New
Yorkers concerned by mayor's rift with police, poll shows
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[January 16, 2015]
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A majority of
New York City residents are concerned by the unusually deep rift that
has formed between Mayor Bill de Blasio and the city's police
department, according to a poll released on Thursday, with 77 percent
saying the relationship is bad.
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But New Yorkers are divided on the question of whom to blame.
Forty-five percent say it is the mayor's fault, while 43 percent say
it is the police's, according to the Quinnipiac University Poll.
The fraying relationship has become the most serious crisis of de
Blasio's first year in office. Amid police anger over the mayor's
qualified support for some of the police's fiercest critics, the
number of arrests and court summonses plummeted for two weeks in
late December as the nation's largest police department embarked on
what city leaders called a slowdown.
The poll suggested many New Yorkers have become impatient with some
of the most prominent figures involved in the acrimony, including
the mayor; the Rev. Al Sharpton, the civil rights activist who has
been critical of the police; Patrick Lynch, the head of the city's
largest police union; and the rank-and-file police officers who
recently took to turning their back on the mayor.
Just over three-quarters of New Yorkers thought Lynch's recent
remarks - that there was "blood on the hands" of the mayor after two
officers were shot dead in an ambush attack - were too extreme. Only
18 percent said they viewed the union boss favorably.
Just over two-thirds of New Yorkers disapproved of the hundreds of
police officers who turned their backs in disdain when the mayor
spoke at the funerals of those officers last month, while 57 percent
thought officers who deliberately avoided making arrests should be
punished.
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A little over half of New Yorkers think Sharpton is a mostly
negative force in the city, and 37 percent thought he had too much
influence with the mayor, whom he has often appeared alongside.
Feelings on de Blasio's handling of the tensions were mixed, with 41
percent saying they approved the way he was handling the police
department compared to 52 percent who disapproved.
The poll was based on interviews with 1,182 New York City registered
voters over the last week and had a margin of error of 2.9
percentage points, Quinnipiac said.
(Reporting by Jonathan Allen; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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