New York Post

Keeping Corruption Consistent

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Say this for Mayor de Blasio’s pay-to-play scandals: At least they follow a regular pattern. The latest dirt comes from a former deputy commission­er — winner of an ethics-in-government award! — who intends to sue the city, saying he was fired because he objected in two cases where City Hall helped grease the bureaucrat­ic skids for fat-cat donors.

Ricardo Morales says he got the ax after objecting to Team de Blasio’s “lack of truthfulne­ss” in lifting a deed restrictio­n, letting the owners of a Lower East Side nursing home reap a $72 million profit.

He also cites City Hall’s objections to his efforts to collect $747,000 in back rent owed by a well-heeled restaurant owner, Harendra Singh, who also got top-level help on a deal to save him millions more.

As we noted back in March, Morales makes a pretty good case that his firing (after 22 years in city government) was meant as a warning to other whistleblo­wers.

The moment he took office, de Blasio started doing favors for donors that go far beyond what regular New Yorkers can expect.

Like Roberta Kaplan, who maxed out as a de Blasio contributo­r and got super-fast service (just 24 hours) after a water-main break knocked out her utilities.

Or Joseph Dussich, who after eight years of trying suddenly got City Hall business once he gave $100,000 to de Blasio’s now-defunct Campaign for One New York.

Meanwhile, we’re still waiting for that long-promised list from City Hall of bigbucks donors who didn’t get favors.

De Blasio’s right about there being two New Yorks — but it’s one for his well-heeled benefactor­s and another for everyone else.

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