Adams celebrates Cuomo ‘coming out of the shadows’ in NYC mayoral race

New York City Mayor Eric Adams ‌has welcomed ​former​ Governor ⁤Andrew Cuomo’s official proclamation to run in the upcoming 2025 mayoral race. this development ⁣comes as the Democratic Party in New⁢ York struggles to unify behind a⁣ candidate. Adams, who previously supported Cuomo in the‍ 2021 ‌election, expressed eagerness for the campaign to illuminate ‌both candidates’ true ⁤positions.

Cuomo’s candidacy is important given his controversial past, which includes investigations into‍ his handling⁢ of⁣ COVID-19 in nursing homes and accusations of sexual harassment that led to his resignation in 2021. Meanwhile, Adams has his own challenges, including a recent​ indictment on federal corruption ​charges amidst accusations of⁣ political maneuvering with the Trump governance.

Prominent Democrats, including Governor Kathy Hochul ⁢and House Minority Leader Hakeem​ Jeffries, have remained non-committal about⁣ their‌ endorsements, while some groups have publicly opposed both candidates. Other notable candidates have​ entered the race, each ⁢presenting anti-crime platforms, indicating a ‍potentially competitive primary as they prepare ‍for ​elections on June 24.


Adams celebrates Cuomo ‘coming out of the shadows’ as New York Democrats split on mayor’s race

New York City Mayor Eric Adams welcomed the formal entrance of a leading contender into the Big Apple’s mayoral race as Empire State Democrats struggle to unify behind a candidate. 

After months of speculation that he would challenge Adams in the city’s 2025 mayoral race, former Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D-NY) officially announced a bid to do so on Saturday. The news marked a full circle moment for Cuomo, who backed Adams during the 2021 mayoral race.

Adams appeared to embrace the announcement, suggesting that his chief opponent would now be forced to reveal his “real positions” to constituents. 

“Come one, come all. We all gotta come out,” the incumbent mayor said. “We can’t hide in the shadows. We gotta come out, give our real positions, so I’m looking forward to it. It’s campaign season.”

Some prominent New York Democrats such as Gov. Kathy Hochul (D-NY) and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) continue to take cagey positions on who they’ll back. 

Former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo speaks at the New York City District Council of Carpenters while campaigning for mayor of New York City, Sunday, March 2, 2025. (AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson)

“You know, as I’ve said before, anyone who wants to run for any office certainly is able to do so,” Hochul said following Cuomo’s announcement. 

“I think he’d be a candidate that a lot of people, as I’ve heard from the district that I represent, would be very interested in checking out,” Jeffries said last week.

Others have declined to back either mayoral candidate. 

“Our club is going to see to it that Eric Adams and Andrew Cuomo are not elected,” Allen Roskoff, the president of New York City’s influential Jim Owles Liberal Democratic Club, announced Saturday evening. 

Both Cuomo and Adams face challenges as they eye a primary win on June 24.

Cuomo has been scrutinized over investigations finding his administration concealed the deaths of 4,100 senior citizens he ordered into nursing homes during the COVID-19 pandemic. The former governor was forced to resign as governor in 2021 over sexual harassment allegations before the Department of Justice concluded in 2024 that he had sexually harassed thirteen state employees. 

Adams’ political ambitions also took a hit last fall when he was indicted on federal corruption charges. President Donald Trump’s Department of Justice moved to dismiss the charges, suggesting that the indictment came because the Biden administration was angry the mayor broke with the White House on relaxed immigration policies. 

The DOJ’s provoked outrage from Democrats, including from Adams’ colleagues, sparking accusations of quid pro quo, particularly after the incumbent mayor announced further initiatives to cooperate with the Trump administration on deporting illegal immigrants convicted of crimes. 

This week, House Judiciary Committee Reps. Jamie Raskin (D-MA) and Jasmine Crockett (D-TX) announced an investigation into the Trump administration’s DOJ’s effort to dismiss the indictment, claiming it was “a blatant and illegal quid pro quo to secure the Mayor’s loyal assistance in executing the Trump Administration’s mass arrest and deportation policies.” 

While polls show Cuomo poses the top threat to Adams’ hopes for reelection, other contenders have emerged in the crowded race to unseat the incumbent mayor, including former New York City Comptroller Scott Stringer, city comptroller Brad Lander, assemblyman Zohran Mamdani, and New York state Sens. Jessica Ramos and Zellnor Myrie. 

Brooklyn Borough President and New York City mayoral candidate Eric Adams, right, speaks to the media accompanied by Gov. Andrew Cuomo during a news conference at Lenox Road Baptist Church in the Brooklyn borough of New York on Wednesday, July 14, 2021. (AP Photo/Eduardo Munoz Alvarez)

Myrie is endorsed by Empire State Democrats such as Rep. Dan Goldman (D-NY) while Stringer has gained the support of Rep. Jerry Nadler (D-NY). Lander has drawn endorsements from groups including the Broadway Democrats, the official Democratic club of Morningside Heights and Manhattanville, as well as New York City Public Advocate Jumaane Williams. 

Many of the contenders are running on an anti-crime platform that rivals campaigns pitched by Adams and Cuomo. 

REPUBLICANS TURN TO 2025 GOVERNOR BATTLES AS PARTY LOOKS TO RIDE 2024 SUCCESS

Landers announced this week a plan to combat antisemitism in the city as Jews are the victims of the majority of hate crimes in the city. 

“I take that very seriously as the highest-ranking Jewish elected official in city government, and will do everything I can to combat it as mayor,” he told the Times of Israel



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