New York Daily News

WHAT ABOUT ALL THOSE GUNS, RON?

Adams says DeSantis talks tough on crime, but not on weapons

- BY MICHAEL GARTLAND

Mayor Adams kept his war of words with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis alive and kicking Tuesday when he slammed the possible GOP presidenti­al candidate for not backing up his tough-oncrime talk with a more forceful stance on gun control.

Adams latest barbs against DeSantis, who visited Staten Island to speak at a law enforcemen­t confab Monday, were based on what the mayor described as a “philosophi­cal disagreeme­nt.”

“All of us believe that people should have the right to safety, and I support that and I’m happy to know that he believes that as well,” Adams said, referring to DeSantis. “But you have to back that up and not support the over-proliferat­ion of guns in our country that is harming far too many New Yorkers.”

Adams, who has made getting illegal guns off the streets a priority, voiced concerns last year about a Supreme Court decision striking down a century-old New York State concealed-carry handgun law and predicted at the time that an uptick in people carrying guns would make fighting crime in the city more difficult.

DeSantis, who’s expected to run for the Republican presidenti­al nomination against former President Donald Trump and former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, supports a bill now being debated in the Florida statehouse that would allow people to carry concealed guns without a permit. Under current Florida law, people who want to tote concealed firearms legally must get a permit from a state agency.

Adams’ latest broadside against DeSantis comes a day after they and their teams traded attacks over social media and after DeSantis slammed New York State’s bail laws for not allowing judges to consider a defendant’s dangerousn­ess when setting bail. Adams, who has been critical of reforms made to the state’s bail laws in 2019, has pushed for them to be revised.

DeSantis on Monday also made a play at luring New York cops to the Sunshine State.

“If you’re disenchant­ed, if you don’t think things are going to turn around wherever you are, not just in New York or wherever, just know that there’s a state that’s doing it right,” DeSantis said Monday to a crowd of law enforcemen­t officers. “There’s a

state that will value your service.”

Adams maintained Tuesday that morale within the NYPD is now good — despite previous comments that he “inherited” a police department with low morale from former Mayor Bill de Blasio and a rate of resignatio­ns unparallel­ed at any time within the past two decades.

He declined to immediatel­y set a number on how many cops the city needs to add to its ranks and suggested that Florida’s entreaties to hire away city cops amounts to a form of flattery.

“Everybody’s going to try to get a New York City police officer to come to their municipali­ty. This is the best-trained police department. A police officer in New York City can go run some of the counties’ police department­s because of their level of training and experience,” he said. “People are always going to try to grab our guys.”

But Adams also noted that changes are afoot when it comes to recruiting candidates to join the NYPD and that the city’s efforts have fallen flat in the past, presumably thanks to de Blasio.

“We’re now creating a different way for the exam to take place. We were taking too long to do the exams, and we have to have a real recruitmen­t plan,” he said. “The recruitmen­t in our city historical­ly has been waiting till people take an exam, and we were not competitiv­e enough and ... we’re changing that.”

Those efforts, he added, will include organizing hiring halls and recruiting on college campuses.

But Adams did not directly address remarks from DeSantis campaign spokeswoma­n Christina Pushaw, who on Monday pointed to the outflow of New Yorkers from the city in recent years.

“Here’s reality: More Americans fled NYC than any other metro area last year,” Pushaw tweeted. “More Americans moved to Florida than any other state. You know this, Mayor Adams, and you’ve talked (accurately) about crime pushing people out of NYC. Florida’s crime rate meanwhile is at a 50 year low. Maybe it’s you who can learn from @ RonDeSanti­sFL?”

Instead of answering a question about that out-migration during a City Hall press conference Tuesday, Adams focused more on what DeSantis decided not to talk about during his Monday sojourn to Staten Island.

The Republican governor did not mention the laws he’s backed to make it harder for women to access abortion, or the bills he’s signed banning books about African-American history in schools, or his efforts to outlaw teachers from discussing sexual orientatio­n through the third grade.

“There’s a qualitativ­e difference from what we believe here — our governor, what I believe — and what he believes. We don’t believe in treating people differentl­y if they’re a part of the LGBTQ+ community. We just don’t believe in the things that he believes in,” Adams said.

“We don’t believe in using asylum seekers as props, sending them around the country. So there’s a philosophi­cal disagreeme­nt, and as he came to the city, I wanted him to understand this is a city where we have a different philosophy.”

 ?? ??
 ?? AP; BARRY WILLIAMS FOR NYDN ?? Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (main photo) took some broadsides from Mayor Adams (inset) on Tuesday as they continued verbal jousting stirred by DeSantis’ Monday visit to Staten Island.
AP; BARRY WILLIAMS FOR NYDN Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (main photo) took some broadsides from Mayor Adams (inset) on Tuesday as they continued verbal jousting stirred by DeSantis’ Monday visit to Staten Island.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States