Mayor Eric Adams told at least one member of the City Council he would restore cuts to their favorite programs if they agreed to vote against a police transparency bill the mayor and NYPD officials vigorously opposed, according to four people familiar with conversations in the Council.

Adams’ attempts to horse-trade using the budget, which he has unique leverage over as mayor, come while the city is battling a fiscal crisis. But his efforts had limited impact on the outcome: The Council overwhelmingly passed the legislation Wednesday in a 35-9 vote — a veto-proof majority.

The bill, authored by Public Advocate Jumaane Williams and introduced with a majority of councilmembers as cosponsors, requires police officers to report all their investigative interactions with civilians, including low-level encounters not previously required to be tracked.

One councilmember said, before the vote, Adams and other administration officials floated restoring cuts in an area important to the lawmaker in exchange for a no vote on the legislation. The councilmember spoke to Gothamist on the condition their name and details of the mayor’s offer not be disclosed because it was a private conversation.

Another Council source who also spoke on the condition of anonymity out of respect for private conversations with lawmakers said several councilmembers told the source they were approached by Adams, who offered them funding for their pet initiatives or inquired about what kind of funding they wanted.

The mayor and Council have been locked in a bitter battle over recent budget cuts. In November, Adams ordered broad cuts to city services, including schools, libraries and police, and has repeatedly said more cuts are in store because of financial pressures the city faces from the migrant crisis, expiring federal pandemic aid and slowing tax revenue growth.

Councilmembers responded by holding an 11-hour hearing this month where some grilled budget officials over whether the cuts were necessary, pointing to recent revenue projections that were less dire than initially forecast. But as mayor, Adams retains significant control over spending reductions throughout the fiscal year and will propose the city’s next budget in the coming months.

Administration officials estimate the city faces a $7 billion budget deficit, but a recent report by the Independent Budget Office, the city’s fiscal watchdog, found a much smaller gap of $1.8 billion next year.

Adams faces heavy criticism over the cuts from lawmakers and residents alike, with a Quinnipiac poll earlier this month finding the spending reductions were a factor in his abysmal approval ratings — the lowest of any NYC mayor in the history of the poll.

The mayor has blamed the cuts on the federal government’s alleged failure to provide sufficient funding and policy responses to the migrant crisis.

Archived at https://web.archive.org/web/20240103122115/https://gothamist.com/news/nyc-councilmember-says-adams-tried-to-stop-policing-bill-by-horse-trading-budget-cuts-it-failed

e; This NYT investigative piece on NYC’s response to migrants seems related,

“The city has signed more than $2 billion in no-bid contracts, some with vendors that have been accused of abusing migrants. It has paid more than twice as much to house each migrant household as it did to house a homeless family before the crisis.” (archived).

  • SCB@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Anyone who has been following this guy have a link for me on how the fuck this dude got elected when everyone seems to hate everything he does, especially given his employment history?

    I don’t get it at all.

    • markr@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      The other major candidates all wanted to reform NYC’s hideous police force. Obviously Adams ran on ‘but the crimes’ and as usual in our idiocracy the people of NYC fell for it again.

    • circuscritic@lemmy.ca
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      11 months ago

      He’s very Trumpian and like Trump he exists beyond the realm of normal political constraints. Read the New Yorker story on him and you’ll realize that he lives closer to the realms of dieties and prophets.

      He isn’t tethered to reality like a normal person, he’s untethered and therefore free, at least unless the DOJ locks him up. Time will tell.

    • RubberElectrons@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Having left NYC for California several years ago, I’d really like to know as well. We were in times square this new years that just passed, soooo many cops in their cars just blaring the horn and effectively driving in circular routes, besides the idiots holding coffee and chatting.

      It’s obvious all these pigs are milking the city for some OT. Fuck the NYPD and fuck Eric Adams.

      • tartan@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        You know what REALLY bugs me about the NYPD? Whenever there’s any big event like the NYE you just mentioned, they always put those fucking metal barriers up EVERYWHERE. Some places I get, you have to separate say a parade route from the stands, fine. But they close off random bits of sidewalk, or funnel everyone through a tiny opening, so there’s always huge clumps of humanity. Last year in Brooklyn, for July 4th, they made a fucking maze of barriers and they let too many people in so it was jam packed, you couldn’t move in any direction. People were getting crushed against the barriers and couldn’t get out, we were all screaming at them to move the fucking barriers and they just stood there, hands on their guns, like the cowardly assholes they are.

        So fucking dangerous, it’s by sheer dumb luck that no one died there (afaik).

        And all of it is completely pointless. I was just in Toronto for the NYE fireworks. No cops, no barriers, tons of people, and it was completely fine.

        Guess they need to spend all that extra budget they got from defunding the library on something. Might as well be barriers and big SUVs, ey? Fuckers.

    • HobbitFoot
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      11 months ago

      He won the Democratic primary at a time when there was a slight increase in crime and visible homelessness people due to Covid as the law and order candidate. It turned out “defund the police” was a bad slogan.