Following his release in 1997, Salaam worked as a construction worker in an apartment complex in the
Mitchell–Lama Housing Program on
Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Boulevard. He was fired after the company discovered who he was. Salaam then worked at
Weill Cornell Medicine. He has served on the board of the
Innocence Project. In 2021, Salaam considered running for the
New York State Legislature, but decided against it due to residency requirements. During the campaign, he was endorsed by
Cornel West. He won the
Democratic primary on July 5 defeating assemblymembers
Inez Dickens and
Al Taylor. He was unopposed in the general election and succeeded councilwoman
Kristin Richardson Jordan for a term ending January 1, 2026. He was re-elected in November 2025. In January 2024, Salaam's car, which had
Georgia license plates and dark-tinted windows that are illegal in New York, was stopped in Harlem by a
New York City police car. When the officer approached his car, Salaam said he was a member of the city council and that he was on city business. He was on a business call with several of his colleagues including City Council member
Sandy Nurse, who heard the entire police interaction. He was driving to dinner with his wife and four of his children. Salaam asked why he had been stopped but the officer, on hearing that he was a council member on business, cut off the interaction and walked away saying, "Take care, sir." Officers are not required to give a reason for stopping a car, but Salaam said the police should have done so voluntarily. Critics of Salaam said he smeared the police and used his position to get out of a possible ticket. In the aftermath of the
second 2024 presidential debate, Salaam confronted former president
Donald Trump who previously called for Salaam to be executed, but Trump refused to walk back his statements. ==Personal life==