New York Daily News

Adams rips Council progressiv­es, who slap back

- BY CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T

Anti-police progressiv­es have “hijacked” the Democratic Party — and their ranks include City Council members who are trying to push the chamber further to the left on public safety issues, Mayor Adams claimed Thursday.

Adams leveled the blistering charge at his fellow New York Democrats in an early morning appearance on CNN after being asked who he was referencin­g when he said a day earlier that “woke” activists have taken control of the party.

“Right here in this city, we have a group that is calling for removing members of their own caucus if they don’t sign a pledge to defund the police,” Adams replied. “That is not who we are as Democrats, and I’m going to continue to stand and state that we are pro-public safety, and we’re pro-proper policing.”

The moderate mayor was referring to the Council’s Progressiv­e Caucus, which is undergoing a contentiou­s reorganiza­tion effort.

The caucus’ leadership recently asked its 35 members to sign a “Statement of Principles” if they want to stay in the caucus. In addition to commitment­s to seek more funding for affordable housing, education and social services, the document says members must “do everything we can to reduce the size and scope of the NYPD.”

The police reduction pledge has unnerved some members, and is likely to result in as many as 10 of them resigning from the caucus, as first reported by the Daily News earlier this week.

Adams, a former NYPD captain who has feuded with members of his own party on a bevy of issues lately, especially public safety, suggested in his morning TV appearance that left-wing Democrats like the Council members behind the caucus ultimatum aren’t actually progressiv­e.

“What has happened in this country, the numerical minority, they have hijacked the term progressiv­e,” he said.

“We are not for defunding the police, we’re not for attacking businesses. We’re for jobs, we’re for growth,” he added.

The four top members of the Progressiv­e Caucus pushed back against Adams’ critique of their platform.

“Unlike Mayor Adams, we do not believe the NYPD should be conducting homeless sweeps and involuntar­ily hospitaliz­ing those experienci­ng mental health crises,” Council members Shahana Hanif of

Brooklyn, Lincoln Restler of Brooklyn, Carmen De La Rosa of Manhattan and Jennifer Gutierrez of Brooklyn said in a joint statement to The News.

We believe in actually investing in the services that keep New Yorkers safe and address the root causes of poverty.”

Queens Councilwom­an Tiffany Caban, a democratic socialist who’s also part of the Progressiv­e Caucus, said it’s actually Adams’ agenda that poses a threat to public safety.

“Nothing says being ‘pro public-safety’ like defunding our schools, libraries, and social services,” Caban wrote on Twitter, referencin­g Adams’ preliminar­y budget, which proposes cuts to some social services while keeping NYPD spending effectivel­y flat.

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