Mayoral transition in
Accra, Ghana After getting elected, Adams reconfirmed his pledge to reinstate a
plainclothes police unit that deals with gun violence. Some
Black Lives Matter activists denounced the effort, but Adams labeled the behavior "
grandstanding." On November 4, 2021, Adams tweeted that he planned to take his first three paychecks as Mayor in
bitcoin and that New York City would be "the center of the cryptocurrency industry and other fast-growing, innovative industries." Adams announced he would bring back the "gifted and talented" school program, improve relations with New York State, review property taxes, and implement agency budget cuts ranging from 3% to 5%. On October 15, 2024, Adams appointed Chauncey Parker as the new Deputy Mayor for Public Safety.
Opinion polling Shortly after Adams's inauguration, polls found that he had a 63% approval rating. On June 7, 2022, a poll conducted by
Siena College, in conjunction with
Spectrum News and its
NY1 affiliate, found that Adams had an approval rating of 29%. The poll also found that 76% of New Yorkers worried they could be a victim of a violent crime. A December 2023 poll published by
Quinnipiac University Polling Institute showed Adams's approval rating at 28% among registered voters, which at the time was the lowest approval of any mayor since the institution began polling in the city in 1996. In October 2024, in the midst of
multiple investigations into wrongdoing, a
Marist College poll found Adams's approval rating to be just 26%. It further found that 65% of respondents believed Adams had committed illegal acts, and 69% thought he should resign; if he did not resign, 63% expressed a desire for governor
Hochul to remove him. By March 2025, another Quinnipiac University poll found that Adams's approval rating had fallen to just 20%.
Tenure First 100 days Adams took office shortly after the
New Year's Eve Ball Drop at midnight in
Times Square, holding a picture of his recently deceased mother, Dorothy, while being sworn in. He became the city's second mayor of African American descent to hold the position after
David Dinkins left office in 1993. and Governor
Kathy Hochul in February 2022 Shortly after becoming Mayor, Adams sought a waiver from the
Conflicts of Interest Board to hire his brother, Bernard, for a $210,000 paying job in the NYPD, where he would serve as the head of his personal security detail. Bernard started working the job on December 30, 2021, two days before Adams was inaugurated as Mayor. Adams said white supremacy and anarchists are on the rise and "suggested that he can trust no one in the police department as much as he can his own kin." He was also criticized for his hiring of
Philip Banks III, a former NYPD commander, to serve as deputy mayor for public safety. Banks had been the subject of a federal investigation by the
FBI in 2014, the same year he resigned from the police force. In response to the fire, Adams announced that a law requiring self-closing doors to prevent smoke and fires from spreading throughout apartment buildings would be enforced. However, his administration faced criticism for its slow response in distributing disaster funds to those impacted by the fire. The unit was officially revived on March 16, 2022. Amid the crime spree, President
Joe Biden and
Attorney General Merrick Garland visited New York City and vowed to work with Adams to crack down on
homemade firearms, which lack traceable serial numbers and can be acquired without background checks. Throughout Adams's first year in office, crime continued to rise, resulting in both
The New York Times and the
New York Post labeling his plans as "ineffectual". Later in February, Adams implemented a zero-tolerance policy for homeless people sleeping in subway cars or subway stations. Police officers, assisted by mental health professionals, were tasked with removing homeless people from the subway system and directing them to homeless shelters or mental health facilities. The plan has been met with criticism from some activists. The Adams administration also took a stand against homeless encampments. In the first three months of Adams's tenure, more than 300 homeless encampments had been declared and cleared. To track these encampments, the Adams administration directed NYPD officers to report information on homeless encampments to the Department of Homeless services, who is then tasked with responding to them within a week. Adams cited the need for in-person workers in the city who would patronize local businesses, saying "I need the accountant in the office so that they can go to the local restaurant so that we can make sure that everyone is employed." While Adams was quarantined, a man
shot 10 people on a
New York City Subway train in Brooklyn. Adams worked virtually to issue a response to the attack and criticized the national "overproliferation" of guns as being responsible for gun violence. Following the shooting, he suggested the implementation of metal detectors to screen riders entering the subway. In June 2022, Adams unveiled his administration's "comprehensive blueprint" for
affordable housing. However, the plan was critiqued for being too vague as it did not propose
rezoning to build more housing, and did not contain any actual estimate of how many new housing units would be built. After about one month, the tent city was closed and the migrants were moved to hotels in
downtown Manhattan. , MTA Chair
Janno Lieber and Police Commissioner
Keechant Sewell on October 22, 2024 In late November, as part of his campaign to combat crime and clear homeless encampments in New York City, Adams announced an effort to allow the police to commit mentally ill people to psychiatric institutions involuntarily. The policy states that those hospitalized should only be discharged once they are stable and connected to ongoing care. The policy will be enforced by police, care workers, and medical officials, who will be tasked with identifying those who have a mental illness and who are unable to care for themselves. The policy applies to those who pose no direct danger to themselves or others. In December 2022, Adams, Reverends
Al Sharpton and
Conrad Tillard,
Vista Equity Partners CEO and
Carnegie Hall Chairman
Robert F. Smith, World Values Network founder and CEO Rabbi
Shmuley Boteach, and
Elisha Wiesel joined to host 15 Days of Light, celebrating
Hanukkah and
Kwanzaa in a unifying holiday ceremony at Carnegie Hall. Adams said: "social media is having a major impact on the hatred that we are seeing in our city and in this country... We should bring social media companies to the table to highlight the racist and antisemitic words being spread on their platforms."
2023 In late February 2023, at the annual interfaith breakfast, Adams said he disagreed with the notion of
separation of church and state. During the speech. Adams said, "Don't tell me about no separation of church and state. State is the body. Church is the heart. You take the heart out of the body, the body dies." Additionally, Adams said he disagreed with the
Supreme Court's 1962 decision in
Engel v. Vitale, which held school prayer to be unconstitutional. Adams added, "When we took prayers out of schools, guns came into schools..." and Governor Hochul in September 2023 In March 2023, as a result of the high office vacancy rates, the
New York City Department of City Planning advanced plans to
convert vacant office buildings into "affordable" apartments. Adams elicited backlash after proposing "dormitory style accommodations" and declaring that apartments did not require windows. In 2022 and 2023, Adams and the Municipal Labor Committee (MLC), which is led by the presidents of two sizeable municipal labor unions,
District Council 37 (DC 37) and the
United Federation of Teachers (UFT), agreed on a deal that would move City retirees from traditional
Medicare to a new, privately run
Medicare Advantage plan. Although the MLC comprises the leadership of every municipal union, MLC voting is proportional to the union's size, giving DC 37 and the UFT more than enough votes to prevail over unions opposed to the deal. Many City retirees have protested the agreement between the Mayor and the MLC. politician
Oliver Dowden in October 2023 in November 2023 As mayor, when
Yom HaAtzma'ut fell on April 25, Adams announced the night-time lighting of City Hall and other municipal buildings blue and white, identifying the assessment of the
modern state of Israel's history as "three-quarters of a century promoting peace and security in the Middle East and hope and opportunity across the globe" as "stand[ing] side by side" with New York's Jewish community. In 2023, the Adams administration spent $50,000 to relocate 114 migrant households who entered New York City from the Mexico-United States southern border to countries like China and other states within the United States. They were resettled during the years of 2021 and 2022. The migrants were seeking
political asylum. Adams vetoed a bill to increase penalties for zoning violations in New York. In July 2023, during the
New York City migrant housing crisis, Adams argued that New York City was running out of room and resources to provide for the influx of roughly 100,000 migrants from the southern border. He said, "Our cup has basically runneth over. We have no more room in the city." In August 2023, a lawyer for Governor
Kathy Hochul accused Adams of being slow to act and failing to accept aid offers from the state to manage the migrants. In September 2023, Adams warned reporters that the migrant crisis could "destroy" New York City. On June 23, 2023, Adams vetoed legislation that would have increased eligibility for housing vouchers to homeless families and individuals under the CityFHEPS program; Adams implemented part of the legislation via executive order, eliminating a 90-day waiting requirement for people currently in shelters. The City Council responded in a series of annotations to the op-ed, "call[ing] the mayor's arguments 'wrong,' 'misleading,' '
gaslighting' and '
alternative facts'". Adams has indicated that he may challenge the veto override in court. The following day, a local radio channel asked Adams if he felt he "went too far"; Adams refused to apologize and called Dubnau's behavior "degrading". In November 2023, Adams was accused in a lawsuit of sexual assault by an anonymous former coworker while they were both city employees in 1993. Adams denied the accusation, claiming he did not know who the accuser was and if they had ever met; he did not recall it. The lawsuit also accused Adams of battery, employment discrimination based on gender and sex, retaliation, a hostile work environment, and intentional infliction of emotional distress, and also named the
NYPD Transit Bureau and the Guardians Association of the NYPD as defendants. In December 2023, the
United Federation of Teachers filed a lawsuit against Eric Adams to prevent a $550 million cut to education funding.
2024 On January 30, 2024, the New York City Council voted to override Mayor Adams's veto of the How Many Stops Act under the command of Council Speaker
Adrienne Adams. The new law officially limits the use of
solitary confinement of prisoners being held on
Rikers Island and all city jails and requires police officers to take detailed notes of encounters with members of the public who they suspect of committing a crime or for other reasons. Councilman
Yusef Salaam is the Chair of the Public Safety Committee and he also had a part in bringing this legislation to the floor for a vote. Adams rejected a ceasefire in the
Gaza war, saying "Bring the
hostages home." in February 2024 At a news conference, Adams suggested that the city could hire migrants as
lifeguards because they are "excellent swimmers". The comment was called "racist and divisive" by unnamed immigrant rights groups. Adams has promoted a series of changes to New York City's
zoning laws called the "City of Yes". The first proposal, intended to make environmentally-friendly building renovations and
rooftop solar installations easier, was approved by the City Council on December 6, 2023. The second proposal, intended to allow businesses more flexibility in terms of where they can operate, was approved on June 6, 2024. The third proposal, intended to allow "a little more housing in every neighborhood", is scheduled for a vote in December 2024. Proponents say the proposal is crucial to address the
New York City housing shortage, while opponents have raised concerns about changes it will bring to low-density neighborhoods. On May 21, 2024, Adams created a Charter Revision Commission to propose changes to the
New York City Charter. It released five proposals, which will be subject to voter approval on November 5. Critics said the proposals, three of which limit the City Council's power, were designed to push an earlier ballot measure, which would have limited mayoral power, off the ballot. A spokeswoman for the City Council called the commission a "sham" and accused it of "undermining democracy and oversight of the Mayor's administration". Police Commissioner Edward — and Chief Counsel Lisa Zornberg each left the Adams administration in September 2024. Reports indicated that Zornberg departed due to Adams's "refusal to get rid of officials who have come under federal scrutiny". Timothy Pearson, a senior adviser to Adams, left his position as of October 4, 2024. Pearson was the subject of complaints of battery and sexual harassment. On October 7, 2024, Mohamed Bahi, Adams's chief liaison to the Muslim community, resigned his position. A day later, Bahi was arrested and "charged with witness tampering and destruction of evidence in relation to the Southern District of New York's investigation into Adams' 2021 campaign". Also in October 2024, Deputy Mayor for Public Safety Phil Banks and Director of Asian Affairs Winnie Greco resigned their posts; the homes of Banks and Greco had previously been searched by federal authorities. First Deputy Mayor Sheena Wright also stepped down in October, as did Schools Chancellor David Banks; Wright is married to Phil Banks, and David Banks is the brother of Phil Banks. Health Commissioner Ashwin Vasan also left his position in October 2024. On November 12, 2024, mandated trash containerization for buildings with 10 or fewer units became effective. The pro-containerization policy began a year prior with mandates for restaurants, and intends to achieve full containerization on 89% of city streets. The
New York Times described containerization as "one of the major achievements of Mayor Eric Adams's first term." In December 2024, chief adviser Ingrid Lewis-Martin resigned her position; she was later indicted on bribery charges.
2025 In April 2025, Adams invited U.S. Secretary of Transportation
Sean Duffy to take a ride on the subway following recent comments by Duffy deriding the subway as a "shithole" and epicenter of violent crime. Ultimately the pair rode the subway for 10 minutes, from Brooklyn to Manhattan, reportedly discussing crime rates and those with mental illness in the public transportation system as well as the congestion pricing policy in the city. In 2025, Adams signed an executive order to reopen an
ICE office on
Rikers Island. On July 8, four former NYPD officers filed individual suits against Adams and high-ranking NYPD officials. The plaintiffs had each served in leadership roles—
chief of detectives, assistant chief of the criminal task force division, chief of professional standards, and second in command for internal affairs—and allege in part that Adams enabled department corruption and retaliation for speaking out.
Edward Caban, the former commissioner,
Jeffrey Maddrey, the former chief of department,
Philip Banks III, the former deputy mayor for public safety, and
John Chell, the current chief of department, are also among the defendants in one or more of the suits. On July 16, Tom Donlon, who had served as interim
NYPD commissioner, filed suit against Adams and high-ranking NYPD officials, alleging that they had engaged in a "coordinated criminal conspiracy" to enrich themselves, prevented executive misconduct investigations, forged documents, and engaged in retaliation. During Adam's mayoral lame duck session, Mayor Adams created a new commission. This commission's leadership positions and other positions are occupied with operatives appointed by Mayor Adams. It would provide a political check and fiscal overnight over the new mayor's power in collaboration with the New York City Charter review Commission.
Investigations and federal indictment On November 12, 2023,
The New York Times reported that an FBI investigation into Adams was related in part to an alleged influence by the Turkish government to have its consulate in a Manhattan building approved by New York City authorities without a fire inspection. In September 2024, a series of
investigations into Adams's administration emerged. On September 25, 2024, Adams was indicted on federal charges. On September 26, the case was unsealed, revealing the five charges: bribery, conspiracy, fraud, and two counts of soliciting illegal foreign campaign donations. The allegations for which Adams was indicted date back to 2014, when he was still Brooklyn Borough President. Adams is accused of receiving luxury travel and other benefits from
Turkish individuals, namely a government official and several businessmen. This included Adams pressuring the New York City Fire Department to open a Turkish consular building without a fire inspection. Allegedly, in order to cover up his misconduct, Adams created and instructed others to make false paper trails indicating he actually paid for these trips in full. The indictment also notes that Turkish officials pressed a staffer for assurances that Adams would boycott 2022 commemorations of the
Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day, in line with Turkey's official policy of
Armenian genocide denial, and that Adams appeared to comply with the request. The indictment states: Adams was arraigned in federal court on September 27, entering a plea of not guilty. The same day,
U.S. Representative Jerry Nadler, the dean of the New York Democratic House delegation, called for Adams to resign. As of September 2024, 15 Democratic state and local leaders, including Rep.
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of the Bronx, had also called for his resignation. Some elected officials called for New York Governor Kathy Hochul to remove Adams from office. In response, Adams said that the charges against him were "entirely false" and "based on lies". He called for an immediate trial and vowed to fight the charges. Adams also claimed that he was being retaliated against for opposing the
Biden administration's handling of the
migrant crisis. On September 30, Adams sought dismissal of the bribery charge against him for being "extraordinarily vague" and arguing that it was brought by "zealous prosecutors." On February 10, 2025, the
Department of Justice under
President Trump instructed federal prosecutors to drop charges against Adams, citing concerns that the case had been affected by publicity and was interfering with his ability to govern. The memo directing this move, written by acting Deputy Attorney General
Emil Bove, stated that the prosecution had limited Adams's capacity to focus on issues such as immigration and crime. The charges were to be dropped "as soon as is practicable" pending a further review of Adams's case following the general election in November 2025.
Danielle Sassoon, the U.S. Attorney in charge of the case, refused to dismiss the charges, telling Attorney General
Pam Bondi that "I cannot agree to seek a dismissal driven by improper considerations." Sassoon later resigned, accusing Bove and the Trump administration of making an illicit deal with Adams to dismiss the charges. The case was then assigned to the Department of Justice's
Public Integrity Section, following which John Keller, the section's acting head, and Kevin Driscoll, the acting head of the Department of Justice's Criminal Division, both resigned.
Emil Bove gathered the remaining members of the public integrity unit, ordering them to find a prosecutor who would file a motion to dismiss the charges. Following the announcement that the Department of Justice was seeking to dismiss the charges against Adams, four deputy mayors within the Adams administration announced their departures. The efforts by the new
Trump administration to dismiss the case came in the same week as the administration was negotiating with the mayor over immigration enforcement initiatives and White House Executive Associate Director of Enforcement and Removal Operations,
Tom Homan, saying during a joint-interview with Adams that if Adams did not cooperate on immigration, Homan would then visit Adams's "office, up his butt saying, 'Where the hell is the agreement we came to?'" Earlier, Adams had agreed with Homan to give access to the city's
Rikers Island jail for
ICE without violating the city's
sanctuary laws, via a "loophole... [Adams] appears to have found". Adams then joined Homan in a joint interview conducted by
Dr. Phil McGraw, among one or more other joint interviews. Adams's indictment was dismissed with prejudice by judge
Dale Ho on April 2, 2025. Ho wrote that the court "cannot force the Department of Justice to prosecute a defendant." Ho highlighted that the dismissal was "not about whether Mayor Adams is innocent or guilty"; the dismissal "does not express any opinion as to the merits of the case or whether the prosecution of Mayor Adams 'should' move forward". Ho found that Adams's case was "entirely consistent with prior public corruption prosecutions", that prosecutors "followed all appropriate Justice Department guidelines" with "no evidence" of "improper motives". Judge Ho commented that the Justice Department's dismissal request "smacks of a bargain: dismissal of the Indictment in exchange for immigration policy concessions". In March 2026, New York City's law department sought a judge's approval to stop representing him in the lawsuit. == 2025 mayoral campaign ==