was elected mayor as a centrist-sounding . A Black former cop who talked tough-on-crime but fit fairly squarely in the overwhelmingly Democratic politics of the city. But Adams was also always famed for his eccentricities and foibles – scandals over the true extent of his veganism, whether or not he might actually live in New Jersey, and some of the tall tales he would recount from his past.
But few New Yorkers might have expected the most recent twist in the Adams’ story: his firm drift rightward, especially in the wake of ’s election victory. In fact, Adams’ ever-closer relationship with Trump has sparked speculation as to exactly what the Democrat mayor of a famously liberal city – embroiled in deep legal troubles – might want from America’s soon-to-be Republican president. Recently, Adams did not dismiss switching to the Republican party, in which he had been a party member from 1995 through 2002, before turning Democrat.
“I’m a part of the American party,” he said. “I love this country.” Last week alone Adams stunned observers with the depths of his rightward tilt on one of the key issues of the election: .
Adapting the language of extreme Republicans – who have fear-mongered over immigrant crime – Adams came out swinging for Trump, who plans a of millions of immigrants as soon he gets back in the White House. “Well, cancel me because I’m going to protect the people of the city,” Adams said when asked if he plans to cooperate with Trump’s plan for federal deportation agents to remove migrants accused of felony crimes in the city. The comment came as Adams said he had requested a meeting with Trump’s incoming “border czar”, .
Adams said he wanted “it clear that I’m not going to be warring with this administration”. He added: “I would love to sit down with the border czar and hear his thoughts on how we are going to address those who are harming our citizens. Find out what his plans are, where our common grounds are.
We can work together.” Adams’ hard line adds a new wrinkle to how Democrat-led “sanctuary cities” such as New York, and Denver will adapt to the second and raises the prospect that some top Democrat leaders may actively assist mass deportation. Adams is already looking to roll back sanctuary city laws approved by his predecessor, Bill de Blasio, that prohibit New York law enforcement – the NYPD and correction and probation departments – from cooperating with US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) agents unless the cases involve suspected terrorists or serious public safety risks.
Some moderate Democrats on the city’s usually progressive-leaning city council are supporting the move, with the councilmember Robert Holden calling in June for a repeal, saying: “Sanctuary city laws put all New Yorkers, both immigrants and longtime residents, in danger.” Kathy Hochul, New York’s governor, said recently that while she supports legal immigrants, including asylum seekers, she will cooperate with the Trump administration to remove immigrants who break the law. “Someone breaks the law, I’ll be the first one to call up Ice and say: ‘Get them out of here,’” Hochul said.
But some observers look at Adams’ tack towards Trump and see other factors at play, beyond playing to a segment of the electorate tired of Democrats’ traditional softer positions on immigrants. Adams is facing a over alleged fundraising abuses involving Turkey brought by the outgoing local US district attorney Damian Williams, a nominee. Adams’ trial is set for the spring, just as his mayoral re-election campaign moves into high gear.
Trump has nominated Jay Clayton to be Manhattan’s top federal prosecutor. Clayton is known for bringing white-collar corruption cases while serving as commissioner of the US Securities and Exchange Commission but has no experience litigating criminal law cases, raising the question as to whether Adams is cozying up to Trump in the hope that the complaint will be dropped. Adams is also now on the same page as Trump when it comes to unfounded claims of the political weaponization of the Department of Justice.
In September, Adams defiantly suggested prosecutors had gone after him because he had criticized Biden’s immigration policies. “Despite our pleas, when the federal government did nothing as its broken immigration policies overloaded our shelter system with no relief, I put the people of New York before party and politics,” he said. “I always knew that if I stood my ground for all of you, that I would be a target – and a target I became.
” But amid all the fresh posturing there is no doubt that immigration is a thorny political issue. More than 200,000 people have come to New York over the past several years after entering the United States seeking asylum. The Adams administration has projected the cost of housing and support to New York taxpayers could hit $10bn by June next year, and Trump made pronounced inroads in the city in last month’s election, particularly among Asian voters and Hispanic voters.
Yet Adams has struck a notably hard line and nationalistic language that echoes Trump. Last week, he floated the idea of deporting migrants who had been accused but not convicted of felony crimes. “If you come into this country and this city and think you are going to harm innocent New Yorkers, and innocent migrants and asylum seekers, this is not the mayor you want to be under,” Adams said last week.
“I’m an American. Americans have certain rights. The constitution is for Americans.
I’m not a person who snuck into this country.” It’s smart for any New York mayor to have friends in Washington because the city always has problems That brought a pushback from civil rights groups. “Everyone residing in the United States regardless of their immigration status has specific inalienable rights under the constitution, including the right to due process,” said the New York Immigration Coalition.
“Immigrant communities have been key to New York’s success, both past and present. The answer to the ongoing crisis in our city is not to turn our back on our values, but it’s to ensure fair treatment,” said Andrea Gordillo, a progressive Democrat candidate for the city council. It is possible that Adams’ recent sidling up to the incoming Trump administration is both a self-serving move and a pragmatic step in keeping with a shift in New York’s political coloring and a recognition of the reality of the next four years of Trump rule.
“He’s currying favor with the Trump administration, and it’s smart for any New York mayor to have friends in Washington because the city always has problems,” said Hank Sheinkopf, a veteran Democratic strategist. “By playing that card he’s also playing to the population of the city that have moved not insignificantly to the center and away from the left. New Yorkers are angry about the basic conditions of life here and tired of paying the cost of the nation’s problems.
By doing so he’s setting himself for re-election.” There is also no doubt Adams is also dealing with a nasty criminal situation. At least seven top Adams officials have resigned or announced plans to resign as a result of the federal criminal investigation.
“Making it go away would a boon to Adams’ re-election chances. Whether it is or it isn’t, everything in politics is conspiratorial by nature,” says Sheinkopf. “Any New York mayor who wants to make an enemy of the White House is nuts.
New York mayors need the president no matter who they are.” By the end of last week Adams was even being asked whether he intended to stay in the Democratic party and join the Republicans. His answer was hardly a firm no.
“The party that’s most important for me is the American party – I’m a part of the American party,” he said..
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‘Currying favor with Trump’: Eric Adams’ rightward drift sparks speculation as prosecution looms
New York mayor embroiled in legal troubles raises concerns over his apparent ties to Republican president-elect