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Tag: new york city mayor

  • ‘Build a FL border wall’: DeSantis mocks Zohran Mamdani’s NYC mayoral win



    Credit: Shutterstock

    Before Tuesday’s elections in other states, Gov. Ron DeSantis repeatedly said a win in the New York City mayor’s race by Democrat Zohran Mamdani would be a boon for Florida real-estate agents as New Yorkers would move.

    After Mamdani’s dominant win Tuesday, DeSantis continued the trolling by posting a poll asking how Florida should respond: “Build a FL border wall” “Tariff all transplants” or “Recruit new transplants.”

    The poll closed Thursday morning with 45,282 responses. The border-wall proposal got more than 48 percent. Tariffs were second.

    When state Rep. Peggy Gossett-Seidman, R-Highland Beach, posted online that “Florida should tariff everyone fleeing NYC,” DeSantis replied, “Have you filed that bill?”

    Meanwhile, Republican state Chief Financial Officer Blaise Ingoglia called Mamdani’s victory “a sad day for NYC.”

    “The ‘Big Apple’ is now government issued and will be rationed accordingly,” Ingoglia posted on X.

    But Florida Democrats offered a much different outlook after Tuesday night, combining Mamdani with Democrats winning gubernatorial races in New Jersey and Virginia and the results in the Miami mayor’s race where Miami-Dade County Commissioner Eileen Higgins will face former Miami City Manager Emilio González in a runoff.

    “Last night was not an anomaly or a blip. It’s a rational call to restore order amidst chaos and a resolute reminder that hope is still on the ballot,” Florida Democratic Party Chairwoman Nikki Fried said Wednesday during a conference call with reporters.

    “They (voters) want the government back open,” Fried said. “They want to make sure that their kids are fed. They want to make sure that they have access to affordable health care. They want prices to come down. They want the economy to grow, and they want to stop the chaos in Washington.”

    Fried said national “momentum” could help Florida Democrats, who do not hold any statewide offices and are far outpaced in voter registration by Republicans.

    “We’ve got a lot of work to do. I’m not overstating the amount of work that needs to get done,” Fried said. “But I do think that we are on the right course to start picking up some of these really important elections across the state.”


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    His lawsuit accuses Planned Parenthood of falsely advertising that abortion medication is “safer than Tylenol.”

    Spooky season had one final and belated hurrah on Conduit’s stage this week

    ‘SB 164 could be the beginning of a slippery slope where the state treats embryos and fetuses as ‘persons’ under the law.’





    Jim Turner, News Service of Florida
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  • It’s Never Quite Curtis Sliwa’s Last Hurrah

    It’s 9:30 p.m. on election night on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, and Curtis Sliwa is telling his crowd of supporters that his campaign spoke for animal lovers and the emotionally disturbed.

    Polls in New York’s mayoral race had closed a half hour prior, with Zohran Mamdani quickly declared the victor, and while the Republican candidate and longtime city fixture only offered a passing concession—“so we have a mayor-elect”—he took the broader opportunity to reflect on his idiosyncratic presence on the edges of public life for several decades now. In the closing days of the campaign, Donald Trump had come out in support of Andrew Cuomo, who ran as an independent, in an effort to head off Mamdani’s momentum, and claimed that Sliwa, whose calling cards include his red beret, a much-referenced 1992 shooting in the back of a yellow cab, and the animals he and his wife keep in their studio apartment, “wants cats to be in Gracie Mansion.”

    “Some of the most powerful people in the world,” Sliwa said, “made fun of Nancy and what we do to care for animals, to care for people.”

    “You’re still our mayor!” a supporter in Gucci sneakers and electric blue color contact lenses shouted.

    The audience on hand at Arte Cafe, a neighborhood Italian standby, amounted to a fittingly unpredictable mélange of Sliwa loyalists in streetwear, suits and fedoras, and pops of red in the form of Guardian Angels berets. Former New York governor George Pataki, whom Sliwa described as a key supporter in his speech along with Rudy Giuliani, was mobbed by cameras and microphones as he tried to make his way past the bar. In a quieter back room, was Brad Solomon, a Queens native who identified himself as a poker player and sports bettor by trade. He was vaping in a God Bless America hat as he described how he came to root for Sliwa.

    “We don’t want Killer Cuomo,” Solomon says. “We don’t want communists. It’s an obvious choice.” He and Sliwa were once arrested together, he says, after protesting the arrival of migrants at a mental hospital next to a Catholic school in Staten Island.

    “Curtis was the only one who stood up against that,” Solomon says.

    George Pataki attends the election-night watch party for Republican mayoral candidate Curtis Sliwa at Arte Cafe on November 4, 2025 in New York City.David Dee Delgado/Getty Images.

    Dan Adler

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  • Champion of Dollar Slices and Rent Freezes: Small Businesses React To Mamdani Win in NYC Mayoral Race

    New York assemblyman Zohran Mamdani seamlessly clinched the win Tuesday evening in New York City’s mayoral election in what has become the latest David and Goliath political tale.

    Mamdani defeated his opponents, former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who ran as an independent, and Curtis Sliwa, who ran as the Republican nominee, with Mamdani grabbing more than 50 percent of votes. Mamdani, 34, largely mobilized young voters who turned out in hoards and were excited by a fresh, progressive face to enter politics. Mamdani defeated Cuomo back in July in the Democratic primary as well, with 56.4 percent of the vote, while Cuomo nabbed 43.6 percent.

    Tackling affordability was a staple of Mamdani’s campaign and likely helped deliver his win in America’s most expensive city, one that continues to grapple with rising costs. Among other things, he’s promised to freeze the rent for rent-stabilized tenants, roll out a free childcare program, raise the minimum wage to $30 by 2030, and even resurrect the $1 slice. 

    For small businesses specifically, Mamdani wants to slash small business fines, inject $25 million in an underutilized small business financing program, and appoint a dedicated “Mom & Pops Czar.” But Mamdani’s tax policy has drawn fire from political opponents. He seeks to raise the corporate tax rate from 8.85 percent to 11.5 (matching New Jersey’s rate), and impose a two percent flat tax on high-earners, defined as those making $1 million or more each year. Critics warn that if these are enacted, the city could see an exodus of the wealthy. 

    Now begins the next step: Getting to work and delivering on the campaign promises he made. So are business owners ready? Inc. spoke with four entrepreneurs to see what they’re monitoring closely. 

    Affordable housing

    As New York City contends with a housing shortage and steep rent increases, local business owners like Josue Pierre, co-founder of Rogers Burgers in New York City, is hopeful that Mamdani will deliver on his promise of constructing 200,000 affordable housing units within the next 10 years. 

    “It’s great for the city as a whole because if our customer base can no longer afford to live in the city, then we will not be able to stay open,” Pierre says. “So seeing a Mamdani win is great for the average New Yorker, but it’s great for small businesses like mine.”

    Nelson Chu, the founder of the private credit platform Percent, anticipates that Mamdani will take a tougher posture on some sectors, like finance and real estate, but companies aren’t going to pack up and relocate overnight.

    “Finance folks may brace for more scrutiny in the short term; upside could be momentum on housing, transit, and small-biz support that broadens who can start and scale here,” Chu says. 

    At the end of the day, Chu says that most founders simply want faster rules, quicker permits, and streets that are safe and hygienic. He adds: “The real test is which proposals actually get implemented versus which stall out; that’s when you’ll see hiring, investment, and office decisions move.”

    Access to capital

    Chat Joglekar, the CEO and co-founder of the small business acquisition marketplace Baton, predicts that Mamdani will likely tighten financial and real estate regulations, but could also expand certain capital opportunities for businesses.

    While it does not appear that Mamdani has outlined specific capital access goals, he does want to invest $25 million in New York City’s Business Express Service Teams. The program connects business owners with city workers tasked with helping businesses apply for permits and abide by local regulations. 

    “We’d likely see renewed focus on equitable entrepreneurship and local reinvestment, which could broaden who gets to buy, build, and scale a business in New York,” Joglekar says. “The city’s next chapter will hinge on how well its leaders balance ambition with execution, turning promises into practical improvements that keep the country’s small business capital open for business.”

    The $30 minimum wage

    The general minimum wage in New York City sits at $16.50. Mamdani is proposing to effectively double it within four years. This concerns Aron Boxer, the CEO and founder of Diversified Education Services, a tutoring service. Boxer, who also partially owns the Tipsy Turtle, a sports bar nestled in Manhattan’s Turtle Bay, says the wage hike would be devastating. 

    “In California, when they jacked up minimum wage, kiosks and automation replaced workers to offset rising costs (causing mass layoffs), but New York’s hospitality industry doesn’t have that luxury,” Boxer says.

    Melissa Angell

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  • Zohran Mamdani Wins NYC Mayoral Election 2025 In Historic Victory

    Zohran Mamdani, the 34-year-old democratic socialist who went from near obscurity to a stunning win in the New York City mayoral Democratic primary over former governor Andrew Cuomo, has done it again: Mamdani was voted in as New York City’s new mayor on Tuesday.

    The win was projected by both the Associated Press and NBC less than an hour after polls in the city closed. Mamdani spoke before a packed victory party shortly after 11 p.m. “Thank you to the next generation of New Yorkers who refused to accept that the promise of a better future was a relic of the past,” Mamdani said. He also acknowledged his opponents, namely Cuomo. “I wish Andrew Cuomo only the best in private life, and let tonight be the final time I utter his name,” Mamdani said. And he used the stage to speak directly to the president. “Donald Trump, since I know you’re watching, I’ve got four words for you: turn the volume up,” Mamdani said to raucous applause.

    By Election Day, all eyes were on the race in America’s most populous city as an electoral proxy for Donald Trump’s second stint in the White House. There was Mamdani, the upstart, a Ugandan-born political organizer turned state assemblyman representing the Astoria neighborhood in Queens since 2021, the anointed Democratic candidate. Republican Curtis Sliwa consistently polled last in the race, though he found a slice of TikTok virality with a subset of Gen Z voters. And then there was Cuomo, soundly defeated in the primary but keeping himself on the ticket anyway running as an independent, receiving a last-minute cash infusion of $1.5 million from former mayor Mike Bloomberg on Halloween, days before voters headed to the polls.

    Incumbent Eric Adams, who has his place in the history books for being the first sitting New York City mayor to be indicted on corruption charges including fraud, bribery, and illegal campaign donations, halted his re-election campaign and dropped out of the race in late September. (Adams has denied wrongdoing.) Many of his former supporters, a notable segment of whom belong to an ultra-wealthy tax bracket, shifted their allegiances to Cuomo after Adams’ defection, and Adams himself endorsed Cuomo in late October, despite having called him “a snake and a liar” in September. (Adams shrugged off the comment when asked about it after his endorsement: “Brothers fight,” he said by way of explanation.)

    Still, Mamdani didn’t forget, telling Vanity Fair‘s James Pogue via text in the days following Adams stepping back from the race that he had a message to voters: “I’d say listen to what Eric Adams said: ‘Andrew Cuomo is a liar and a snake.’”

    Kase Wickman

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  • Election Day 2025: Live updates of key races, storylines and ballot measures around the country

    Former congresswoman Abigail Spanberger defeated Republican Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears, who was outraised by the Democrat and failed to earn the endorsement of President Donald Trump.The win flips control of the commonwealth’s governor’s mansion. While local issues and the biographies of the candidates played a strong role in the race, the results also reflect a contest where Trump’s presence loomed.Virginia has a concentration of federal workers in the north and has deeply felt both the impact of the president cutting the workforce and of the government shutdown.Virginia was one of two states, along with New Jersey, where voters were picking a governor on Tuesday. Voters were also selecting a new mayor in New York City, and in California, were deciding whether to approve a new congressional map that is designed to help Democrats win five more U.S. House seats in next year’s midterm elections. Here are the latest time-stamped updates from Election Day 2025 (ET): 8:15 p.m.Results for two high-profile mayoral races have come in.According to AP, Democrat Aftab Pureval has won the Cincinnati mayoral election over Cory Bowman, who is the half-brother of Vice President JD Vance.And in Atlanta, Democrat Andre Dickens won reelection over three challengers.8 p.m.Democrat Abigail Spanberger has won Virginia’s gubernatorial election, becoming the first female governor in the commonwealth’s history, according to AP projections.Spanberger, a former congresswoman and CIA case officer, defeated Republican Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears.Spanberger ran a mostly moderate campaign, offering a model for Democrats who want the party anchored by center-left candidates.Spanberger tied Earle-Sears to President Donald Trump but kept her arguments mostly on Trump’s economic policy and her support for abortion rights.Notably, Trump did not endorse Earle-Sears.7:30 p.m. Economic worries were the dominant concern as voters cast ballots for Tuesday’s elections, according to preliminary findings from the AP Voter Poll.The results of the expansive survey of more than 17,000 voters in New Jersey, Virginia, California and New York City suggest they are troubled by an economy that seems trapped by higher prices and fewer job opportunities.The economic challenges have played out in different ways at the local level. Most New Jersey voters said property taxes were a “major problem,” while most New York City voters said this about the cost of housing. Most Virginia voters said they’ve felt at least some impact from the recent federal government cuts.7 p.m.Polling locations have closed in Virginia.Polls across the commonwealth’s counties and cities were open from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m. Voters in line at a polling place at 7 p.m. can still cast ballots.Virginia voters are choosing a new governor and lieutenant governor. They’re also deciding whether Republican Attorney General Jason Miyares should get another term or if Democratic challenger Jay Jones should replace him. All 100 seats in the House of Delegates are also up for election.There are well over 6 million registered voters in Virginia. The last time these statewide races were on the ballot in 2021, overall voter turnout was 55%.This year, nearly 1.5 million people have cast absentee ballots, mostly through the mail or in person.Video below: Spanberger makes last push before Tuesday’s election for VA governor6:55 p.m.New York City’s Board of Elections released another turnout update Tuesday evening.As of 6 p.m., 1.7 million people have voted in the mayoral election.That’s the biggest turnout in a New York City mayoral election in at least 30 years. Just under 1.9 million people voted in the 1993 race, when Republican Rudy Giuliani ousted Mayor David Dinkins, a Democrat.6:45 p.m.Here is when polls close in states with key races. New York: 9 p.m.New Jersey: 8 p.m.Virginia: 7 p.m.California: 11 p.m. (8 p.m. PT)6:30 p.m.It’s not a presidential election year or even the midterms, but the stakes for Election Day 2025 remain undeniably high, with outcomes that could leave a lasting impact on the nation’s direction.Will California redefine the congressional landscape ahead of 2026? Could New York City elect a democratic socialist as its next mayor? And how will the perception of the Trump administration impact critical gubernatorial contests in New Jersey and Virginia?This week holds the answers to those pressing questions. Here’s what you need to know before the results start rolling in Tuesday night.

    Former congresswoman Abigail Spanberger defeated Republican Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears, who was outraised by the Democrat and failed to earn the endorsement of President Donald Trump.

    The win flips control of the commonwealth’s governor’s mansion. While local issues and the biographies of the candidates played a strong role in the race, the results also reflect a contest where Trump’s presence loomed.

    Virginia has a concentration of federal workers in the north and has deeply felt both the impact of the president cutting the workforce and of the government shutdown.

    Virginia was one of two states, along with New Jersey, where voters were picking a governor on Tuesday. Voters were also selecting a new mayor in New York City, and in California, were deciding whether to approve a new congressional map that is designed to help Democrats win five more U.S. House seats in next year’s midterm elections.

    Here are the latest time-stamped updates from Election Day 2025 (ET):

    8:15 p.m.

    Results for two high-profile mayoral races have come in.

    According to AP, Democrat Aftab Pureval has won the Cincinnati mayoral election over Cory Bowman, who is the half-brother of Vice President JD Vance.

    And in Atlanta, Democrat Andre Dickens won reelection over three challengers.

    8 p.m.

    Democrat Abigail Spanberger has won Virginia’s gubernatorial election, becoming the first female governor in the commonwealth’s history, according to AP projections.

    Spanberger, a former congresswoman and CIA case officer, defeated Republican Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears.

    Spanberger ran a mostly moderate campaign, offering a model for Democrats who want the party anchored by center-left candidates.

    Spanberger tied Earle-Sears to President Donald Trump but kept her arguments mostly on Trump’s economic policy and her support for abortion rights.

    Notably, Trump did not endorse Earle-Sears.

    7:30 p.m.

    Economic worries were the dominant concern as voters cast ballots for Tuesday’s elections, according to preliminary findings from the AP Voter Poll.

    The results of the expansive survey of more than 17,000 voters in New Jersey, Virginia, California and New York City suggest they are troubled by an economy that seems trapped by higher prices and fewer job opportunities.

    The economic challenges have played out in different ways at the local level. Most New Jersey voters said property taxes were a “major problem,” while most New York City voters said this about the cost of housing. Most Virginia voters said they’ve felt at least some impact from the recent federal government cuts.

    7 p.m.

    Polling locations have closed in Virginia.

    Polls across the commonwealth’s counties and cities were open from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m. Voters in line at a polling place at 7 p.m. can still cast ballots.

    Virginia voters are choosing a new governor and lieutenant governor. They’re also deciding whether Republican Attorney General Jason Miyares should get another term or if Democratic challenger Jay Jones should replace him. All 100 seats in the House of Delegates are also up for election.

    There are well over 6 million registered voters in Virginia. The last time these statewide races were on the ballot in 2021, overall voter turnout was 55%.

    This year, nearly 1.5 million people have cast absentee ballots, mostly through the mail or in person.

    Video below: Spanberger makes last push before Tuesday’s election for VA governor

    6:55 p.m.

    New York City’s Board of Elections released another turnout update Tuesday evening.

    As of 6 p.m., 1.7 million people have voted in the mayoral election.

    That’s the biggest turnout in a New York City mayoral election in at least 30 years. Just under 1.9 million people voted in the 1993 race, when Republican Rudy Giuliani ousted Mayor David Dinkins, a Democrat.

    6:45 p.m.

    Here is when polls close in states with key races.

    New York: 9 p.m.

    New Jersey: 8 p.m.

    Virginia: 7 p.m.

    California: 11 p.m. (8 p.m. PT)

    6:30 p.m.

    It’s not a presidential election year or even the midterms, but the stakes for Election Day 2025 remain undeniably high, with outcomes that could leave a lasting impact on the nation’s direction.

    Will California redefine the congressional landscape ahead of 2026? Could New York City elect a democratic socialist as its next mayor? And how will the perception of the Trump administration impact critical gubernatorial contests in New Jersey and Virginia?

    This week holds the answers to those pressing questions. Here’s what you need to know before the results start rolling in Tuesday night.

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  • The Internet’s New “Babygirl” is Curtis Sliwa

    While Sliwa’s popularity online has been organic, many politicians have tried to implement their own Gen Z social media strategy—for example, Gavin Newsom’s Twitter trolling. Some candidates are even trying to parrot one of the arguably most successful online campaigners: Donald Trump.

    Along with the president’s early days of online ranting, his 2024 victory was partly attributed to investing in relationships with social media influencers. Today, as Sliwa appears on popular TikTok shows, some social media users have begun to make the comparison.

    “They thought [Trump] was a joke, and he was getting clipped and memed all the time,” Divyne said Tuesday. 

    “The ‘he’s funny’ rhetoric is how we ended up with Trump,” another TikTok comment agreed.

    Khalil Gamble, 27, said that Sliwa reminded him of 2016 Trump, calling it “diva” behavior to refuse to play by the invisible rules of debate.  

    Gamble’s own video about the debate, uses the typical format of the Mamdani-Cuomo-Sliwa meme that’s circulating the internet. It goes like this: Mamdani answers a question while staying cool and collected. Andrew Cuomo refuses to answer. And Sliwa says something related to his strange lore. It typically has something to do with his vigilante days—or how he was shot in the back of a taxi.

    In Gamble’s video, for example, he pretends to ask the candidates: “Who won the Kendrick Lamar-Drake beef?”  

    “Kendrick, obviously,” he says as Mamdani.

    “I don’t listen to rap music,” he says as Cuomo.

    Then, in a gruff voice, he impersonates Sliwa: “On Sep. 7, 1996, I killed Tupac Shukar.”

    The video has been viewed more than 2.5 million times.

    People like to adopt public figures as “pets,” Gamble said. “Especially if they’re strange, like Sliwa is.” 

    Guardian Angels founder Curtis Sliwa speaks during an anti-migrant rally in 2023.Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

    Kenneal Patterson

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  • Zohran Mamdani and Graham Platner Share a Strategist Who Wants to Overhaul the Democrats, With Beer and Zyn and True Belief

    It was just past midnight on a mid-October Friday, and Morris Katz was sprawled out on the floor of his firm’s office in downtown Brooklyn, a warm six-pack of Bud Light within easy reach. Katz could not be blamed for needing a drink.

    Here in New York, things were going pretty well. Katz, as Zohran Mamdani’s top adviser, was on the verge of completing an astonishing victory—though Andrew Cuomo was ratcheting up his fear-mongering attacks and the pressure to avoid mistakes was building as Election Day approached.

    Up in Maine, however, the chaos was escalating. Katz’s client in the US Senate race, Graham Platner, was confronting damaging daily revelations about old Reddit posts where Platner had declared himself a communist, labeled cops “opportunistic cowards,” seemed to blame rape victims for their plight, and asked why Black people “don’t tip.” Then there was the tattoo on Platner’s chest. Katz was trying to determine how to handle questions about whether it was a Nazi symbol, and hoping it wasn’t—not the kind of issue you generally want to be wrestling with during a political campaign.

    He looked at a monitor, reviewing and approving a new set of Mamdani ads. Then Katz talked through a statement he was writing for Platner’s campaign, in response to the uproar over the old posts, trying out a line about the “importance of a party that’s open to redemption.” Katz, a 26-year-old with a head of tight blond curls and a rapid-fire tongue, was remarkably calm. Maybe that poise flows from Katz’s prevailing focus on remaking the Democratic Party. Or maybe it comes from Katz balancing the beer drinking with a steady diet of Zyn menthol ice nicotine pouches.

    U.S. senatorial candidate from Maine Graham Platner speaks at a town hall at the Leavitt Theater on October 22, 2025 in Ogunquit, Maine.Sophie Park/Getty Image.

    It will be a very big deal if Mamdani wins the general election for mayor on Tuesday. New York will be led by a 34-year-old Muslim American democratic socialist, a drastic ideological and generational change from the incumbent, Eric Adams, a Black 65-year-old centrist ex-cop—and from the city’s entire mayoral history, really.

    But Katz is aiming to do far more than win individual races. “I don’t want to just defeat Andrew Cuomo,” Katz tells me. “I want, in every race I do, anywhere, to defeat the politics of Andrew Cuomo. He embodies the smallness and the pettiness and this desperation for power that is willing to sell anyone out, to fuck anyone over, to get it. He’s a warped example, but it’s a rot that’s at the core of everything that’s wrong with our politics and the party.”

    Katz and his candidates are at the epicenter of the debate roiling the Democrats about how to rebuild and how to respond to the second term of President Donald Trump. It’s a war between younger operatives and politicians, who are generally but not always to the left, and the more cautious moderate establishment Democrats, headed by Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer and House minority leader Hakeem Jeffries. Those two also happen to be from New York—but they grew up in a different city from the one that raised Morris Katz.

    Chris Smith

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  • As Cuomo Tries to Catch Mamdani, the Campaign May Get Ugly

    Cuomo has received friendlier welcomes at a couple of other mosque visits, but there hasn’t been much indication that his tactics are working with the wider electorate, continuing what has been a dismal campaign year for him. This spring, polls showed Cuomo with a seemingly substantial lead in the Democratic primary, on track to complete a remarkable comeback after resigning in disgrace from the governor’s office some four years earlier. He was lulled into a lethargic effort and made few retail campaign appearances. Mamdani’s late surge clobbered Cuomo by almost 13 points.

    He promised things would be different in the general election, where he is running as an independent. Cuomo did initially beef up his social media presence and in-person schedule. But the live events dwindled through September, and some of his attempts to create viral videos were awkward. “Andrew doesn’t listen to anyone,” a senior ally says. “He wouldn’t do anything that he didn’t already know how to do.” Instead, he’s worked the phones in an effort to raise money and reel in endorsements from labor unions and mainstream elected officials. “You’ve got a candidate who has lost his way,” a second longtime Cuomo insider says.

    He did get some good news when, in late September, the incumbent mayor, Eric Adams, dropped out of the field. A Cuomo aide claims the campaign’s internal polling shows that the bulk of Adams’s support will shift to Cuomo—though even that would only add a mere 5%, not enough to close the gap with Mamdani. So one focus now is peeling support away from Curtis Sliwa, the Republican nominee, in hopes that Sliwa will step aside and give Cuomo a head-to-head matchup with Mamdani. The Cuomo aide admits that it amounts to hitting a triple bank shot: “The pieces have to fall the right way. But is there a path? Yes, there is.”

    Before Adams left the race, most polls put Mamdani at around 45% in a four-person field—a surprisingly low number for a Democratic mayoral nominee in a deeply blue city, leading some New York operatives to jokingly refer to Mamdani as “Z 45.” That underwhelming figure suggests a substantial number of potential general election voters still aren’t sold on Mamdani, and it gives Cuomo an opening, especially since an early-September New York Times poll showed him just four points behind Mamdani, among likely voters, in a one-on-one matchup.

    One crucial factor will be whether Mamdani is able to repeat his spring success in turning out a significant number of young voters. “Everyone’s been like, ‘It doesn’t look like you guys are having as much fun.’ Yeah, this isn’t as much fun,” a top Mamdani strategist says. “There’s something far more magical about taking on the establishment than trying to coalesce it into your coalition. But I feel more confident than I have ever felt.”

    Chris Smith

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  • Zohran Mamdani and why the NYC mayor race just turned into a viral bench pressing contest

    They’ve had a fierce primary. They’ve exchanged sharp barbs online. Now, the candidates for New York City mayor have taken their face-off to the gym − specifically, the bench press rack.

    Zohran Mamdani, the Democratic mayoral nominee, went viral over the weekend after he was filmed at an event performing a bench press − or at least attempting to do so. In the video, which has over 5 million views on X, the democratic socialist performs two reps of the exercise with what appears to be 135 pounds. The only problem? He doesn’t get a single one of those reps without serious help from a spotter.

    The video has drawn widespread mockery online, including from Mamdani’s political rivals. “This guy can’t bench his own body weight, let alone carry the weight of leading the most important city in the world,” Andrew Cuomo wrote on X. Eric Adams took it a step further, sharing a side-by-side video on X of himself benching 135 pounds next to Mamdani, to the tune of over 7 million views.

    “The weight of the job is too heavy for ‘Mamscrawny,’ ” Adams wrote. “The only thing he can lift is your taxes.”

    Men’s health experts say there’s a lot to unpack when it comes to the unofficial bench press contest unfolding within the New York City mayoral race. Ultimately, it raises important questions about what American politics has come to, as well as society’s shifting view of masculinity.

    “It’s down to the the teenage level that grown, professional men are fighting each over of how much weight they can press,” says Ronald Levant, professor emeritus of psychology at The University of Akron and the author of “The Problem with Men: Insights on Overcoming a Traumatic Childhood from a World-Renowned Psychologist.” “It’s totally immature.”

    Why Zohran Mamdani’s bench press went viral

    Mamdani’s bench press has been shared widely online, particularly by some conservatives who argue the candidate’s bench press signals deeper faults in his character.

    Therapist Erik Anderson says this type of criticism speaks to long-held stereotypes in our culture when it comes to masculinity and politics.

    Want to stay up-to-date on the latest health and wellness news? Sign up for our Better Yet newsletter.

    “Unfortunately, this is a stereotype that people like to throw around, saying that progressive men are weak,” Anderson says. “So it’s this combination of the question of, are you really virtuous in other areas if you’re not virtuous in this area?”

    Zohran Mamdani has gone viral for struggling to bench press what appears to be 135 pounds.

    Some on social media have suggested the buzz around Mamdani’s bench press points to a deeper shift in the American zeitgeist. As one X user wrote: “A perfect example of the cultural shift in America over the last two years is how many people are openly ridiculing Zohran Mamdani for being unable to bench press 135 pounds.”

    Has the country’s view on masculinity shifted that much? Levant says it’s possible. After all, what society deems masculine changes over time, depending in large part on greater cultural and social forces. Under President Donald Trump’s second term, Levant says, more and more Americans − particularly Gen Z men − seem to have embraced a more rigid view of masculinity than in years past.

    More: Gen Z men, women have a deep political divide. It’s made dating a nightmare

    “The masculinity we’re living with now is kind of this 1950s version that men dominate through power and toughness, and that’s essentially what Trump models,” Levant says. “So Cuomo and the current mayor are taking this opportunity to essentially use a juvenile, masculine put down: ‘You can’t even bench press your own weight.’ “

    What the NYC mayor bench press contest says about us

    Another reason why so many people seem to care about Mamdani’s bench press, Anderson says, is because of an assumption wherein people think that if someone is competent in one area of life, that means they’re competent in other areas too.

    More: The rise of Trump bros and why some Gen Z men are shifting right

    Anderson adds that the Mamdani bench press discourse also speaks to broader, clashing views of masculinity held between the political left and the political right.

    “People on the right are far too rigid about their expectations of men and masculinity,” he says. “Then there’s the opposite side of that, which is on the left, where people are maybe a little too lax about the virtues that we expect men to exhibit.”

    There’s probably a happy medium to be found.

    “We do get to choose what we truly value as a society,” Anderson emphasizes. “Sometimes those are traditional virtues, and sometimes those are seeing people as a complicated picture where they can be good at one thing … and them not being good at another thing.”

    This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Zohran Mamdani’s viral bench press fail and why we care so much

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  • Eliot Spitzer Finally Speaks Out on NYC Mayor’s Race

    Eliot Spitzer had politely declined all spring. When other reporters called, wanting him to weigh in on the New York City mayoral race, especially because his longtime antagonist Andrew Cuomo seemed headed for an improbable comeback win, the ex-governor said no. When Vanity Fair called last week, though, Spitzer talked.

    Spitzer, 66, has largely retreated from public political life. In 2008, he resigned, in the midst of a prostitution scandal, from the state’s top job. Spitzer reemerged to host a CNN show, and he made a losing run for city comptroller in 2013. Since then, however, he has spent most of his time running Spitzer Enterprises, the real estate development company founded by his father, Bernard, in 1952.

    Spitzer has crossed paths with Donald Trump for decades. And he was once the hottest establishment-rattling thing in Democratic politics, a status now enjoyed by mayoral front-runner Zohran Mamdani. Also like Mamdani, Spitzer has clashed with Cuomo—who, like Spitzer, resigned in disgrace as New York’s governor. All of which gives him expertise on the current moment. “I don’t know about ‘expert,’” Spitzer says with a laugh. “But I do have opinions.” Including that Mamdani has correctly identified affordability as the greatest threat to the city’s future, “but his answer may make the problem even worse,” and that Trump’s tariff drama can be explained as “the myopic behavior of somebody who enjoys being at the center of attention.” Spitzer spoke to Vanity Fair from his Manhattan office during a break in closing a property transaction.

    Vanity Fair: You’re finishing a deal. Is this a good time to be in the New York real estate business?

    Eliot Spitzer: Real estate is doing fine. The demand at the high end is real. Our structure of rent laws has, unfortunately, inhibited the creation of the supply that we need to keep the city viable. What we need to do is a very significant upzoning that would permit more housing in areas where transportation permits people to get access to the job centers.

    We live and die based on our capacity to attract young, smart, creative, energetic generations of kids. Look, Mamdani is absolutely right, affordability is the issue. I happen to think his answer is not one that will solve the problem. Freezing rent won’t do it, unfortunately. What it will do is inhibit capital inflow and lead to the significant deterioration of our capital stock. And that’s not going to be good for the city.

    If your taxes go up as a result of his proposals, are you going to leave town?

    No. A 2% shift shouldn’t make people leave. On the other hand, there is data that a significant number of wealthy taxpayers have left. And it is also a reality that a very significant piece of the tax receipts of the city come from that upper strata. But I think the other part of the equation is, if you’re going to raise taxes, the quality of life in the city has to improve commensurate with that. You can’t become the San Francisco model.

    Your three daughters are in Mamdani’s target audience, at least by age. Did they vote for him?

    I don’t think it’s my place to reveal their votes. You certainly have to admire his capacity to do what is so essential to politics, which is to have people look at him and like him. Mamdani has created an emotional momentum that, at this moment, I think is almost impossible to defeat.

    If someone who is considering voting for Cuomo asked for advice based on your history with him, what would you say?

    How many hours do you have? [Laughs] Look, I think it’s been chronicled. He and I are not drinking buddies.

    You have also interacted with Trump many times over the years. What’s your favorite story?

    None of them is a favorite. Trump used to come over to my dad’s office and talk about real estate. My dad, who began without anything, he didn’t have two nickels to rub together, did quite well, and did it by dint of hard work and intelligence. One time, Trump left my dad’s office, and my dad said, “He has not read a book in 30 years.” Which was fine and kind of irrelevant as long as Trump was just a real estate developer, right? But when he’s the president of the United States, the lack of understanding of either history or society or broader social issues is…problematic.

    Chris Smith

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  • If Eric Adams Quits, New York Could See an Epic Grudge Match to Replace Him

    If Eric Adams Quits, New York Could See an Epic Grudge Match to Replace Him

    The investigations and resignations swirling around New York City mayor Eric Adams have multiplied nearly nonstop for the past year. For that whole time, the disclaimer has been consistent whenever I asked his possible political challengers and their advisers about plans for challenging the mayor in a 2025 campaign: Only if Adams himself is indicted.

    Well, that caveat crumbled this morning when Damian Williams, the United States attorney for the Southern District of New York, unsealed a five-count federal indictment against Adams. The charges include bribery, wire fraud, and conspiracy to receive campaign contributions by foreign nationals. The allegations stem largely from his victorious 2021 run for City Hall, as prosecutors claim he received campaign donations and travel benefits from entities connected to the government of Turkey in exchange for, as mayor, pressuring New York City Fire Department officials to approve an occupancy permit for the new Turkish consulate building that had not passed a fire-safety inspection. If those charges prove true, they’re both very on-brand for Adams—combining his long-running love for international excursions and glitz with his background in law enforcement—and depressingly petty and stupid.

    The city’s history of political corruption is long and tawdry, but this is a first: No sitting mayor has ever been formally accused of criminal acts. Adams insists that any charges are “entirely false.” In a short video released Wednesday night after The New York Times broke the news of the impending indictment, the mayor said he would “fight these injustices with every ounce of my strength and my spirit.” He is a formidable fighter willing to work almost any angle in his defense. Adams has already invoked racism as a possible motivation for criticism of his administration; he has also alluded to the far-fetched idea of the federal investigations as being part of a Biden administration conspiracy to exact revenge for the mayor’s criticism of the president’s border policies.

    Fending off the criminal charges will be tough for Adams, but the judicial process will be fairly slow. Faster-moving, more difficult, and well-underway is the political battle to hold onto his job. He’s already lost his police commissioner and schools chancellor to recent resignations; more top staff may now head for the exits. Rev. Al Sharpton, an Adams ally, has already delivered a worrisome signal, with the Times reporting he has “expressed concern” that the mayor’s mess could become a drag on other Democrats this fall, including Kamala Harris.

    Calls for Adams’s resignation are escalating, but, so far at least, they’re mostly from Adams’s already declared reelection opponents or his long-standing adversaries, including Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and the Working Families Party. Key players to watch are Governor Kathy Hochul, who has had a friendly relationship with Adams but who has often miscalculated the city’s political dynamics; Senator Chuck Schumer, whose relationship with Adams has been cordial if mostly distant (though Schumer’s reaction to the indictment was fairly ominous: “No one is above the law, including the mayor of New York City”); and House Democratic majority leader Hakeem Jeffries. Jeffries is plenty busy at the moment, marshaling campaign troops to try to win New York congressional races in November, but he and Adams, both from Brooklyn, have very different personalities and politicians, and they have clashed in the past.

    The city charter stipulates that if a mayor leaves office early, they are replaced by the city’s public advocate. This means that Democrat Jumaane Williams would move into the top job temporarily, with a special election required to take place within roughly 90 days. That’s when the fun would really start, and it’s why the already declared and most plausible contenders have quickly shifted from saying, “Only if Adams himself is indicted” to “If Adams quits.” Some would be better off if Adams departs soon; some would prefer he stay in office but decline to run for reelection next year. Here’s who to watch and the calculations they are making right now:

    The 2013 favorite

    For a long time, Christine Quinn looked to be on track to become the city’s first female mayor. But she got caught in the progressive backlash to three terms of plutocrat Mayor Michael Bloomberg and lost to Bill de Blasio. Lately, Quinn has been doing good work by running a nonprofit called Win that provides shelter and services to homeless women and children. But 11 years is a very long time to be off the radar with city voters.

    The 2021 near miss

    Kathryn Garcia lost to Adams by just 7,197 votes, or less than 1%, in the 2021 Democratic primary, the decisive contest in New York mayoral elections. That narrow margin and the fact that Garcia’s technocratic image would seemingly be a welcome antidote to all the Adams drama makes her a logical candidate. However, Garcia is said to be very happy in her current job as state director of operations in the Hochul administration and has no interest in running again now.

    The existing 2025 field

    Brad Lander has the strongest recent track record of winning actual city elections—three terms as a Brooklyn city councilman followed by, in 2021, a citywide contest to become comptroller. His campaign told The New York Times in July that it expected to have $3 million once anticipated matching funds were included; on the other hand, Lander may be too far left for some voters, and his attempts to be nuanced regarding Israel and Gaza may please no one. Zellnor Myrie is young (37) and energetic; he’s also little-known outside his Brooklyn state senate district. Jessica Ramos is young (39), charismatic, and somewhat better known outside her Queens state senate district. Scott Stringer, at 64, is the veteran: a former state assemblyman, borough president, and city comptroller. Stringer is making his second bid for mayor; the last one, in 2021, was derailed by a sexual misconduct allegation. (He has denied any wrongdoing.)

    The possible interim mayor

    Jumaane Williams is a left-wing activist turned politician. Williams, also from Brooklyn, spent two terms on the City Council before winning a 2019 special election to become a public advocate. Ninety days as interim mayor would give Williams a very large platform.

    The dark horses

    Jessica Tisch has held senior information technology jobs in the de Blasio administration; she’s currently Adams’s sanitation commissioner and is leading a major overhaul of how the city picks up garbage. She’s part of the Loews Corporation’s Tisch family, so she’d presumably have access to the necessary campaign money and be popular with the city’s business community. But Tisch is a virtual unknown with voters. Ritchie Torres, however, is very good at self-promotion. Currently a 36-year-old congressman representing a South Bronx district, Torres is an electric and sometimes polarizing presence. “He’s ambitious, Latino, and gay, and real estate and Jewish donors love him,” a Democratic operative tells me.

    The lurking disgraced governor

    Last November, shortly after FBI agents suddenly confronted Adams and seized his electronic devices, allies of Andrew Cuomo were already gaming out the advantages of a special election, telling me how the compressed campaign schedule would accentuate Cuomo’s strengths: nearly $8 million in campaign cash and much greater name recognition than his putative rivals. Those edges are still valid, and Cuomo has since made multiple speeches in Black churches around the city, keeping himself in front of a crucial voting group, especially in what would likely be a low-turnout contest.

    Yet some recent reasons for Cuomo’s high name recognition aren’t helpful. In 2021, he quit as governor under a barrage of sexual harassment allegations (all of which he continues to deny). And just two weeks ago, Cuomo testified before a congressional committee investigating his handling of the COVID pandemic; his administration was criticized for concealing the actual number of deaths in nursing homes (Cuomo disputes this interpretation). If he runs for mayor, though, Cuomo would be the favorite. Probably. “I don’t know,” a former ally of the governor says. “The city has really changed. Are all those ethnic white voters who loved Mario and Andrew still around? And would Black voters go for him against a Black candidate?”

    The disgraced governor’s mortal enemy

    Which brings us to Tish James. She has previously talked of mayor being the job she dreamed of someday holding. James planned to run in 2021. But in 2018, scandal forced Eric Schneiderman out as state attorney general, so James ran—with the crucial backing of Cuomo—and won, which helped pave the way for Adams, her fellow Brooklynite, in the subsequent mayoral race. Relations between James and Cuomo have changed, to say the least. He blames her for using the sexual harassment allegations to railroad him out of Albany to stage her own gubernatorial bid (a motivation she dismisses, though James did run briefly in 2021 before ceding the race to Hochul). A showdown between James and Cuomo for City Hall would be irresistible theater. But it’s still hard to see James giving up her AG perch. If Adams quits and Cuomo gets in, however, James will come under considerable pressure to make a bid. “I think,” one of the city’s best-connected political players says, “she is the only one who can beat Andrew.”

    Chris Smith

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  • Migrants arrested in citywide crime spree, NYPD says

    Migrants arrested in citywide crime spree, NYPD says


    NEW YORK CITY (WABC) — The NYPD says it has foiled the largest robbery pattern in the city – thieves snatching women’s purses and phones out of their hands.

    Officers raided a suspected safe house in the Bronx early Monday morning. The suspects are migrants from Venezuela.

    “In recent a months a wave of migrant crime has washed over our city, but by no means are the individuals committing these crimes representing the vast number of people coming to New York to build a better life,” NYPD Commissioner Edward Caban said.

    The string of 62 thefts of phones stolen from women on the street and in the subway system has been linked to a mastermind overseeing the spree from his Bronx apartment, the NYPD said on Monday.

    Victor Parra, who is still being sought, ran a sophisticated criminal enterprise of migrants predominantly living in the city’s system, police said.

    “They use social media platforms to organize and coordinate their thefts. This is how they operate. The leader of the crew identified as Victor Parra will blast out a message via WhatsApp that he’s looking for phones,” Chief of Detectives Joe Kenny said.

    Video released by the NYPD shows a 52-year-old woman being violently dragged by thieves on a scooter after being mugged of her bag, phone, credit cards, keys, glasses, $60 cash and her ID. It happened last month in the Sheepshead Bay section of Brooklyn.

    To carry out their crimes, they would ride up behind their victims, mostly women walking alone on the sidewalk, and grab their phones or purses and make their getaway.

    A scooter operator would make $100 and a phone snatcher $300 to $600.

    The phones were taken to Parra’s apartment, where his ‘tech guy’ hacked into the stolen phones, accessing the victims’ financial and banking apps for fraudulent purchases in the U.S. or Central America.

    The phones were then sent to Colombia, where they were wiped clean.

    Police recovered 22 stolen phones as well as victim’s identification from Parra’s home during a search on Monday.

    Investigators said they took five people into custody on Monday.

    The following individuals have been identified and charged:

    – 20-year-old Cleyber Andrade is charged with 25 counts of grand larceny.

    – 23-year-old Juan Uzcatgui is charged with 23 counts of grand larceny.

    – 24-year-old Roxanna Sahos is charged with tampering with evidence.

    – 20-year-old Alexander Dayker is charged with criminal possession of stolen property.

    In all, seven of the 14 members of this crew have been arrested and charged with multiple counts of grand larceny.

    “They’re essentially ghost criminals. No criminal history. Not photos. No cell phone. No social media. Sometimes we’re even unclear on name or a date of birth. And on top of that these operations are extremely sophisticated.” Caban said.

    “If they’re found guilty and they do their time they should be deported. You should not be allowed to walk the streets of New York,” Mayor Eric Adams added.

    Parra is from Venezuela and entered the country last year. He was last before a judge in December on a grand larceny charge.

    The string started in November 2023 on the Upper East Side and the most recent incident was in Chinatown on Sunday night

    The thefts occurred in every borough except Staten Island. Nearly 56% of them were in Manhattan

    The news comes as criticism grows against Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg after just one of several migrants believed to have attacked two police officers in Times Square was put behind bars. Four others were released without bail.

    ALSO READ | Exclusive: NYPD cracks down on illegal scooters amid investigation into officers attacked

    Josh Einiger has the exclusive report.

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  • FBI Seizes Eric Adams’s Phones, iPad As 2021 Campaign Fundraising Investigation Escalates

    FBI Seizes Eric Adams’s Phones, iPad As 2021 Campaign Fundraising Investigation Escalates

    In a significant escalation in a criminal investigation into New York Mayor Eric Adams’s victorious 2021 campaign, Federal Bureau of Investigation investigators seized at least two cell phones and an iPad from the mayor early last week, The New York Times reported Friday afternoon.

    The investigation, which concerns whether the Adams campaign conspired with the Turkish government to solicit illegal donations via a Brooklyn-based construction company, burst into public view earlier this month when FBI agents raided the Crown Heights apartment of a former Adams intern and current chief fund-raiser, Brianna Suggs. The agents seized two laptops, three iPhones, a manila folder labeled “Eric Adams,” seven “contribution card binders,” and other physical materials, according to the search warrant obtained by the Times.

    On Friday, Adams’s lawyer, Boyd Johnson, said in a statement that the mayor was cooperating with the FBI and had “proactively reported” at least one person who engaged in improper behavior. The statement did not say whether the reported conduct was related to the FBI seizure of Adams’ devices. Johnson said that Adams has not been accused of any wrongdoing and “immediately complied with the FBI’s request and provided them with electronic devices.”

    In his statement, the mayor said, “As a former member of law enforcement, I expect all members of my staff to follow the law and fully cooperate with any sort of investigation — and I will continue to do exactly that.” Adams added that he had “nothing to hide.”

    According to a source who spoke to the NYT, FBI agents climbed into Adams’s SUV after an event early last week and executed the search warrant. The cell phones and iPad were returned to the mayor after a few days, but investigators had the legal authority to copy data on seized devices.

    On Wednesday—two days after the FBI had seized his devices, and two days before the seizure was reported to the public—Adams said he would be “shocked” if anyone on his campaign had done anything wrong. “I cannot tell you how much I start the day with telling my team, ‘We gotta follow the law. Gotta follow the law,’” Adams said. “Almost to the point that I’m annoying.”

    When reporters asked whether the mayor was in touch with investigators following the raid of Suggs’s apartment, another Adams lawyer, Lisa Zornberg, preemptively answered the question. “The answer is yes, of course we are,” Zornberg told reporters. “The mayor has pledged his cooperation, and we’ve been in touch.” Zornberg failed to mention the FBI search.

    During Wednesday’s press conference, Adams said he’d met with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan just once, when the two “exchanged pleasantries” at an event during Adams’ tenure as Brooklyn borough president. But Adams has traveled to Turkey on numerous occasions, bragging last month, “I’m probably the only mayor in the history of this city that has not only visited Turkey once, but I think I’m on my sixth or seventh visit to Turkey.” Turkish entities reportedly paid for some of those visits.

    On Friday, just before the news of the FBI seizure broke, The City reporter Katie Honan asked Adams about early speculation that, amidst this investigation, Adams will face several primary challengers in 2025. “Wait before you hate,” Adams cryptically replied.

    Jack McCordick

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  • Are Hybrid Work Skeptics Finally Seeing The Light? | Entrepreneur

    Are Hybrid Work Skeptics Finally Seeing The Light? | Entrepreneur

    Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

    New York City Mayor Eric Adams was once a staunch opponent of hybrid work, adamant that city employees should work in person. However, the growing reality of a tight labor market and the success of remote work have finally begun to change his mind. When even the most ardent skeptics are realizing the benefits of hybrid work, it’s clear the future is hybrid, as I tell the 5-10 leaders who contact me about this topic every week.

    Related: You Should Let Your Team Decide Their Approach to Hybrid Work. A Behavioral Economist Explains Why and How You Should Do It.

    The changing landscape: NYC’s journey to embrace hybrid work

    Just last year, Adams proclaimed, “You can’t run New York City from home,” insisting that city workers abandon their pajamas and report to work in person. But the world has changed, and the pandemic has shifted the balance of power in favor of employees.

    The recently settled contract with District Council 37, the largest city union, includes an agreement to create a special committee to define and implement rules for hybrid work. Additionally, the Police Benevolent Association’s new contract includes an experimental program allowing 400 officers to work flexible hours. This shift indicates that even the most die-hard opponents of remote work are beginning to recognize its advantages.

    The winds of change: How pandemics reshape the workforce

    Historically, pandemics have caused massive social and economic shifts, often resulting in improved working conditions and better pay for workers. The Black Death in the 1300s, for example, wiped out a significant portion of Europe’s population, leading to the end of feudalism and an increased demand for labor. Similarly, the 1918 Spanish flu outbreak in the U.S. coincided with a wave of labor unrest and strikes.

    In the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, we are witnessing a similar transformation, with private-sector workers demanding better working conditions and hybrid work arrangements. The labor market is tightening, and even city governments are forced to adapt to compete for talent with the private sector.

    The new normal: Adapting to a hybrid work future

    The post-pandemic world is one where flexibility and adaptability are crucial for success. In New York City, the office vacancy rate in Manhattan has reached a record high of 16%, and workers are showing up in traditional offices 54% less than in the pre-pandemic era. This has led to a drop in economic activity in the city’s core and an increase in activity in neighborhoods outside of the business district.

    Mayor Adams, despite his personal preference for in-office work, has acknowledged the new reality: “My personal beliefs cannot get in the way of running the city of this level of complexity.” The city is now recognizing that it must provide more flexibility and adapt to the changing workforce landscape to attract and retain talent.

    New York City’s shift towards embracing hybrid work isn’t an isolated incident. Cities across the nation are starting to acknowledge the benefits of flexible work arrangements, both for employees and employers. By offering hybrid work options, local governments can attract top talent, increase job satisfaction and contribute to a healthier work-life balance for their employees.

    Related: Employers: Hybrid Work is Not The Problem — Your Guidelines Are. Here’s Why and How to Fix Them.

    How city governments and businesses alike can adapt to the hybrid work era

    The rise of hybrid work has significant implications for businesses, both large and small, as well as city governments. Failing to adapt to this new way of working risks losing out on valuable talent and falling behind their competitors. To thrive in the hybrid work era, businesses and governments must:

    • Develop clear remote work policies: Establish guidelines and expectations for remote and in-person work, including communication protocols, performance metrics and employee support systems.
    • Invest in technology: Provide employees with the necessary tools and resources to work effectively from home, such as reliable internet connections, video conferencing software and project management platforms.
    • Focus on employee wellbeing: Encourage a healthy work-life balance by offering flexible work hours, promoting mental health resources and fostering a supportive work environment.
    • Reevaluate office spaces: As employees spend less time in traditional offices, companies should consider downsizing their office spaces or adopting a “hoteling” system, where employees reserve shared workspaces as needed.
    • Nurture company culture: Remote work can lead to feelings of isolation and disconnection. To maintain a strong company culture, encourage regular team-building activities, both in-person and virtually, and prioritize open communication channels.

    By embracing hybrid work and adapting to the changing workforce landscape, instead of falling into mental blindspots, business and government leaders alike can not only survive but thrive in the new normal.

    The broader implications: Hybrid work and its effects on society

    The shift towards hybrid work has far-reaching consequences beyond the workplace. As more people work remotely, cities and suburban areas must adapt to accommodate the changing needs of their residents. This may include:

    • Improved public transportation: As commuting patterns change, public transportation systems need to be more flexible and efficient, with increased service during off-peak hours and better connectivity to suburban areas.
    • Enhanced broadband infrastructure: Reliable internet access is critical for remote work. Cities and towns should prioritize expanding and upgrading broadband infrastructure to ensure that all residents have access to high-speed internet.
    • Revitalized local economies: With more people working from home, there is an opportunity to boost local economies as employees shop, dine, and spend their money closer to home. This could help breathe new life into struggling suburban areas and small towns.
    • Increased focus on sustainability: The rise of hybrid work could lead to a decrease in carbon emissions, as fewer people commute daily to work. This presents an opportunity for cities to invest in more sustainable initiatives and promote environmentally friendly practices.
    • Greater emphasis on work-life balance: As the lines between work and home life blur, society may place a higher value on work-life balance and mental wellbeing. This could lead to more policies and initiatives that prioritize employee wellbeing and encourage a healthier lifestyle.

    The road ahead: Embracing the hybrid work future

    The turn towards hybrid work is more than a passing trend. It is a fundamental transformation of the way we work, live, and interact with one another. As strong opponents of hybrid work, like Mayor Eric Adams, come to understand and embrace its benefits, it’s clear that the future is hybrid.

    As we move forward, it’s essential for businesses, governments and individuals to adapt and evolve with the changing landscape. By embracing the hybrid work model, we can create a more flexible, efficient, and inclusive workforce that benefits not only employees but also the economy and society as a whole.

    In the end, the hybrid work revolution will lead to a better quality of life, improved mental health, increased productivity and a more sustainable world. By recognizing the potential of this new era and actively working to make it a reality, we can ensure that the future of work is brighter and more equitable for everyone.

    Gleb Tsipursky

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  • “The Job Is Not Hard”: An Ever-Confident Eric Adams Speaks to His First Year as New York City Mayor

    “The Job Is Not Hard”: An Ever-Confident Eric Adams Speaks to His First Year as New York City Mayor

    Eric Adams won the 2021 Democratic primary for mayor of New York City—and, because this is a one-party town, he essentially won the general election too—by a mere 0.8% over Kathryn Garcia. But Adams, in his first year in office, has carried himself with the confidence of a man who won by a landslide. That’s all the more striking considering the challenges Adams has encountered at City Hall: a sluggish postpandemic economy, a spike in crime, record-setting homelessness numbers, a surge in migrants arriving from Central America, and a crippling shortage of moderately priced apartments. Oh, and an explosion in a population that Adams has long obsessed over: rats. There have also been self-inflicted controversies, including attempting to hire relatives and friends for high-paying taxpayer-funded jobs. 

    The mayor certainly appreciates the gravity of the issues he’s facing—hours before talking with Vanity Fair, Adams had raced to a Brooklyn hospital emergency room to check on a cop who’d been shot trying to make an arrest. Yet the mayor has also popped up everywhere from the Met Gala to downtown clubs and traveled far and wide outside the city. He seems to be thoroughly enjoying the job. “No, I don’t think it’s fair to say that,” Adams says. “What you should be saying is that I love the job.”

    Vanity Fair: What’s one thing you’ve learned this year about doing the job of mayor?

    Eric Adams: When someone says, What was the surprise?, it’s difficult to point to something because I knew city government. But I will tell you this: The job is not hard. It’s the volume. All day, every day, there is something to deal with. No matter what other job you have in the city, you are drinking from a garden hose compared to the mayor. You drink from a fire hose. You got everyone around you—some of them for good reasons, some of them from bad reasons. You have to have your instincts up.

    In recent weeks you have announced ambitious goals to build thousands of affordable housing units and to get mentally ill people off the streets and into care. But mayors have been announcing these kinds of agendas for decades, without delivering on a real plan. Why should we think you’re going to follow through and get it right?

    A great question. I’m a big believer in you have to inspect what you expect or it’s all suspect. I’m a computer programmer by nature. And I know that you have to build systems that allow you to see, are you moving in the right direction? Now, trust me, it’s not going to be easy because there’s just so many naysayers. They look for reasons to get in the way of where we could go. Back at the beginning of the year, I said we’re getting all of the encampments out of our subway system. We put a system in place, we monitor it every week. We’ve been able to narrow it down to the stubborn people we’re having a problem with, and we need to get them more services. That is how you get to a destination, through that inspection.

    When crime rates were rising through the spring and summer, you placed much of the blame on New York state’s elimination of cash bail, even though there’s little evidence of a connection between the two. Are you going to try and push for bail changes again when the new state legislative session starts in January?

    Everyone says, Eric, you’ve been unsuccessful with Albany because of just bail. But anyone that knows Albany knows you never get everything you want, particularly in the first year. I wanted to continue mayoral control [of public schools]. I got it. I wanted the earned income tax credit increased. I got it. I wanted a NYCHA trust fund. I got it. If we just fixed bail, and still have a recidivism problem that’s really producing the crimes we’re seeing, that’s a big problem. I need to go after the entire system.

    So I’ll take that as a no on advocating for tougher bail laws.

    No, that’s on my list! I’m going back to Albany to say, can we talk about [giving judges more discretion on] dangerousness again? I don’t stop talking about it just because there’s a philosophical difference. I need to come up with more data.

    You have said many times—including earlier today—that fighting crime isn’t just about cops, it’s about giving young people, in particular, opportunities for education and jobs. How does that square with you trying to cut tens of millions of dollars from the school and library budgets?

    With the library cuts that we’re doing—which we don’t want to do—we’re facing an out-year budget deficit of $10 billion. That money has to come from somewhere. This is additional money we gave them; we’re not digging into operations. Same thing with schools. Not one dollar came off the fair student funding. We were propped up with COVID money, and it runs out. And we have to be honest that the school population has shrunk. We cannot run a city that is dysfunctional in the area of economics.

    Your out-of-town travel has drawn a lot of attention and criticism. What’s one tangible benefit to the city from a trip you’ve taken? 

    Going to Athens allowed me to create an international relationship to show that New York, which has the largest Jewish population outside of Israel, is serious about antisemitism. While I was in LA, I moved around the city to look at their encampment problem, their homeless problem, on the ground. I knew when I got back here, we are not going to turn into that. If you don’t get on the ground and see what’s happening in these locales, you’re not going to get the full picture.

    How will the Adams family be celebrating Christmas?

    Hopefully doing nothing. I want to sit down and keep on my pajamas.

    It will be your first Christmas living in Gracie Mansion.

    Yeah, there’s ghosts in there, man.

    Chris Smith

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  • Eric Adams Absolutely Loves Being Mayor. Does New York Love Him Back?

    Eric Adams Absolutely Loves Being Mayor. Does New York Love Him Back?

    Adams, who grades his first-year performance as a B-plus, has concentrated day-to-day operational power amongst a handful of close associates, particularly Ingrid Lewis-Martin, his chief adviser, and Sheena Wright, the recently promoted first deputy mayor. Wright is engaged to David Banks, whom Adams selected as schools chancellor. For deputy mayor of public safety, Adams chose David’s brother, Philip Banks III (in 2018, federal prosecutors described Banks as an “unindicted co-conspirator” in a bribery scheme; the investigation yielded several convictions, but Philip has consistently denied any wrongdoing). Adams did drop the idea of hiring a younger brother as a $240,000-a-year deputy police commissioner after ethical questions were raised. Such qualms haven’t interfered with the mayor’s after-hours relationships, however: His favorite restaurant is run by two friends of his who are convicted felons. Adams has frequently seemed irritated by the media attention paid to his travels and his pals, but at the moment he’s shrugging it off as part of the game. “I love the reporters,” he says. “They’re going to push back on me. I’m going to push back on them. Anyone that feels as though, well, they’ve treated Eric specifically unfair—man, they treat everyone unfair!”

    Eric Adams  receives the Civic Leadership award for his commitment to fighting antisemitism in Athens, Greece. 30th Nov, 2022. 

    By Nikolas Georgiou/ZUMA Press/Alamy.

    An early-December Siena College poll showed Adams with a 50% favorability rating amongst city voters. Most of the mayor’s constituents are likely to overlook the cronyism and the dubious associates if Adams can deliver on his main promise—to create a safer, more prosperous, and more equitable city. The mayor has recently scored a pair of wins in Queens, where two private development projects he backed are expected to include nearly 4,000 below-market-rent apartments, though they may not arrive for a decade. On the other hand, his campaign vow to convert 25,000 hotel rooms into apartments has fizzled, in large part because of pushback from the hotel workers union, a key supporter of candidate Adams last year. Crime statistics were finally trending down in November, even though Adams’s biggest tactical change, reviving the anti-crime unit—to seize illegal guns—has yielded only modest gains, something demonstrated painfully on Wednesday morning, when Adams’s year-end speech about public safety was delayed by the shooting of a Brooklyn cop who had responded to a report of a domestic dispute. And Adams may need to resolve the intrigue at police headquarters, where insiders talk about Commissioner Keechant Sewell as a figurehead and say the department is mostly being run by Philip Banks. 

    Adams laughs at the suggestion that Sewell isn’t in charge. “Keechant is no joke. She will not be a figurehead,” he says. “I needed a deputy mayor [in Phil Banks] that will coordinate and be the maestro for all the [law enforcement agency] instruments that we’re playing. It was probably one of the best moves that I made.”

    The city’s business community, a key ally, seems to remain staunchly in the mayor’s corner. “He’s been a breath of fresh air,” says Kathryn Wylde, president of the Partnership for New York City, an influential business advocacy group, who points to new public-private partnerships in education and homeless outreach. “He has engaged the business community in a way they have not been since the Bloomberg era. I mean, we did nothing for eight years with Mayor [Bill] de Blasio. I think he called us once to ask for help getting mayoral control of the schools past the state legislature.” 

    Adams will need all the support he can muster in his second year. Contracts with several major labor unions, including those representing municipal workers, teachers, and police officers, have either expired or will soon. In addition to the sweeping mental health and affordable housing initiatives, his flurry of year-end announcements has included a “New” New York plan, crafted with Governor Kathy Hochul and light on specifics, to retool commercial sections of midtown Manhattan into live-and-work neighborhoods. Now Adams needs to follow through on the nettlesome details, which will require cooperation from both Albany and the city council. Amanda Farías, a city councilmember who represents a Bronx district that could eventually see hundreds of new affordable apartments built with the Adams agenda, says she’s highly encouraged by what she’s seen so far. “The developers and the city will need to engage community feedback on the housing plans,” says Farías, who chairs the council’s economic development committee. “But what the mayor has done well is prioritize the city’s economic recovery, and he’s hired some really great people to make it happen, like Maria Torres-Springer,” the deputy mayor for economic and workforce development. 

    Other integral pieces of the city’s bureaucracy, however, had a rougher start in the administration’s first year. “Because he didn’t have enough staff at the city’s housing agency, he wasn’t even able to spend all the money he had in the capital budget to build affordable housing,” says Rachel Fee, executive director of the New York Housing Conference. “We saw a 43% decrease in affordable housing starts between the last year of the de Blasio administration and Mayor Adams’s first year, during a housing crisis.”

    Adams is an adept politician. He’s intent on staying in touch with his Black, middle-class base, and he’s shrewd about keeping his antagonists, particularly Democrats to his left, on the defensive. Yet the most unlikely accomplishment of Adams’s first year as mayor is that he has ignited flickers of nostalgia for his predecessor. “Say what you will about de Blasio—he could be a jackass—but he actually wanted to help people,” a former Adams administration official says. “He put people in charge of agencies who had well-thought-out plans to help people.” 

    By the end of de Blasio’s first year as mayor, in 2014, he had, after high-decibel battles with then governor Andrew Cuomo, succeeded in creating a universal pre-kindergarten program. After almost 12 months in office, Adams can’t point to any similar distinct success—and he has seemed dismissive of chasing a big, singular achievement. Back in June, as he rode the subway for three overnight hours to get a firsthand look at conditions underground, Adams toldNew York Post reporter that former mayors were misguided in concentrating on a “pet project.” “You know, they hold on to this one thing,” he said. “That’s why when people try to say, ‘Okay, Eric, you know, what is your one or two things?’, I’m saying: ‘To fix this mess!’” 

    Fixing everything that’s wrong with New York City government is an admirable objective. The risk in pursuing it is that Adams ends up with no focus and fixes nothing. The mayor waves off that notion. “The number one thing I heard from people [coming into office], they said, ‘Just pick three things and try to be good at those three things and just ride those three things out.’ And that is just not my goal. Government is broken in this city and in this country, and we can do a better job and produce a better product. And I’m going to swing for the fences.”

    Chris Smith

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