% of Assembly votes.
But it canβt be denied that Adams must defend his record.
In September 2024, he earned the dubious distinction of becoming the first sitting New York City mayor hit with a federal indictment β accused of bribery and conspiracy. The case was dropped in April on orders from President Trumpβs Department of Justice.
And from late 2023 through last year, Adamsβ administration was rocked by a near-constant exodus of his closest confidants from City Hall, with many leaving under a cloud of scandal.
But the former cop, who won office in 2021 on a law and order platform, has survived. And with Mamdaniβs defeat of Andrew Cuomo in Tuesdayβs Democratic primary, his campaign has taken on new importance.
βIβm perfectly imperfect,β Adams told me, as he sat down for an hour chat ahead of the official launch of his re-election campaign.
βYes, there are those that I should not have brought on board,β he said of staffing woes. βThere are those who were not fit for the assignments they were in. And there were those that should not be in government.β
But heβs steadied the ship in many ways: appointing the uber-competent Jessica Tisch as his police commissioner, and standing up to the Biden administration for its handling of the border β a disaster that allowed migrants to flood our city and stress our resources.
Adams was elected to a city atrophied by a pandemic exodus, with disorder on the streets and trains and an overemphasis on identity politics pushed by his predecessor Bill de Blasio.
But after four years, there are signs that sanity and vitality are returning to the Big Apple.
That growth is precarious, and Adams knows it. A Mamdani administration, he said, βcan take us backwards.β
With that, I tossed Adams a copy of Wednesdayβs Post, featuring Mamdani on the cover with the headline βSOS NYC.β
He said the paper sees our shared emergency βclearly.β
Adams sees himself as a bulwark against a socialist agenda that would strip our great city of its grit and its coffers. Heβs heeding that distress call from sensible New Yorkers β claiming that his phone rang constantly throughout primary night, allowing him only an hour and a half of sleep.
Donors, volunteers and Cuomo boosters are all looking to get on his calendar, he said.
βThis is a resilient city and we need a resilient mayor. And [Mamdaniβs] a snake oil salesman,β Adams told me. βHe sells lies and, the reality is, what heβs promising β he cannot deliver . . . Every time he talks about his policies, it exposes [his] lack of understanding of government.β
Case in point: Mamdani claims he will pay for his urban utopia by raising income taxes on high-income earners.
βMayors donβt raise income taxes, assemblymen do,β Adams said. βIf he couldnβt raise it in Albany as an assemblyman, how is he going to raise it as mayor?β
Hizzoner said he wasnβt blindsided by Mamdaniβs underdog victory over Andrew Cuomo, either.
He told me how, over the past few weeks, he heard people talking about Mamdani in a Brooklyn Trader Joeβs (the mayor was buying lentil noodles: βThey are great and only $3 a bagβ) and at a Harlem restaurant.
Wherever he went, really.
βI said to myself, when [Mamdani] was 30 points behind in the poll but with 2,000 volunteers on the streets β and I saw a lackluster Andrew Cuomo β I knew then that this guy was going to win the primary,β he recalled.
I donβt buy that Adams is the Miss Cleo of Trader Joeβs, but he at least understands that heβs dealing with a candidate fueled by grassroots energy, an army of devoted canvassers, and undeniable charisma.
Mamdani toppled a barely-there Cuomo by flooding social media, speaking with influencers, walking the streets to meet New Yorkers, and creating poppy ads. Itβs pure hustle in the manner of his supporter Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
Heβs also promised voters a bunch of free stuff (groceries, bus fare, rent freezes) β which, no surprise, landed with college educated New Yorkers who are likely saddled with student debt. It all sounds good, even though itβs fiscally impossible and irresponsible.
So how will Adams defeat the socialist juggernaut? By appealing to sane moderates.
β[Mamdani] won the Democratic primary that is the left end of the Democratic party. We have a million independent voters who are not registered,β the mayor said. βYou have a whole pot of general election voters that will come out because of the urgency of the moment.β
He knows his limits, particularly among the delusional anti-Israel protesters that Mamdani courts: βWe are never going to convince those who have been radicalized [and] hate America. [Who espouse] βfrom the river to the seaβ and they donβt even know what river and what sea theyβre talking about.β
He plans to tap into βAfrican-American, Hispanic and Jewish communities.β Adams said first- and second-generation immigrant communities are βunderestimated. They want to know: Are our streets safe, are we educating our children, can I take care of my house? These are hard-working, American-value, first- and second-generation immigrants.β
And he has some wins to tout: Homicides and shootings are down. Subway crime is finally dropping. Broadway had the greatest 12 months of recorded history.
βBusinesses are returning, and our nightlife industry is telling me their places are booming,β said the man known for his love of hotspots like Zero Bond and Casa Cipriani.
βAnd 89% of the migrants and asylum seekers we had are out of our care now.β
Adams will have some challenges on his indictments, which he was eager to discuss.
βNothing was there,β he said.
The mayor believes the Biden administration βtried to publicly embarrassβ him when he βstarted to be vociferous about the migrants and asylum seekers,β though he doesnβt blame President Biden directly. When prosecutors dropped the charges, it led to accusations that Adams accepted a quid pro quo from the Trump administration.
Adams denied making a deal with the president for himself. But he made it clear that β unlike Mamdani, who has said he will fight Trump β he understands the importance of New York City working with the federal government, regardless of who is in the White House.
βYour job [as mayor] is not to be at war with the president, but to work with the president to get the resources here,β Adams said, adding that he worked with both Biden and Trump for the good of New York.
Now, with the specter of socialism and dangerous idealism looming over us, our admittedly flawed mayor might be the best hope for the survival of this great but vulnerable city.
βDo you want socialism that has failed all over the globe . . . or do you want a healthy capitalist society, where you could come as a dishwasher and eventually own a chain of restaurants?β Adams told me.
βThis is a country of opportunity, not enabling people. What Mamdaniβs offering β to give you everything? Thatβs not a healthy environment.β