Eric Adams Wins NYC Mayoral Race, Rallies 'Team New York'

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Eric Leroy Adams was elected the 110th mayor of New York City, following a campaign in which he won the support of New Yorkers across class and racial lines with promises to restore the pandemic-ravaged city to its former glory.

The Associated Press declared the 61-year-old Democratic Brooklyn borough president the winner over Republican anti-crime activist Curtis Sliwa. Adams had 74% of the vote with 22% of precincts reporting, according to the AP, which called the race 11 minutes after polls closed.

“Today we take off the intramural jersey and we put on one jersey — Team New York," said Adams.

Adams’s election to what’s known as the “second-toughest job in America” catapults him to a national political figure at the center of some of the nation’s most intractable debates.

He’s a reform-minded but tough-on-crime former police officer at a time of rising worries about crime and frayed police-community relations. He’s a moderate Democrat in an increasingly progressive party. And he’s proclaimed an end to “anti-business” rhetoric while demanding the city’s businesses better address income inequality and other social ills.

The victory over Sliwa was preordained in a city where Democrats outnumber Republicans by roughly 7-to-1. Sliwa tried to capture the city’s attention with TikTok videos and publicity stunts centered around a platform of public safety, tax reform and animal rights. Adams dismissed his challenger’s campaign as “buffoonery.”

Adams has conducted himself as the de facto mayor-elect since July, when a lengthy ballot-counting process ended with Adams atop a 13-candidate Democratic field. Primary election results showed that Adams won on the strength of Black, Hispanic and low-income voters in the city’s outer boroughs. After his victory, he was quick to proclaim himself the “face of the new Democratic party” and weigh in on vaccine mandates, school programs and other decisions made by outgoing Mayor Bill de Blasio.

When Adams is sworn in Jan. 1, he will replace the term-limited de Blasio, whose eight-year mayoralty was defined by the coronavirus crisis, clashes over policing and an ill-fated run for president.

Incoming New York mayors have faced challenges before. Ed Koch inherited a crime-ridden city on the verge of bankruptcy in 1978. Former Mayor Michael Bloomberg was nominated in a primary election scheduled on Sept. 11, 2001 and had to rebuild a city devastated by the terrorist attacks.

Bloomberg, founder and majority owner of Bloomberg News parent Bloomberg LP, has endorsed Adams.

Adams will inherit his own set of problems plaguing New York: Race relations, violent crime, budget headaches, an exodus of work-from-home professionals and a series of union contracts up for negotiation. And Adams’s penchant for trying to be all things to all people -- coupled with vague or even conflicting solutions to some of those problems -- has left business leaders wondering how Adams will act once he shifts from campaigning to governing.

The second Black mayor in the city’s history, Adams calls himself New York City’s first blue-collar mayor. He was born in Brooklyn in 1960, and his family moved to Queens when he was 8. Adams often recounts how he joined a gang at 14, and was arrested and beat by police at 15. And at 24 -- inspired both to serve and reform the New York Police Department -- he joined the force.

Over 22 years of law enforcement experience, Adams led groups of Black officers and rose to the rank of captain -- giving him a unique and often complicated perspective on policing. He was criticized during the Democratic primary for supporting stop-and-frisk policies, albeit a modified version.

He first started plotting a run for mayor as early as the 1990s, and briefly registered with the Republican party before running for the New York Senate as a Democrat in 2006. He served four terms in the Senate and two as Brooklyn borough president, where he was all but unopposed.

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NYC has absolutely no reason to complain when things in their City start to go downhill even worse! I'm so sick and tired of seeing people in these big cities complain about all of the bad stuff in their city that they continue to Alexey socialist from radical Democrat I don't want to do anything they don't want to help anybody they just want to continue to line their own pocket don't feel bad for Portland anymore maybe the first couple of weeks but they did it to themselves and I definitely am not going to feel bad for New York anymore you're going to do it to yourself when you have more restrictions you can't make a living wrenches High almost this is under control crime is off you have no one to blame but yourself you went out you voted this is what you vote for you better hope that you like it

sarabrant
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Bloomberg left the Mayor's office with $40 Billion! How much will Deblasio leave with? Every Mayor-Governor etc has cashed out big money in these big Cities! 😂🐑🚸🐑😂

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