New York Post

One Way To Earn Defunding

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City Council Speaker Corey Johnson says he didn’t kill funding for the activist group VOCAL-NY because several of its members and staff targeted his boyfriend’s home for a protest, and we have no cause to doubt him.

But it would be ample reason to cut off funds. Heck, targeting CoJo’s own residence, or any decision-maker’s, would be enough.

Public officials still have a right to privacy, no matter how sanctimoni­ously self-righteous their critics may become. Besieging their homes is an assault on civil society and democratic norms.

That also applies to the demonstrat­ions on Sen. Chuck Schumer’s street and the recent protest at Police Commission­er Dermot Shea’s residence. It’s all nothing less than an attempt at mob rule.

Certainly, no one taking a public protest to a private residence should get a dime of taxpayer money.

VOCAL-NY led protests as Johnson negotiated the new city budget, demonstrat­ions that culminated in the Occupy City Hall encampment. And VOCAL staff joined a march to the home of Johnson’s S.O. — a protest that saw vandalism of the building (which the boyfriend doesn’t own) and ringing buzzers in the middle of the night.

Johnson was rightly angry: “He’s not a public figure; I am.”

But there’s no clear sign that’s why the council axed a previously-OK’d $2.25 million for VOCAL to buy a new building in Brooklyn: Lots of grants vanished as the city closed its coronaviru­s-caused $9 billion shortfall.

VOCAL claims CoJo has attacked “our First Amendment rights to speak truth to power” and threatens to sue. Good luck.

Nobody has a right to “a permanent home to build political power” at taxpayer expense — and VOCAL’s vile behavior has forfeited any reason to indulge its complaints.

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