The mayor is an ex-cop, and it shows – Politico

Eric Adams spent 22 years as an NYPD cop before turning to politics and in his first month as mayor of New York City, it has sometimes seemed like he never left the job. Often clad in an NYPD jacket, hes been racing to crime scenes like the officer he once was making his physical presence just as central to his crime response as his policy platform.

Adams started his first day in office with a call to 911 from a subway platform to report a fight among a group of men. From there, hes spoken at vigils for a baby shot and the Bronx and a woman shoved to her death in front of a subway train. Hes rushed to hospitals where police officers were being treated for gunshot wounds. Hes headed to police headquarters to announce an arrest in the armed robbery death of a young Burger King cashier.

The mayors tendency to be always on the scene is no accident, as Erin reports. Doesnt matter to me if its a police officer shot, or if its a baby shot. Im going to stay in these streets until this city is safe, Adams said in the Bronx last week.

Backers say hes sending an important signal that hes personally invested in New Yorkers safety. But critics say that by still thinking like a cop, the mayor is placing too much trust in a police force with a long history of abuses and too little emphasis on social services and other strategies to reduce crime. Theyre skeptical of both his public persona and his policy proposals, like reviving the NYPD anti-crime unit and rolling back limits on bail.

Showing up is a critical part of the job, said Queens Borough President Donovan Richards, who endorsed Adams. It signals to folks that this is a mayor whos not going to tolerate the Wild Wild West in our city. But he added that Adams would have to back up his public pronouncements with funding in his upcoming first budget for housing, social services, and neighborhood crisis management teams. Without these things, we can have all the rhetoric in the world, but youll still continue to see shootings.

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WHERES KATHY? Attends funeral services for NYPD Officer Jason Rivera and holds a snowstorm briefing in Suffolk County.

WHERES ERIC? Speaking at the funeral of Police Officer Jason Rivera and giving a snowstorm briefing.

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City Hall has yet to request a waiver to allow Banks to collect his deputy mayor salary on top of his NYPD pension.

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An Asian woman was struck in the face last week in Brooklyn.

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The mayor is an ex-cop, and it shows - Politico

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