Adams is bombarded with scandal and Lander opts for boring territory

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Sep 17, 2024 View in browser
 
POLITICO New York Playbook PM

By Jeff Coltin and Jason Beeferman

Presented by 

Swedish Match

Mayor Eric Adams and senior administration officials hold an in-person media availability. City Hall. Tuesday, September 17, 2024.

Mayor Eric Adams walks into City Hall's Blue Room to take questions from reporters Tuesday. | Ed Reed/Mayoral Photography Office

While Mayor Eric Adams faced a barrage of questions about the scandals engulfing City Hall, a leading reelection challenger chose to focus on the decidedly drier topic of procurement reform.

“This is a moment of crisis, and we should use that moment to make real changes,” said City Comptroller Brad Lander, a far-left Democrat running to replace Adams next year. “What's happening across the street at City Hall is deadly serious.”

The atmosphere was indeed serious, as Adams repeatedly defended his embattled aide and longtime friend Tim Pearson amid growing calls for his ouster.

Members of his inner circle and the oft-loyal New York Post editorial board are pressuring the mayor to fire Pearson, who is facing accusations of workplace sexual harassment, on top of having his phone seized by federal investigators this month.

And though he did his best to dodge questions on the federal investigations that have already led to the departure of top appointees, Adams, too, copped to Lander’s wording of an administration in crisis.

“Every mayor I have communicated with says there are moments of crisis in an administration,” Adams said at his weekly press availability at City Hall when asked about Lander’s comment.. “I can manage no matter what we are facing. Because I have one mission. My North Star is improving the city that I love.”

But Adams couldn’t hide his disdain for Lander.

“He said that yesterday, or Jan. 3, 2022? Because he’s been saying that just about every other day since we’ve been in office,” Adams said through laughs, referring to the first week of his term. “You lose the credibility of your message when your message doesn’t change no matter what the state is.”

Recent events would substantiate Lander’s assertion. In the last few weeks federal agents have raided the homes or seized the cell phones of at least five top Adams aides. His police commissioner was forced out. His city lawyer abruptly quit. Two fire chiefs were arrested. Some of his most loyal allies are privately voicing deep concern.

Over at the comptroller’s office, Lander sought to distinguish himself from the chaos surrounding Adams by releasing a set of transparency recommendations to improve the city’s procurement process.

Federal investigators are reportedly looking into city contracts awarded to private firms for which the brother of two city officials were unregistered lobbyists.

“It’s already illegal to have an unregistered lobbying agency lobbying the agency led by your brother, but there are many areas where our practices, like not registering with subcontractors, have created gaping holes through which corruption seeps,” Lander said.

Lander, who declined to call on Adams to resign, said as mayor he would have fired anyone under FBI investigation.

He also criticized the mayor’s initial promise to work with the comptroller’s office to promote transparency.

“You could find a lot of places where he said, at the beginning of the administration, ‘This is going to be the most transparent administration in history,’” Lander said. “Very, very little of that has come to fruition.” — Jeff Coltin and Jason Beeferman

 

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From the Capitol

A photo composite shows logos of X, Snapchat, Facebook and TikTok.

Some LGBTQ groups are rallying against a measure that aims to protect minors from harmful content on social media platforms. | AP File Photo

SOCIAL OBLIGATIONS: LGBTQ+ organizations in New York are worried about a federal proposal to regulate social media for child users — a fight that has reverberated in Albany and Washington.

A House panel on Wednesday is set to mark up a bill that’s meant to create guidelines to shield minors from harmful content online.

But the measure, known as the Kids Online Safety Act, has come under scrutiny from LGBTQ+ groups who believe the bill could limit protected speech and restrict access to important information.

A letter obtained by Playbook sent by groups that include Harlem Pride, Niagara Pride and the Pride Center of Staten Island to members of the state’s delegation to Congress pointed to the use of online resources for vulnerable groups — especially those seeking reproductive care in the wake of the Dobbs Supreme Court decision.

“Consequently, social media platforms have become a place to find support and invaluable resources, especially for those who live in states with policies hostile to a woman’s right to choose,” the organizations wrote in the letter.

The debate over how kids are exposed to content on social media platforms played out at the state level this year.

Gov. Kathy Hochul and state lawmakers agreed to provisions meant to protect the data of child users as well as block social media platforms from using algorithmic-based feeds, which officials have said can be harmful to kids.

Social media regulation — and a broader skepticism of the power of tech companies — has been a rare area of bipartisan agreement for both parties, making the challenge facing companies like Meta, TikTok and Google all the more challenging. — Nick Reisman

 

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CASH UP: Local sales tax collections are on the rise.

State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli’s office reports that local tax collections in the state are up 3.8 percent in August when compared to the same time last year. And 45 of 57 New York counties saw year-over-year increases.

“While this growth is certainly encouraging, local officials must keep in mind sales tax revenues can be volatile and budget cautiously,” DiNapoli said. Jason Beeferman

STABILIZIN’: Attorney General Tish James announced that over 250 apartments were returned to rent stabilized status after her office found the units were illegally deregulated.

Forty-three additional apartments that had their rents illegally increased will also see a rent reduction after James’ action.

“The previous owners of these buildings broke the law to pad their pockets and denied hardworking families a rightful home,” she said in a statement. “Because we were able to return these units to the rent regulation program, more than 300 families will be able to access the affordable housing they deserve.” — Jason Beeferman

 

A message from Swedish Match:

RESPONSIBLE SOCIAL MEDIA IS PART OF OUR 10-POINT ACTION PLAN.
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As the manufacturer of ZYN and other nicotine products, Swedish Match strives to ensure our products are accessible only to legal-age nicotine users. We believe social media needs to do its part too.

Our comprehensive 10-point action plan covers responsible marketing, compliance, enforcement, and innovation. We use age-verification systems like DoubleVerify to ensure our social media ads are only directed to adult nicotine users 21+. Additionally, we prohibit the use of social media influencers across our owned channels, and we routinely ask social platforms to take down inappropriate user-generated content.

Our actions add up. See the actions we’re taking at 21plusresponsibly.com.

 
IN OTHER NEWS...

OH, BABY, GIVE ME ONE MORE CHANCE: Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi went out of her way to blame Gov. Kathy Hochul for losses in battleground districts. Now Hochul is flexing the state Democratic party muscle while limiting damage to her own brand. (The New York Times)

A MAYOR’S LOYALTY: Adams commitment to embattled aide Winnie Greco, even as she remains under investigation, reveals his commitment to pacts of loyalty with longtime confidants. (THE CITY)

HAND EM’ OVER: A judge has ordered the Adams’ administration to turn over any text messages it has with the owner of Adams’ favorite nightclub, Zero Bond, after the news outlet Hell Gate filed a public information request for it. (Hell Gate)

Missed this morning’s New York Playbook? We forgive you. Read it here.

 

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