Eric Adams Drops Out of NYC Mayoral Race
Eric Adams Drops Out of NYC Mayoral Race
Mayor Eric Adams dropped out of New York City’s mayoral race Sunday amid escalating pressure to clear the crowded field in a last-ditch attempt to stop socialist Zohran Mamdani’s election to City Hall.
The bombshell move came after weeks of back-and-forth over whether Adams would bow out of the race, in which he is polling fourth, far behind frontrunner Mamdani, former Gov. Andrew Cuomo and also, Republican nominee Curtis Sliwa.
“It’s been an honor to be your mayor,” Adams said in a video from Gracie Mansion, according to a transcript first obtained by The Post.
“I am proud to say that we took that victory four years ago and turned it into action — making this city better for those who had been failed by government,” he said.
He touted his victories over his first term — which include bringing crime down, building housing and dealing with the city’s brutal migrant crisis — but said that despite his administration’s successes, “I know I cannot continue my campaign.”
“I strongly encourage whoever takes over City Hall to continue what we’ve done,” Adams said.
Hizzoner did not endorse any of the other candidates, and even took a blatant swipe at Mamdani — issuing a warning about local government being used to launder radical ideals.
The mayor also had a jab at Cuomo in the draft speech read to The Post, telling voters that a politician who repeatedly flip-flops on issues “cannot be trusted.”
That part was notably omitted from the final version.
“I want to be clear, although this is the end of my campaign, this will not be the end of my public service,” Adams said in the video, released on social media.
“I will keep fighting for the city, no matter what… because I am a New Yorker and fighting for our city is just what I do.”
The mayor noted his campaign’s inability to fundraise, taking aim at the city’s Campaign Finance Board for repeatedly denying him millions of dollars in matching public funds, which put him at a massive disadvantage compared to his opponents.
“The constant media speculation about my future and the Campaign Finance Board’s decision to withhold millions of dollars have undermined my ability to raise the funds needed for a serious campaign,” he said.
Hizzoner had been facing increasing pressure to drop his independent re-election bid, especially after President Trump’s Department of Justice dismissed his controversial federal corruption case.
“I also know some remain unsure of me after the unfortunate events surrounding my federal case,” he admitted in the video. “I was wrongfully charged because I fought for this city — and if I had to do it again, I would fight for New York again.”
Adams had been facing mounting pressure to ditch his campaign as fears intensified that the packed field would all-but-ensure Mamdani’s election — even prompting Trump and White House officials to engage in an extraordinary spate of backroom talks aimed at getting the mayor, Sliwa, or both, to quit the race.
Hizzoner had been floated several potential plum gigs, including an ambassadorship, by Trump officials, but those fizzled out as the president only appeared willing to poach the Big Apple mayor if Sliwa came along, insiders had told The Post.
Polls show Cuomo has the best chance of besting Mamdani in November’s election, so long as it’s a one-on-one contest.
But Sliwa has vowed to remain in the race as the GOP’s standard bearer — and his devoted supporters have argued that Cuomo, who is running as an independent after he was embarrassingly trounced by Mamdani in the June Democratic primary, should be the one to step aside.
Adams had left the door open to dropping out in an interview with the Rev. Al Sharpton Saturday, just weeks after he defiantly insisted he wasn’t going anywhere.
Despite suspending his campaign, Adams will remain on the November 4 ballot, as will fellow independent candidate Jim Walden, who also dropped his beyond-longshot bid.
Adams’ decision ensures his mayoralty will end after his roller-coaster first term — and not with a humiliating, widely expected rout at the ballot box.
The former police captain came into office in 2022 following the devastating COVID pandemic that shuttered businesses across the city — and was immediately faced with another growing crisis, thousands of migrants pouring into the Big Apple from the southern US border.
Thanks to policy actions by the Adams and Trump administrations, the crisis straining city resources eased dramatically this year, with migrant arrivals dropping from a peak of 4,000 per week, to fewer than 100.
Under Adams, and his police commissioner Jessica Tisch, crime has also dropped significantly — with shootings down to historic lows this year. The NYPD recovered a whopping more than 23,000 illegal guns from the streets over Adams’ term.
The mayor made housing a priority, with his policies protecting more than 400,000 affordable units throughout the five boroughs and his administration paving the way to build one million new homes.
“I know many New Yorkers have yet to feel the full impact of these historic achievements. I know many are still worried about affordability, about safety, about their future here,” Adams said in the video Sunday.
“But trust me when I tell you: what we’ve started will continue to reach every community in this city. It is not always easy to see the impact of good policy in just three years.”
During his term, Adams also used his bully pulpit in City Hall to pressure Albany to make “common sense” changes to 2019 criminal justice reforms, such as tweaks to bail laws and fierce opposition to Raise the Age, which boosted the age at which youth offenders can be prosecuted as adults.
The progressive City Council fiercely opposed many of Adams’ proposals, overturning his vetoes on the How Many Stops Act that added burdensome paperwork duties for cops and on a law to ban solitary confinement in local jails.
A key pillar of Adams’ term was combating anti-semitism. As a vocal defender of Jewish New Yorkers, he created the first-of-its-kind Office to Combat Antisemitism earlier this year.
But New York City’s second black mayor, who cruised into office after his 2021 by promising to bring “swagger” back to City Hall, was quickly marred by scandal.
The former state senator and Brooklyn borough president was charged in a five-count indictment, including bribery and fraud, last September and had pleaded not guilty.
He was accused of pocketing more than $100,000 in illegal campaign contributions and travel perks from people seeking to buy influence with him, including a Turkish official.
The mayor and the Trump administration had denied allegations of a “quid pro quo” where Adams would help with immigration enforcement in exchange for feds getting his case dropped.
His troubled first term also saw members of his administration arrested and embroiled in controversy, including his longtime right-hand Ingrid Lewis-Martin, who was charged with conspiracy and bribery last month.
Adams is not implicated in the criminal case against Lewis-Martin, who has called herself his “sister ordained by God” — and he stood by her after the latest charges.
Also last month, another ally, Winnie Greco, Adams’ former top aid and adviser to his re-election bid, bafflingly handed a reporter a potato bag filled with cash. Her volunteer status with the mayor’s re-election bid was immediately suspended after the mishap.
Adams has denied any accusations of wrongdoing on his part and derided the corruption case against him as “lawfare.”
But the mayor’s reputation couldn’t recover, despite months of crowing about accomplishments with the mantra, “Jobs are up, crime is down.”
After insiders spilled the beans on Adams’ ultimately failed talks for a job in Trump’s administration, he increasingly whined in recent weeks about the impact on his campaign.
“When you’re hearing every day that tomorrow Eric is leaving tomorrow, Eric is leaving six weeks out, it impacts your fundraising ability,” he said recently on “Sid & Friends in the Morning.”
“I’m not saying woe is me, I’m saying, ‘Why not me?’ Why not me, because I’ve done a great job for the city and we’re going to continue to do that.”
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