New York Post

PILIP VS. COUNCIL ‘CHAOS’

Paper-pushes back on cop-report law

- By CARL CAMPANILE

Republican­s are already hammering Democratic rivals over the controvers­ial bill passed Wednesday by the City Council that would require street cops to file reports on millions of minor interactio­ns with the public.

In the special election to replace expelled ex-Rep George Santos, GOP congressio­nal candidate Mazi Pilip came out swinging Thursday, trying to hang the measure around the neck of Democratic opponent Tom Suozzi.

“Suozzi is part of the progressiv­e Democratic Party that is encouragin­g crime and not protecting the American people,” Pilip (inset) told The Post.

Pilip, an Ethiopian native who served in the Israeli military, is facing off against Suozzi in the Feb. 13 special election to succeed the exin pelled Santos the 3rd Congressio­nal District covering Long Island and parts of Eastern Queens. It will be a nationally watched race, a bellwether to see which party wins control of the House of Representa­tives

in the 2024 fall elections. The council passed a law Wednesday that would force cops to file reports for every streetstop encounter they carry out — even the low-level ones. “This is the agenda of the Democratic Party, of Gov. Hochul, Suozzi. It’s chaos. They’re creating a mess,” said Pilip, a Nassau County legislator. “This proposal takes power away from law enforcemen­t. It makes it more difficult for police officers to do their job. It’s unnecessar­y. It creates another layer of bureaucrac­y and doesn’t help anyone.” Mayor Adams also opposes the measure and has threatened to veto it. However, the bill passed with a veto-proof 35-9 majority with three abstention­s, and soursaid ces that the administra­is tion unlikely to change any yes votes to no in the case of a veto. The Suozzi campaign, meanwhile, said Pilip’s attack smacks of desperatio­n. “Mazi Pilip has a dismal record on addressing crime. Since she has been in office Nassau County has seen a 41% increase in crime, while when Tom Suozzi was County Executive Nassau

County enjoyed historic lows in crime,” said Suozzi campaign senior adviser Kim Devlin.

‘Desperate act’

“To try to attach Suozzi to extremists in any political party is absurd and should be seen as the desperate act it is by his inexperien­ced opponent,” added Devlin.

Suozzi, considered a moderate Democrat, previously served in Congress but relinquish­ed his House seat to run a Democratic primary against Gov. Hochul.

Hochul crushed Suozzi in the primary. He ran to the right of her on public safety during that campaign, accusing her of being soft on crime.

Meanwhile, Rep. Nicole Malliotaki­s (R-Staten Island/Brooklyn) rapped her potential Democratic rival in the 2024 elections, Councilman Justin Brannan, for voting for the police reporting bill.

“The out-of-touch City Council, including Justin Brannan, keeps ignoring law enforcemen­t’s warnings and New Yorkers’ concerns about crime and instead passes bill after bill that further erodes public safety and quality of life,” Malliotaki­s said.

She said that Brannan and the council want an “understaff­ed NYPD to push paperwork instead of patrolling our streets . . . it’s clear City Council Democrats have gone from defunding our police to dismantlin­g the department.”

Brannan shot back, “I enjoy living rent-free in Nicole’s head but if she really cared about New York City she’d worry less about me and get a bill done to fix our country’s broken immigratio­n system. The 118th Congress is on track to be one of the most unproducti­ve in modern history. Nicole needs to focus on doing her damn job.”

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? BUREAUCRAC­Y: The City Council passed a law requiring the NYPD to file reports on all interactio­ns with the public, even minor ones.
BUREAUCRAC­Y: The City Council passed a law requiring the NYPD to file reports on all interactio­ns with the public, even minor ones.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States