New York Post

Eric Adams Keeps Speaking Sense

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New York’s likely next mayor, Eric Adams, is serving up some much-needed common sense. On Monday, he politely but firmly differed with Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-Bx/Queens) on “Tax the Rich.”

“I think AOC and I believe we both want the same things, we just have different pathways to get there,” he said when asked on CNBC about the notorious dress she wore to last week’s Met Gala. “Her mother was a domestic worker, or did things on that level, [and] so was my mother.

“But when you talk about just blanketly saying tax rich in this city, . . . 65,000 [people] pay 51 percent of our income taxes . . . . And if you say to those 65,000 to leave, then we’re not going to have the firefighte­rs, the teachers, all of those basic things.”

Speaking to advocacy group InformNYC via Zoom earlier this month, Adams said he’d ditch Mayor de Blasio’s plan to take oversight of 5,000-plus school-safety agents away from the NYPD, claiming police control creates a hostile school atmosphere.

But Adams, a former NYPD captain, vociferous­ly disagrees, noting that school security often requires dealing with serious violence and misconduct issues. He’ll add new training, change the uniforms and improve coordinati­on with school officials; that’s it.

On CNBC, Adams rightly labeled the city Department of Education “dysfunctio­nal.” “Sixty-five percent of black and brown children don’t meet proficienc­y in the Department of Education,” he said. “Our school system is dysfunctio­nal, and we have to stop acting like it’s not. We sometimes have to call a thing the thing and be honest about the basic essentials.”

Such sound talk delivered in a non-combative way is not only refreshing but bodes well for actually bringing New York City the changes it so desperatel­y needs.

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