Spurning liberals, Adams wins NYC's Democratic mayoral race with
'blue-collar' appeal
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[July 08, 2021]
By Joseph Ax
(Reuters) -Eric Adams, the Brooklyn borough
president and a former police captain, won the Democratic nomination for
New York City mayor as a moderate who vowed to improve public safety and
give voice to working-class residents.
The message resonated in the pandemic-weary city, where media reports of
a spike in shootings drove crime to the top of voters' concerns even as
New York confronts deep-seated issues including wealth inequality, a
lack of affordable housing and struggling public schools.
Adams' two closest rivals, former city sanitation chief Kathryn Garcia
and civil rights lawyer Maya Wiley, conceded the race on Wednesday, a
day after newly released vote totals from the June 22 election showed
him maintaining a narrow lead.
Adams' victory makes him the strong favorite in November's election in
the heavily Democratic city - and could give national Democrats some
signs of where voters stand as the party strives to maintain a fragile
alliance between progressives and centrists in Washington.
Adams has been dismissive of critics of his agenda on the left whom he
says do not speak for mainstream Democrats.
"I say that it's time for us to stop believing that we should have the
right tweets. We should have the right safe streets," Adams told CNN on
Wednesday.
Adams spent less time campaigning in Manhattan than some of his rivals
in the crowded race, instead targeting minority and working-class
neighborhoods in the four outer boroughs - Brooklyn, the Bronx, Queens
and Staten Island, all of which he carried.
Adams centered his campaign on fighting crime. But as a Black man who
portrayed himself as a "blue-collar" New Yorker, he also argued that
working-class Democrats had been ignored by the party's more liberal
wing, including current Mayor Bill de Blasio's administration.
"He was talking about issues that resonated with them," said Christina
Greer, a professor at Fordham University who followed the race closely.
"For a lot of people, this past year and a half has been – putting COVID
aside – economically just devastating."
Adams prevailed with a coalition that resembled, in some ways, the
voters who helped elevate President Joe Biden to the Democratic
nomination last year, particularly his support among more moderate Black
voters.
ADAMS' AGENDA
Perhaps no issue has animated Democrats more in the last year than
policing, after the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis
sparked months of demonstrations across the country.
Unlike Wiley, a liberal who favored diverting $1 billion from the police
budget to social services, Adams bluntly rejected the "defund the
police" movement as a product of left-wing activists.
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Eric Adams, Brooklyn borough president and Democratic candidate for
New York City Mayor, speaks during a news conference outside
Brooklyn borough hall in Brooklyn, New York, U.S., June 24, 2021.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo
As a police officer who had a reputation for speaking
out against racial injustice, however, Adams appeared to have
credibility with voters when he insisted that he could
simultaneously increase police resources while reducing systemic
bias.
During the campaign, he emphasized his humble upbringing in Brooklyn
and Queens, including getting beaten by police officers as a
teenager.
Adams, who secured key union backing, is seen as labor-friendly. He
has promised to bring diversity and reform to the senior ranks of
the police department. He has also said he will work to connect more
low-income residents with city services they are eligible for but do
not use.
He has expressed support for charter schools and selective schools,
despite concerns that the latter exacerbate racial segregation. He
has proposed creating a permanent remote learning option - even
after the pandemic - to allow students access to better teachers.
Progressives worry he will cater too much to the real estate
industry, a powerful lobby that gave generously to his campaign.
Adams' win could be seen as a rebuke to the city's ascendant left
wing, with Wiley finishing third despite backing from liberal
luminaries such as U.S. Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who
represents parts of the Bronx and Queens.
But Sochie Nnaemeka, the executive director of the liberal Working
Families Party that endorsed Wiley, noted that more progressive
candidates won other key races, including city comptroller, public
advocate and Manhattan district attorney.
"There are bold governing progressives surrounding him on all sides
ready to push for more," she said.
Adams has not been shy about suggesting that his triumph can serve
as a blueprint for national Democrats. When he built an initial lead
in the vote on Election Day, he warned Democrats would face an
uphill battle in next year's congressional midterm elections if they
did not heed the lessons of his campaign.
"We have reached the point where we are allowing the dialogue to get
in the way of moving us in the right direction," he told CNN on
Wednesday.
(Reporting by Joseph Ax; Additional reporting by Doina Chiacu;
Editing by Colleen Jenkins, and Bill Berkrot)
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