PBD Podcast - Mamdani’s Socialist Surge, Cuomo’s Downfall & Trump's Defense w/ NYC Mayor Eric Adams | PBD Podcast | Ep. 614
Episode Date: July 11, 2025Patrick Bet-David sits down with NYC Mayor Eric Adams for a raw and wide-ranging interview on Zohran Mamdani’s socialist surge, Andrew Cuomo’s political downfall, Trump’s legal battles and publi...c perception, and the urgent issues facing New York City, from rising crime and migrant pressure to the future of the Democratic Party and whether leadership still matters in American politics.------🧢 VT STATES HAT COLLECTION - NEW YORK: https://bit.ly/44E7fE7🗳️ RE-ELECT MAYOR ADAMS FOR NYC MAYOR: https://bit.ly/3IkUDdE🗳️ FOLLOW MAYOR ADAMS ON SOCIALS & REGISTER TO VOTE: https://bit.ly/4nJeP96🎫 THE VAULT 2025 | SEPT 8TH - 11TH | THE GAYLORD PALMS | ORLANDO, FL: https://bit.ly/4dJlmfL🍋 ZEST IT FORWARD: https://bit.ly/4jYg3Lh📕 PBD'S BOOK "THE ACADEMY": https://bit.ly/41rtEV4🎙️ FOLLOW THE PODCAST ON SPOTIFY: https://bit.ly/4g57zR2🎙️ FOLLOW THE PODCAST ON ITUNES: https://bit.ly/4g1bXAh🎙️ FOLLOW THE PODCAST ON ALL PLATFORMS: https://bit.ly/4eXQl6A📱 CONNECT ON MINNECT: https://bit.ly/4ikyEkC👔 BET-DAVID CONSULTING: https://bit.ly/3ZjWhB7📰 VTNEWS.AI: https://bit.ly/3OExClZ🎓 VALUETAINMENT UNIVERSITY: https://bit.ly/3BfA5Qw📺 JOIN THE CHANNEL: https://bit.ly/4g5C6Or💬 TEXT US: Text “PODCAST” to 310-340-1132 to get the latest updates in real-time!ABOUT US:Patrick Bet-David is the founder and CEO of Valuetainment Media. He is the author of the #1 Wall Street Journal Bestseller “Your Next Five Moves” (Simon & Schuster) and a father of 2 boys and 2 girls. He currently resides in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida.
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I think I've never said this before.
Mayor Adams, how you doing?
Good, good. Flowing, you know? Flowing.
Swimming with the tides.
I got on an elevator one day and an elder got on.
This was many years ago.
And I said, good morning, sir.
And he says, I'm swimming with the tide the tide swimming with the tide. That's good. You got to get behind the momentum, right?
So now talk about New York
Did you think for a moment you've been a New York native your entire life? Yes captain NYPD
You know
Growing up there. You've seen the trouble you change, you know as a young man
You know, growing up there, you've seen the trouble, you change as a young man, became a leader,
run for mayor, and then all of a sudden today,
you're going up against a guy, the mayoral race
that everybody in America's following,
to go on against Azoran Mamdani,
who on many ways you look at it,
this is a person that's a communist,
this is a person that's openly said
how he feels about capitalism,
how he said a lot about different things. How did things get to a point
that a candidate like this out of nowhere is now being seen as possibly a guy that could win?
That's a great question because it's really not out of nowhere. Those of us who were watching
what was taking place on the stage of not only New York City, but America I told my team six months ago this guy's going to win and I need to be in a general
So that I can go head to head six months six months ago
I sat down on my team and I said to the reporters I said this is going to be the most
Fascinating race in the history of New York City
What happened was he already had a ready-made army
that we were ignoring.
And if you go back, I was talking about
the radicalization of our children
on our college campuses to hate America.
What we were seeing in the street,
10,000 people marching in our street,
lifting up Hamas.
And I was saying, our children are being radicalized and so all he
had to do was pop his head up. Once he did that the army was already a symbol and say we want to
follow someone and he has become a symbol of the radicalization of our young people across this
entire country and specifically in New York. But why though? I guess the question I wanna ask is why?
Because the last five years, go COVID, right?
If you wanna pull up the chart Rob,
that Brandon had on how much money's moved
from different states to different places.
I mean, New York was known, and many will say till today,
as the greatest city in the world, right?
New York's been that city, the Mecca,
the financial capital of the world
used to be London, now it's you guys.
And Dana White comes and does an event here for UFC
two or three years ago.
In the interview afterwards they ask him,
they say, so what was UFC like Miami?
He says, he said, we broke Madison Square Garden's record.
He said, this is what LA used to be.
It's the energy New York used to have.
I think that's the message in that he gave,
where now a lot of people are looking at saying, could Miami become the new New York City?
But then the chart that shows the biggest difference is this.
Rob, if you can pull up the numbers with the dollars, I don't know if you have it or not.
It shows how much money moved here.
Over a trillion dollars of wealth moved out of California.
California got the money to go to Texas. New York got the money, right here, if you look at this,
New York got the money to flow to Florida.
This was one of the charts.
If you go to the other one, Rob,
that shows the dollar amount,
you got a couple of them there.
Go to the one on the left,
the one that shows like the right there.
If you look at this one,
the dark purple is New York and California.
Over a trillion dollars lost,
then if you look at states that gained plus trillion,
the dark green, you'll see Florida,
you'll see Texas is less than Florida,
but you look at Tennessee, Carolina,
a bunch of other places gained the money.
What happened the last five years
that caused the business owners and the wealth
to leave your state and more importantly, your city?
New York City.
When you think about what happened after COVID,
after COVID, many people felt as though during COVID
that they were being confined.
They wanted to raise their children in an open atmosphere.
They wanted to go somewhere where it was not that restricted.
And then once they explored,
once they went to travel to Florida,
travel to Connecticut and other areas, they figured out to, traveled to Florida, traveled to Connecticut and other areas, they
figured out that you know what life is a little bit more open, life is you get a
better bang for your dollar in some of these municipalities, like the cost of
housing here is far different from New York. Now that number is changing because
New Yorkers have arrived and they've raised the amount. Many people have said,
listen, we don't want you guys down here anymore.
But the reality is that once people explored
outside of the city and understood that
there's a good life outside the city,
and there's a different type of personality
that you have in the city,
just as we lost that money,
we gained a large number of young people,
particularly tech. A lot of new tech companies opened. We became the high spot for graduates,
the number one location for graduates.
New York City.
New York City. It became an exciting place. Our nightlife is booming. And our economy
is the strongest in history. Broadway had the strongest 12 months in history.
And so the city is still thriving.
But when you have someone like the Democratic primary winner
saying that billionaires should not exist,
they don't understand the economics.
The person who drives the limousine should do well
and a person in the back seat of the limousine
should do well.
That's the ecosystem that's important for New York City.
Rob, can you pull up the clip of Mamdani that he's referencing that he's being interviewed
and the lady who had a couple great interviews with Trump asked, do you believe billionaires
should exist?
And his answer with the chuckle, he says, I don't think there should be billionaires.
And then he says, but I'm willing to work with them.
I don't know how those two go together. I don't think there should be billionaires, And then he says, but I'm willing to work with them. I don't know how those two go together.
I don't think there should be billionaires,
but I'm willing to work with you to give up your money
and lose your billionaire status,
which doesn't make a lot of sense.
There's a video of it in an interview.
We've had it before, we've shown it.
I think that's the one right there.
And it's a clear misunderstanding of the economics.
When you look at our top one percenters
and how they ensure that we have teachers, firefighters, police officers,
roads paved. That's the ecosystem that exists. And if you don't understand that ecosystem,
your actions can drive out a major portion. Oh, for sure. I mean, you have in your city,
Mayor, you have 123 billionaires. Number two is 71 or so. You got most of the billionaires living in the city and here's a question that was asked.
I thought it was a very good question.
Go for it Rob.
You are a self-described democratic socialist.
Do you think that billionaires have a right to exist?
I don't think that we should have billionaires because frankly it is so much money in a moment
of such inequality and ultimately what we
need more of is equality across our city and across our state and across our country and
I look forward to work with everyone including billionaires to make a city that is fairer
for all of them.
Now when you're speaking to billionaires in your city at this point they know you right?
I mean I saw Bill Ackman posted something.
Bill Ackman is a 10 billion dollar guy.
He's a heavyweight, carries a big stick, he has reputation, he's gone against some of
the biggest guys.
He's gone against Carl Icahn, he's gone against a lot of people in his career.
And he's had to slay a lot of dragons and he's been up and down, right?
But he's a tough guy.
And he puts a tweet, not this one Rob, there's another one about Andrew Cuomo.
This was it.
In summary, in light of the inability to add a new name to the ballot and low probability
of success to a writing campaign, the only candidates with credible chance to beat Mamdani
or Cuomo and Adams.
I met yesterday with Adams and Cuomo to discuss the upcoming election and I spent an hour
or so with each of them. In short, my takeaway is that Adams can win the upcoming election and I spent an hour or so with each of them.
In short, my takeaway is that Adams can win the upcoming election and that governors should
step aside to maximize Adams' probability of success.
I say this while having a high regard to Andrew Cuomo and his contributions to New York State,
but it was abundantly clear in his body language, his subdued energy and his proposals to beat
Mamdani that he is not up for the fight.
When you speak to billionaires like this, what are they telling you?
What is their concern about Mamdani?
Well, when you look at the policies, and you have to peel apart the policies and get a
full understanding of the impact.
Let's take the Rikers Island, for example.
That is our city jail. We have 7,400 of the most dangerous people in our city because due to bail reform, many
of them did not have to go to jail.
They were able to come out on our streets.
He wants to open the jail and let them out.
They're going to go back to the communities that they preyed on.
They're going to impact low-income New Yorkers, and it's going to hurt them.
His plan to have government supermarkets.
We have many what we call bodegas.
Those are grocery stores.
We have many supermarkets.
If you put a plan in place like that, you're going to devastate your middle-income New
Yorkers, your broken-class New Yorkers.
I had a meeting with 250 supermarket owners
who stated that this is going to devastate us, increase $30 or $40 minimum wage.
That is going to devastate the Roking Class community.
We have the largest number of small businesses that are operating now under this administration.
The largest number of businesses in general, we the record 11 times is because we know there's a marriage between a good wage and
Allowing the mock profit profit mat margin of a business to survive
But but okay, so when you say that he says, you know seize the means of production, right the comments he's made about
Jews and when you look at the population, if I'm saying
this correctly, I believe the biggest Jewish population in America is in New York City.
You guys have 960,000 Jews that live in New York City.
Around 12% of the population is Jews.
Used to be 2 million back in the days in the 50s.
25% used to be Jews, but now 12%.
A lot of them have left the city. So he
calls them out, you know, he's not very complimentary of them, okay. He calls out billionaires,
you got the most billionaires. He's saying he's going to do free buses for everybody
that's going to cost three billion dollars that the billionaires are going to pay for
because they're going to raise the taxes on the billionaires. And you've said before
that mayor cannot raise taxes on billionaires. That has to be done by the assembly, which
is his job that he currently does right now.
And everything he's saying, you're hearing the stuff that he's saying, you're saying
to yourself, none of this stuff makes sense.
How is he the leading candidate?
How does he have that?
Great question.
Because 9% of voters voted, 9%, 91% they have yet to speak. And so the Democratic primary is the, really the most liberal arm, the left arm of the
voting population.
So when you have 9% of New Yorkers who are speaking on behalf of 91% of New Yorkers,
now the job become people woke up and say whoa whoa what do we have here?
You know sometimes people are lackadaisical, apathetic, and you know not really going out
and voting. Now you're seeing an energy that I've never witnessed before in politics. How many
people showed up to vote the last time you had in 2001? I think one. How many showed up in 2021?
Less than it was about close to a million.
Now we went a million plus.
I think it was around 900 or something thousand.
Okay, so I'm looking at this right now.
New York City mayoral race, November 2nd of 2021 general election, out of 4,911,000 registered
voters, 1.149 ballots were casted.
23.4%.
Other reports found that figure to be around 23 percent.
Let's just say million, million one showed up, right?
Okay.
And so far, only 9 percent have showed up to vote for Mamdani.
Yeah, a little over a million.
I think they got to a million five.
This was an increase in voter participation because you had a lot of energy that people
came out.
And where Andrew went wrong, he did not mobilize,
he didn't run a campaign, he took Madani for granted
instead of going out and running a hard campaign.
I say it all the time, New Yorkers have five fingers,
they love to show you the middle one the most.
If you're not willing to go
out and say you want the job, he never wanted the job. He thought this was a
consolation prize and New Yorkers don't like that and so not running a hard
campaign going head-to-head with him social media and all the tools you put
yourself in a precarious position. Rob, can you do me a favor Rob, can you pull up Chad
G. Beatty and ask the following question?
How much was voter participation in 2025 New York City mayoral race?
Can you just type up how much was voter participation in 2025 mayoral race?
This is the number that came up to me.
And again, I'm trying to see what's going on because it's a little bit confusing on what's going on.
So this is the number that we see.
The primary was New York City's largest ever.
Nearly 1.15 million votes casted in 2021 general election.
First round, Mamdani 462, Cuomo 384, Bred, Landon 119.
Total ballots around a million.
Early voting search with about 94,000 cast in the first three days, more than twice to
43,000 in 2021.
So this is two X, more than two X.
Overall, turnout was under 30% of registered Democrats
consistent with the past New York primaries.
So that's the numbers we're looking at right now.
So you chose to become an independent.
When I look at your history with your past,
last night, I'm at a local Italian restaurant
that I go to all the time, Casa di Angelo, and I'm there and I can't leave the place.
Everyone's asking me, I saw you going to have the mayor on, let me tell you.
They were sitting in the entire family.
I want to give these guys the right shout out because they'll know that we were talking
yesterday.
It was the Shortino family, right?
Anthony and Michael and the family sitting there the wife the mother everybody let me tell you you know we're
probably Republicans but we did this is our we can't have mem Donnie we're gonna
be getting behind him he's a good guy he's got to do this then the other table
New York then the other because you know South Florida is a lot of New York and you're
seeing this surge you've seen this number taking place with the level of
interest on what's gonna happen in New York City.
But Mamdani is the lead today.
And when I think about you, and I think about your past, what you've done, how you came
up, and I wouldn't have looked up if you were always registered a Democrat.
You were a Republican, 95-97 to 2001.
So you were Republican for four years, then you switched to Democrat and then you
became independent.
And when I ask around, people who know you, who like you, I don't know a lot of people
that don't like you.
Almost everybody I talk to, they like you.
We have a friend, Alex Spiro, I'm sure you know who Alex is.
Oh, yes I do.
We spoke this morning.
He said, let him know that Alex is a heavyweight.
Yes, he is. You know who Alex is a heavy weight, you know
Alex is Alex is as heavy as it gets. Yeah, he's represented everybody You trump mosque a lot of jay-z a lot of guys. So so the question becomes
You go Republican you go Democrat now, you're independent. I asked why did that happen?
They said well you have to understand New York politics, you go Democrat, now you're independent. I ask, why did that happen?
They said, well, you have to understand New York politics.
This is as Republican of a Democratic and independent candidate you'll have, but if
he goes as a Republican, da da da da da.
I said, you know what made Trump attractive is the following, and I'm just going to talk
openly, I'd love to see what you're gonna say this So he came out and he said look
This is what I am boom boom boom boom boom
So everybody's like okay
I know how to get behind them because I think this is the worst time ever to be wishy-washy to try to win everybody
over right especially in the city you're in and
When I look at this I'm like, you don't give me Democratic vibes.
Even when you were doing the sanctuary city, I'm like, dude, this guy knows this is not gonna like,
you know, you even saw why are we giving away the money and the moment you started saying that they
came after you, immediately, we gotta take this guy out. So what caused you to go from being a
registered Republican, not for a split second, for four years, five years,
six years, to a Democrat, then an independent.
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When the frustration grows and the doubts start to creep in, we all need someone who
has our back.
To tell us we'll be okay.
To remind us of our ability to believe.
Because their belief in us transfers to self-belief and reminds us of all that we're capable of.
We all need someone to make us believe.
Hashtag, you got this.
So let's think about this for a moment because
you're right. Our city, both Dems and Republicans, have different feelings on
different topics and what you will find throughout those entire years I've been
consistent. Public safety. We have to be safe because that is the prerequisite to
our prosperity and I have been always focused on that.
My moderate Dems, even progressive Dems,
my moderate Republicans,
even conservative Republicans, independents,
they all say, you have always been clear
that our city must be safe,
my children must go to school safe,
I must be able to live on a safe neighborhood.
That is the foundation of my run.
Party lines
and party labels don't define a person. You know, I may be a blue Democrat, but I'm red,
white and blue. I love this country. I had a 19-year-old uncle that died in Vietnam to
defend this country. He didn't agree on everything, but he said, well, my country called, I responded.
That's the energy that I come from. So when you look at someone like Michael Bloomberg, who was one time a Democrat before he ran
Republican independent. Donald Trump was a Democrat at one time, you know, before
he ran Republicans. Those of us who love the country, we use the vehicle to
continue to serve the country. The vehicle doesn't define who we are.
Why were you Republican 97-201?
We saw, I was a police officer at the time, and we saw an unbelievable, lax criminal justice
reform.
We were doing some of the things that we're doing now, allowing people who commit crimes.
There was a repeated revolving door.
And as a police officer, I was seeing this all the time and telling those who were in office
that these laws are not the way we should be going.
And the Republican Party started defining clearly
the whole public safety agenda.
I have a straight public safety,
business-friendly law enforcement agenda,
and that's why I did it at the time.
Why'd you leave it in 01?
Because 01 is when Giuliani and Bernard Kerik
and the late Bernard Kerik,
they're cleaning up the streets, right?
He was a good friend.
Yeah, he was a good friend of ours as well, yeah.
So why 01?
Was it after 9-11 when you switched back
to the Democratic Party or was it before 9-11?
It was when I switched back was around the time
when I said, you know what, this is a Democratic town,
almost similar to what Michael Bloomberg did,
it's a Democratic town, you need to be Michael Bloomberg did. It's a democratic town.
You need to be on the democratic part.
If you're going to get elected, to get something done.
If you want to get elected to get something done,
you have to understand what vehicle to use
to get elected to get something done.
Did somebody knock on the door and tell you to switch,
or was that like, hey, Mayor Adams,
if you, you know, Eric, Captain Adams, if you do this,
I think you can end up being a mayor,
you can have a political career.
Was it just a decision you made?
Was it an event that took place with Giuliani and Kerik?
What was it that got you?
Some of my, you know, mentors, when we sat down
and I saw what was happening in the city
and what direction we was traveling in the city,
they said, Eric, don't only complain about it.
You need to get into your elected office to do something about it.
I had a young man who was 11 years old.
He was arrested two or three times for robbery.
And I was doing midnight tours of duty, and I walked into the precinct, and I saw him
in there.
He was spitting at everyone, cursing at everyone.
And throughout the night, I befriended him, and I asked him, what's going on?
He broke down and started crying.
His dad was in jail for homicide.
His mother was selling her body on the streets, hooked on crack cocaine, and he was out of
school for three months and no one knew about it, that he was out.
And I realized that putting handcuffs on these children is not going to solve the problem.
And when I spoke with many of my mentors, they said, listen, you did time in the street
as a police officer
You see the end of the problem now going government to reverse the problem and that put me back on the path on the path
Got it. So so the inspiration was to leave the Republican Party for that
But it was also if you're gonna have a political career in it, you know join the Democratic Party
They're gonna have your back. You'll have a career politically there. Now, you went there, okay?
And that always had my back.
I was always the outsider.
Oh, well that's where I wanna go next,
because what I notice a pattern
with New York City politics is,
so, you know, Andrew Cuomo, governor, two term,
father, three term, brother, CNN, right?
So he's there, he's doing his governor thing, and I think Andrew may have even been three terms. I think it's two terms, two term, brother, CNN, right? So he's there, he's doing his governor thing,
and I think Andrew may have even been three terms.
I think it's two terms, two terms, yeah.
And at first, COVID happens, we have to hear him every day.
And he was on TV every day.
Remember when he's doing all the updates,
he's eating his burgers or whatever he was doing
and we're getting the update.
This guy's gonna be the president,
he'd be better than Trump, right?
And then all of a sudden,
he started calling out a little bit of the left.
And then de Blasio was an AOC, went against Amazon,
and no, we don't want Amazon.
He's like, wait a minute, Woody, that's 25,000 jobs
at a 150,000 dollar salary.
What are you guys talking about?
Let him come in, no, they're gonna increase the rent
and da da da.
And then Bezos took the jobs elsewhere, right?
But then the moment he started kind of calling out against the establishment, instantly,
the sexual charges came up, the 15,000 which the old folks home, that was his mistake as
a governor that he went through, major mistake, could have been a fatal mistake that he made
on his career.
But they went after him.
The same people that were saying he should run for office and be president, then all
of a sudden went after him.
You, New York, at first you're aligned.
At first you sound like you're trying to be a gamer with the Democratic party.
And then all of a sudden, us who were watching it closely were like, oof, he's not comfortable
with that.
Ooh, he just called them out.
Ooh, the $550 million credit cards and all this stuff, ooh, he just called out Biden
not getting help, they're going to come after him.
Boom.
Almost instantly, the Turkey, hey, we want to give this event, they're coming in, can
we give them a better experience, all the stuff that happened with that.
And then now your name is being mentioned in different places, and now publicly, they're
defaming you in their own way, and you're going through a long, your lawyer's telling
you for a year and a half you can't say anything so you have to kind of stay quiet.
The pattern of trying to make it in the Democratic Party, when they have your back, they have
your back.
The vibe I get is the moment you decide to be a man of your own, they're almost hanging
on to receipts to come and destroy your life.
Is that what caused you to leave the party?
No, let's go back for a moment because you said a lot and I want to peel some of these back Yeah, I feel some of that back. I was always an outsider
I always was a person that you know when you look at the policies of the party for the most part of
The whole public safety they tend to shy away from the public safety conversation
And I never did because being on the streets seeing the victims of crime, I was always a believer that innocent people
should not be the victims of violence.
And that was not always the tone.
When I ran for mayor and I said,
I'm running on the platform of public safety,
my consultant said, you can never win on that.
There's no way you can win on the public safety platform.
You got to run on another platform.
And I said, no, I know what I'm seeing every day.
And I've always stayed focused on know what I'm seeing every day.
And I've always stayed focused on that.
That was always my North Star.
And the reason even Madani can start talking about affordability
is another thing, because I made the city darn safe.
We're the safest big city in America.
And so I've always pushed back on what I felt was wrong.
I was always rooted in your belief.
Don't go away from what you believe in.
And if you Google me 20, 40 years ago,
you're gonna say this guy was saying the same thing.
He was always pushing public safety and justice,
public safety and justice.
And so when I ran for mayor,
there was many people that was concerned that I was mayor.
When I got elected, I said I'm the new face
of the Democratic Party.
Those working class people that's going to fight
for a working class agenda.
And even when we came down to,
which I think was a turning point,
was the migrants and asylum seeker crisis.
That was a turning point.
It was costing us billions of dollars,
total $7.7 billion now total. We were getting 4,000 a week, you know 8,000 every two weeks. We had to, the federal
government did not allow me to stop the buses from coming in, did not allow me to allow
them to work. Some of them were waiting a year and a half to two years to work. City
law required me to feed, house and clothes, I educated 50,000 children.
And so when I saw this was devastating us financially,
because those dollars should have gone
to the services of our city,
that is when I believe they decided that,
you know what, we're gonna come after this guy.
And when I heard the president talk about it
on the campaign trail, I didn't know the president.
Never met him.
He both was in the same city.
Never met him until he was running for office.
You and the president have never met?
Never met until we were in this, until he was running for office and I met him at the
Alfred E. Smith dinner, a huge Catholic dinner.
2016 or 24?
This one here, 24.
This one also 24?
24, you've never met him?
24, never met him, never met him.
Oh, wow. This one here 24 this also 24 you've never met him never met him never met him. Oh wow He was on a campaign trail without knowing me saying look what they doing to this mayor
This is wrong what they don't to this man southern many people didn't read the indictment. I
was
charged and indicted for calling the fire department and
Asking them to do a building inspection not not to pass it, do a building inspection,
because the president of Turkey was coming
to see the opening of his new building.
And they stated that throughout the last 10 years,
when you travel and pay for the trip, you ask for upgrades.
I got upgrades when I went on government to travel,
and when I was on personal travel, do we have more leg room?
What's asked all the time?
They took that and said that because you called
the fire department and asked them to do
a building inspection, that we're gonna charge you
with bribery.
I was facing 33 years in prison.
33 years in prison.
And it wasn't until I read Cash Patel's book
Government Gangsters, that you see the lawfare
that has been taking place in
our country. Did you find out who was behind the whole thing? Well the
attorney, the US attorney for the Southern District was a person named
Damian Williams when he left after President Trump got elected. He
opened a website. The Damian Williams that worked on the Epstein file and
worked on Mary Ann Comey like that Damian Williams? If it's a say I don't know the files he
was on. Yeah this is Damian Williams that worked on the Jelaine Maxwell file on
Sam Bachman Fried, Sean Combs. Yeah this is the same one. And Brian Benjamin in the
attorney general, the lieutenant governor, highest ranking African-American in
state of New York. They indicted him, destroyed his career, and then dropped the charges.
But what Americans need to know is that they felt as though they were sovereign.
Their mindset was they're sovereign. Just think about that for a moment.
Sovereign, when you're sovereign, you don't respond to anyone. They didn't feel like it was supposed to respond to main justice.
They didn't feel like it was supposed to respond to the justice. They didn't feel like he was supposed to respond to the president.
They felt as though they were an entity within America.
That's not in the Constitution.
Everyone answers to someone.
Do you think what they did to Andrew Cuomo was also unfair?
I don't know the full scope of what happened.
You know, understanding the full scope.
Were you supportive of him as a governor, what he was doing in New York? Were you somebody that said, I like him as a governor more than I you supportive of him as a governor what he was doing in New York
Were you somebody that said I like him as a governor more than I like Hokel as a governor and no no you prefer Hokel over
I prefer
Hoku yes Hoku's actions over Cuomo. Let me tell you why Cuomo passed bail reform that turned to revolve into a criminal justice system
As you mentioned Cuomo killed 15,000 loved ones in the
nursing home. Cuomo also did other laws that many people may not understand the
depth of them, like raise the age, canceling supplement for people who are
in housing, and created our housing crisis, closing psychiatric beds, and
creating when we see people in our street walking around with serious
mental illness.
And so when you look at his program, I had to fix those programs.
His cannabis law, I had to close 1,400 cannabis shops that were creating violence in our communities.
And so there were many laws. He succumbed to the left, the far left that's in Albany.
If he did not succumb to the far left and went based on his principles,
I would not have had to fight and clean up our city.
I'm fighting with the far left in Albany,
the far left in the city council.
It's a constant battle and much of this
is coming to the far left hurdles.
How's your relationship with Letitia James
and seeing what she did with Trump
when you were following it,
because that's in your city,
so you're seeing it on a daily basis.
What do you think about what she did with Trump's case were following it, because that's in your city. So you're seeing it on a daily basis. What do you think about what she did with Trump's case?
Well, she's the state attorney general.
Sure, right.
And they conduct investigations, you know,
that we're not privy to those investigations,
but I don't think that at no time
should we ever use an investigatory body
to go after individuals.
You know, advertising ahead of time
that she was going to go after the president.
I don't think that was the right thing to do
while you're campaigning, to say you're going
to specifically go after someone.
So I don't know the depth of her investigation.
And you know the stories now with Letitia James.
Do you have a relationship with her or you don't have a?
I've known Letitia James for years.
We came up through politics together.
Right, and I am very very
As my attorney Alex Sparrow told me when I was going through my
Investigation that Eric don't you say anything until this is over and now I'm free to talk about not talk about it
So I'm very leery of talking about investigations that dealing with other people because they should have the right to go by their attorney. The only reason I'm saying that is
because while you're watching what the president said about you to say how unfair it is what
they're doing to you, did you at any moment watch some of your colleagues in New York that you came
up with saying, dude, what are you guys doing? This is fully unfair to you what you're doing to
the guy, to Trump. And we know it's not true. Why are you guys going after This is fully unfair you what you're doing to the guy to Trump and we know it's not true
Why are you guys going after him the way that you are?
Did you ever have any types of conversations either publicly or privately with your peers saying I think guys across the line little bit
You're using the deal. You know the justice system against the president
We don't have that relationship that she would go into the investigations that she's doing. We don't communicate like that
I don't get personally just your opinion though. Yeah
that she's doing, we don't communicate like that. I don't get it.
Personally, just your own opinion though.
That conversation was out.
Yeah, your own opinion.
Like did you publicly have a sentiment to say
I don't think it's fair what they're doing
to President Trump?
In my gatherings, I've often talked about this is wrong.
This is wrong.
Lawfare is always wrong to me, no matter what.
Lawfare is wrong if anyone's attempted to use lawfare on someone. I've always felt to me. No matter what, law fair is wrong. If anyone attempted to use
law fair on someone, I've always felt that
wrong. I believe in justice and public
safety and I always make that clear.
So you would say it was unfair some of the
ways New York handled President
Trump. They were trying to do everything for him to
not be able to run. And when you do an
analysis now and you read back over what he was charged with in some of those
Cases you have to ask yourself just as I asked myself when I looked at what I was charged with
How we stop in the president of the United States from running for office in a timing of that
And then you look at what President Biden did President Biden partner son President Biden said the Justice Department was politicized
He said that I said it President Trump said it and I don't think we should ever
Politicize our Justice Department. That's that's fair enough to know that so Andrew Cuomo. Yes
There is multiple stories here the story of you know, one of them says you're asking him to step down
He's asking you to step down
So has that conversation happened with the two of you guys together and how's that conversation gone? Think about this for a moment. We knew prior to the election, pre-election, we knew I was going to be
on the general election. We knew that already.
Here's something else we knew. We knew Modani was going to be on the general election.
He was going to be on the working families party line, no matter what happened. That's another line.
Cuomo files his independent petition
to get on the line knowing that.
So this scenario that's set up now
with the three of us in it, that's a scenario he created.
He knew that no matter what was going to happen,
Madonna and I were going to face each other,
or he and I were going to face each other.
He created a scenario where all three of us are now facing each other. He should I was going to face each other. He created a scenario where all three
of us are now facing each other. He should do the right thing for New York. He lost to him. He spent
25 million dollars. New Yorkers heard his voice. They didn't support it. Now allow me to go one-on-one
with him because I'm going to beat him. I'm going to finally get my story out of
the success and the turnaround of our city. I cycled us through COVID, through
migrants and asylum seekers, I brought back the economy of what you're seeing
in New York City. New York City is thriving again. Bond raiders increased my
bond rating, seeing how I was fiscally prudent and made sure we use our
dollars correctly
How different is it running for mayor of a city like New York City versus running for governor of a state New York?
How different totally different totally different? What's the different strategy? Okay, first of all when you running for governor you in this cocoon
You're basically popping out at different events every once in a while. You have the security around you.
No one is really getting close to you.
When you're running for mayor, you are in the thick of it.
And he thought he could come out every Sunday, do a church event, and go back home.
That's not how running for mayor is.
You're in the subways.
You're in the park.
It is the impotent me of shaking hands, kissing babies.
You are entrenched and embedded in the city.
And that's what Madonna was willing to do, and Andrew was not willing to do that.
I do that every day.
No one does it better than me of interacting with everyday New Yorkers, because authentically,
I love this city. I everyday New Yorkers, because authentically, I love this city.
I love New York.
That's not a bumper sticker for me.
That's not a T-shirt.
Oh no, listen, you sound New York.
You talk New York, you walk New York,
and you were on our friend's show, Andrew Schultz,
and when they're talking about New York flag
and all that stuff.
So, okay, so if that's the case,
you're seeing what Mamdani's doing in the streets,
you're seeing how he's campaigning,
he's using social media in an incredible fashion
where he's getting a ton of momentum.
When you're walking in the streets of New York,
how are people treating you and what are you hearing
about how people are treating Mamdani
when he's walking the streets of New York?
Listen, you're going to have a population, because it's a heated race, so you're going
to have a population that's going to say, hey, go ahead, run down and keep going.
You got that strong population that's saying, Mayor, you must win this.
You must win this.
Those on his side that voted for him are saying, hey, keep going, keep going.
My voters are saying, you must win.
You must win for this city.
That's a different energy.
So people are acknowledging the energy that he has brought to the campaign.
They're missing the energy of those who are saying, you need to win, Eric, to continue
the success of this city.
Because you know why
they're not loud they're not boisterous they're not in your face they're not yelling at you
they're not cursing you out they're going about their business doing their jobs every
day but they're registering to vote and they're going to show up at the polls we're going
to register a million new voters to add with the existing voting population.
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Yeah, who are some surprising names that are getting behind you who are some names that you would have said?
I would have never thought for those guys to get behind me that they're getting behind me in this race publicly
Yeah, well, there's a host of you see some of the articles that you know, people are saying
You know the Andrews should step down
Curtis should step down everyone should mobilize behind Eric
I mean, you know the public comments are clear
You just saw a bill of make a comment who was extremely influential and powerful in the city
But then there's also those names that they're not a list names the rabbis the ministers
the Sikh
community of the Bodegas associations,
of the independent supermarket.
So these real New Yorkers that are important,
because you could have an A-list name,
but you're going to need everyday working class people
to be in the street to mobilize
and have a grass roots organic campaign.
When you think about power players, power brokers, like you just said something very
interesting where the public name you know is what?
You got Bill Ackman, everyone knows who he is, right?
Jamie Dimon just came out and said something this morning, Rob, I don't know if you saw
that one.
Jamie Dimon this morning said, Jamie Dimon lashes out on Marxist Zoran Mamdani, left
the AI push, big hearts with little brains.
Then you have Trump called him the communist lunatic, if I'm not mistaken.
I think that's the phrase he used.
You've got all these other people that are calling him different things.
Fraud, because he claimed he's an African American on his Columbia application, and
he put, I think, black and Asian, but he's not necessarily
African American to put in.
It's like, oh, well, you know what?
I shouldn't have done all this other stuff.
But who is the Robert Moses of New York today?
Because back in the days when you read about the power broker Robert Moses, right?
And you hear the kind of influence he had, where everything had to flow through him,
right?
He was the guy that, you know, the biggest power broker New York had in a long time,
how he built the roads, the bridges, the controversy behind it, all that other stuff.
When I look up and say, who's the power broker today?
I see Jerry Spier, right?
The CEO of Tishman Spier, he's the developer behind Rockefeller Center and other Manhattan
projects, Lowes Corporation, that family.
Richard Kaufman, right, the New York original energy czar.
You got Justin Driscoll, who is the CEO of New York Power Authority.
Robert Feuderman, Kathy Wilde, you've seen some of these names, the Power Brokers.
Does New York still run on the model as a Robert Moses?
And if yes, who is the modern-day Robert Moses of New York City?
No, it doesn't.
And you have some good plays even, Bill Rootin and the Rootin family.
It doesn't.
It doesn't have that one person.
There was a different dynamics and not only that city charters, other laws have been put
in place to prevent that centralization of one person that's going to have to agree or put their stamp on something.
It doesn't exist. All of those names that you mentioned, they're extremely
influential, they are important to the flow of the city, but there's not one
name you can mention to point out. I mean, you even have someone as the
former mayor, Mayor Bloomberg, is extremely civically involved.
He thinks it's very important for our city to be clean and safe, but if you
were to say who's the Robert Moses of the day, that structure has been changed a
lot because of the Robert Moses. Is that a good thing? I think it is. I think it is.
People should weigh in on what happens in their communities, responsible adults should weigh in.
Robert Moses split up the Bronx with the Cross Bronx Expressway.
They're still recovering from that.
The asthma impact, the highways that he built throughout the city, really had an impact
on neighborhoods.
You think about the ones that he built.
So I think it's imperative to have responsible involvement
that does not slow down the evolution of the city.
So I pulled that up and I said, okay, what are the top five things New Yorkers right
now in New York City? Yes.
What are the top five most important issues to them? This is what came up. Number one,
affordability and cost of living. Yeah.
93% of New York voters say affordability is a critical crisis, 72% reporting stagnant
family incomes.
Okay, so that's one.
Number two, housing and rent and development, you know, median rents now are nearly $3,700
a month, vacancy rates are at 1.4%, signaled by Mamdani proposal to freeze rent stabilized
rents.
Okay, 51% support on that.
You have number three three crime and public safety
Okay, which on multiple categories you've improved on a couple categories you've declined
taxes and economic policy nearly 48% of a
40% support raising taxes on corporations and the wealthy to fund the free transit and housing but fear of come
Fear of backlash temper support so we want it
But shit if we do this,
the billionaires could leave and they can go to Florida, right?
Right.
And then transit and public service.
So when you see that as the five issues,
and affordability, cost of living, some of the challenges,
how are you addressing each one of these?
So let's peel back that list.
Our first affordability issue.
I can't decrease the cost of bread,
but I can put bread in your pockets.
We put $30 billion back in the pockets of New Yorkers,
paying off medical debt, the number one cause of bankruptcy in the city,
reducing the cost of transit and reduced fare of Metro cars.
We just passed an extra tax initiative.
No income tax for low
income New Yorkers. Making sure we pick up the course for a high-speed broadband
and public housing. Paying the college tuition to foster care children. Reducing
the cost of child care from $220 a month to less than $20 a month. So if you see
what we've done, we say what's within our span of control? What can I do as mayor to bring down the dollars that everyday New York
is suspended? I'm not giving them broken promises because the first thing you
could do when you grew up in poverty, the first thing could happen to you, someone
promised you something that they can't deliver. That's what's happening now and
that's unfair to do so. The bus initiative like you said cost three billion dollars
Mayors don't have the strength or the power to raise income tax on 1% of New Yorkers
We don't have that authority
So the problem is that knowing you don't have the authority to do so and not doing it while you are
Assemblymen who has the authority it's just the wrong message. Now when you look at the housing, each year, three years in a row, we built and renovated
more affordable units in each independent year in the history of the city.
In the history of the city each year.
My housing projection is more than 12 years of Bloomberg, eight years of de Blasio combined.
Move more people out of homelessness into permanent housing
in those individual years in the history of the city.
Move more people into supportive housing
in the history of the city.
We have a voucher program that subsidized rent
for low income New Yorkers.
More people got those vouchers
and were able to subsidize their rent
in the history of the of the program
So we are we are doing it and making sure that we're not saying broken promises
That's the worst thing that you can do and we look at subway system, you know, we have four point six
Million people that'll use our subway system a day four point six million
I do when you think about it have five felonies a day on that system.
Out of 4.6 million.
Is that an accurate number?
Yes.
4.6 million use it daily, but only five felonies a day?
Exactly.
Exactly.
Those police officers are working their butts off to keep that system safe.
So where we have failed as an administration is that we have not
effectively got our message out. I thought that you know every elected
official you would take hits from the media that's the business that we're in
and I thought that. I never thought we would take hits and also never get our
story out. When I'm in town halls, community meetings, even I sit down and
talk to my son and do our wins list, know what? He tells me he said dad. I didn't know that I
Said I sit down and speak to knowledge of knowledgeable people in the city and they're not aware of how we turn the city around
So now for the next three months, I'm speaking direct to the consumers and I'm getting my message out
I want to go deeper into this here because when you're saying about crime what's happened?
Homicide is down 22% since
21.
Shooting is down 40% since 21.
Felony assault is up 29.
Car theft is up 36%.
Robbery is up 20%.
Total infraction is up 28% in the 34 crime categories.
While I look at these numbers, so you can highlight the two good, which is what?
Homicide down 22, shooting down 40, but the other four are up, right?
Story comes out of NYPD.
Rob, I don't know if you saw this, but we talked about this I think last week, it could
have been.
The number of police officers resigning in New York has skyrocketed.
New York cops would flee the job in historic numbers of Zoran Mamdani when union leaders
predict, not even this one Rob, there's one that says how many are retiring.
If you use the phrase retiring instead of resigning, retirement, NYPD retiring, maybe
it's the same story.
Go on the same story, see what numbers they put up, but I'll read this to you.
Exactly that's the one.
That's the one.
Because of 1554-941, if we can get that out of way, there you go
So police officers are retiring historic numbers and the exodus will only accelerate if anti-cop
Democratic mayoral nominees or on I'm done. He is elected and union officials warned this week as of Monday
1555 New York PD NYPD police officers put in their papers
48% more than last year a thousand forty nine. Okay, who retired last year? That's a big number
Yes, and sixty five percent more than a decade ago. Okay
When just nine forty one turn in their shields according to NYPD data provided by the Post and Police Benevolent Association
This is happening under your watch that they're doing that? And you're a guy that's a former captain.
Now some may say this is because of Mamdani, some may say many other reasons, but I want
to hear it from you.
Why are so many cops choosing to retire and go elsewhere?
Well, a couple of things.
First of all, I want to go back over those numbers that you had.
What time period was that?
2021 to 2025.
So the numbers I give you, homicide down 22% shooting down 40%
felonies up assault up 29, car theft up 36, robbery up 20, infractions up 28%
that's from 21 to 25. Right and that's not how you judge success in law
enforcement that's when I heard those numbers I said something is wrong with
that. What you do you compare year year. That is how you compare the uniform crime report,
FBI report.
You look at what happened one year and another year.
And the reason you do that,
because it's closer to the changes in those years.
Back in 2021, you didn't have a full scope of bail reform.
You didn't have raise the age
where you were charging 16 year olds no longer as adults when they do real criminal
behavior. So there was a lot of things that happened back then that they didn't
have to deal with that we have to deal with now. When you compare year over year
which is normally how you do crimes, how are we in 24 compared to 25? The first six months of this year, those numbers are drastically down.
We're moving in the right direction, even with a very soft criminal justice system where
you know how hard it is to go to Rikers Island jail, you have to commit some serious crime.
I have the city council that is fighting to let anyone out with a
crime to come through, and I have a state lawmaker. So when you compare year over year,
you're seeing a real movement in the right direction. Not only did we have the lowest
number of shootings and homicides in the history of the city, we took 22,000 illegal guns off our
streets, 100,000 illegal vehicles that were being used for crimes.
So we're moving in a direction and dealing
with quality of life issues at the same time.
And now, your question, that was a question you asked.
Your retirement, cops retirement.
So when you look at it, back then,
we were having large classes.
Cops now get to their 20-year period.
Many of them are not staying long.
I stayed for 22 years.
A lot of these younger cops don't want to stay longer.
They have a different mindset.
I was always thinking about overtime, make more money
so I could pay for my son's tuition, et cetera.
Many of these cops are not doing that.
This live-work balance is important to them.
They hit 20 years, they said,
we're ready to go, ready to get out.
Now, I have to match that.
We're bringing 4,000 more cops to keep up with the
nutrition problem that we're having. Then when you add this anti-police energy that's out there, that you're hearing all across the countries,
cities all across the country, they are struggling with
having police officers come in. We're seeing now
with having police officers come in. We're seeing now larger and larger classes because of what we've done. And I gave my police officers a fair contract.
The PBA leaders, the SBA, the other union leaders would tell you this mayor has
been the fairest mayor we've ever had when it came down to ensuring that these
police officers are paid what they deserve for placing their lives on the line.
Yeah, and I'd be curious to know what the number of cops
we've had in New York City, this is wage increases 2017,
up 2.25%, 2.5%, 3%, 3.25%, 3.5%, 4% bump that they're getting.
So the entry level right now is what, 42 to 50,
is this for New York NYPD Rob?
Yes sir.
That's not a lot of money to be a cop over there.
That's a...
Yeah, but it bumped, you know, because of the salary,
after you go to the entry level, you go through the academy,
we pay our offices while they're in the academy,
and then once you get to your first year,
you see a substantial increase in the salary
by the time you get to your max.
Yeah, and okay, so around 4,400 now.
Can you see historically, Rob, like how many,
so if I look at 2000, peak staffing in 2000 for cops,
NYPD was 40,000.
2005 was 36,300.
2020 it dropped to 34,000.
23 was 33,000 sworn officers, with about 30 on patrol.
Today you're on 33 to 35.
So even today, how much has New York City population
increased from 2020?
How much has New York?
About 200,000.
So not that much.
Population increased from 2000 to today.
I'd be curious to know what the populations increased from 2000 to today. I'd be curious to know what the population's increased from 2000 to today.
But if you look at that, you had 7,000 more cops in 2000 in New York City than we do today.
And that's 25 years later.
In 2000, the population was 8 million roughly now is eight and a half million
So it's increased five thousand so five hundred thousand so five hundred thousand states increased six percent
It's increased six percent, but the number of cops
has decreased
roughly twenty percent right they give or take so
Do you see that correlation on?
Some of the crime that's taking place in New York
because it's got 7,000 fewer cops today than it had 25 years ago and population has increased
500,000?
Yeah, think about it for a moment.
Again, you know, when I came in to the police department, we had large classes, I think
my class was over 2,000.
Holy shit.
No, we had large classes. Those large classes back then, they hit their 20 years.
You see, they retire.
Those are big classes.
So you're seeing big classes hit their 20 years.
And what you're finding in addition to that,
we were hemorrhaging cops that were going
to different municipalities that were paying them better.
And so I knew I had to get in and sat down with the president of the union, Pat Lynch
at the time, and say, I have to stop the hemorrhaging of my officers because they're not getting
salaries that are comparable.
And we were able to fix that.
And also there was a morale issue.
You know, I mean, we were coming through a time when there was a lot of marching in the street
A lot of anti-police energy that was going on the police officers did not feel
When they went into battle to save his city that we were not supporting them
And I had to change that energy to let them know you do your job
We're going to be here and I think you did that and just so you you know I support that we watch it and we loved it because
You know I love New York. I'm a minority one of the Yankees when I go there and I go to a game I don't want to you know I take my entire family
We took 50 guys to a game last week and so when we go there were by the chairman's you know by
Steinbrenner suite right next to him about everybody what we love to see it's a special place you
Like going to the restaurants you like experience the whole thing.
I love hearing you saying the Broadway numbers are up the last 12 months.
But the one thing I would say is when I'm looking at this and I see what cities are
lowering the number of cops the most and which one's increasing.
Like if I look at decrease, New York is number one, just so you know.
The number of cops on how much fewer they have.
New York, Delaware, Idaho,
Maine, Louisiana, all have decreased.
Montana, Connecticut, Rhode Island have increased the number of cops.
I think that would be something to consider.
Now let me go into the next conversation.
Next question I got with you with the city is the following.
Permits.
When you look at real estate, okay, and you go to roads, and one thing when you're driving around New York,
there's a lot of unfinished projects
that are kind of sitting around.
And when you look at why, like right now California,
it's a worse time to be newsome.
You know, no matter how much he tries to spin it,
what he's going through in his state,
with all the stuff that's going on with the palisades,
what happened in Malibu, you know,
out of all
the homes that went through it, I think only six have been rebuilt and only 14% have permits
to start rebuilding.
So think about the permit issue that's taking place in California.
You got it as well.
When you look at New York City, and I wonder how much of this you can do something about
or it's got to be a governor, like a bigger position than you.
The number of highways, over 60% of the highways were built after 1970 in New York City.
They're built past their expected lifespan, most of these.
So when they build it, they're like, this is good to be for 40 years, 50 years, but
you guys are kind of playing with fire right now.
The Department of Transportation says over 200 city bridges are structurally deficient
as of 2024.
The Brooklyn Queen Expressway being one of them, you know, some of these other ones.
Then I said, I'm curious, the average highway compared to other cities.
In New York City, it's 60 to 80 years, the average age.
LA is 40 to 60 years.
Houston is 30 to 50 years.
Chicago is 50 to 70 years.
You have the oldest, and when you look at these numbers, the oldest of the oldest.
Then when you go to the cost, slowest and the most expensive construction timelines
in the world, it takes two to four years compared to some other places, you know, six to twelve months,
twelve to eighteen months.
To build a mile bridge in your area, the average subway extension in New York City, not bridge,
subway extension, two and a half billion to three and a half billion per mile compared
to Paris, it's only a half a million per mile, Seoul is 300 million per
mile, 120 per mile in Madrid, you're five to seven times more than Paris.
So people are sitting there saying, hey man, we cannot have our city that's the city,
the headquarters, financial capital.
But then where do you get the money from?
How do you fund this?
Who do you work with?
How do you get construction companies to work?
How do you put the incentive for people to say I want to clean up the roads and it takes such a long time to go
Through this
How do you manage all of this stuff when it comes down to?
Updating your roads because all it takes is one bad accident with a bridge one bad accident with that and then
That's a big story. Everyone's talking about without a doubt and as you mentioned the BQE
These are problems that would can, that was kicked down
the road for years.
I had and invited Secretary Duffy, Secretary of Transportation, to come and walk with me
and see the BQE and the erosion because those type of large projects, we need help and sign
off also from the federal government.
And so when you look at some of the roles that you mentioned in the bridges,
some is under city, state, and federal, and we need a combination of those things.
And when I ran for office, I stated that it takes too long,
and with too much bureaucracy bureaucracy to get things done.
And remember, remember while I was brought up on a diamond,
I was saying to the FDNY, go goddamn inspect the building.
If you're gonna pass it or fail, that's up to them.
But at least go in and do the inspection.
I was hearing on the campaign trail from building owners who was telling me, Eric, to get a fire inspection, it takes years. And it was my
mindset that we have to speed up the bureaucracy because if I have a building
owner developing a skyscraper and they have to wait to get an inspection and
they have a 200-man crew that they're paying for every day,
it just hurts business.
And here's why.
The whole concept of government is a flawed concept
in the manner in which if you don't incentivize the action,
if I have a person who opened a hotel
paying $35,000 a month in rent,
yet they can't have someone come in and turn on their gas
and turn on their electricity or come and give them a CFO
for an inspection, and no one is incentivizing.
If government is saying, I'm getting my salary
if I open you or not, that's wrong.
I started judging our agencies based on the end product.
How many restaurants did we open?
Not how many citations did you issue? How many building permits did we
approve? We have to incentivize government and judge based on the end
product because... How much control do you have to accelerate permit, the
speed of permitting? Is that influence on you? At what level is somebody able to accelerate the speed of people getting
permits? That's a great question. Part of the problem is is the permanency of
government. You know many people you know who don't want to see this
productivity, those who are in government, they have a mindset, we'll wait you out.
You know you're here for what four years, eight years? I've been here for 35 years.
I've been here for 34 years.
So when you go in and you put your folks at the top,
and we have modernized many of our systems.
I have a great chief technology officer.
A lot of this stuff, you could use real good
artificial intelligence technology.
Should not have to go through
this long series of interactions.
And that's the way I attempted to do.
So in three and a half years, we've modernized a lot.
But at the same time, remember,
I had to go to those top issues,
building the housing, making the city safe.
Well, I guess what I'm trying to say is,
can the campaign be that we're going to go through
the following permits that are taking so long to get approved because nine people need to
sign off and here's what we're doing moving forward.
Moving forward, we're going to split the time for campaign because we need to approve
the bridges to be rebuilt, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom.
Enough of the buildings that are not being built,
people are sitting on the sidelines,
and one of the reasons why it's not is permitting.
What can be a direct statement that you can make
to accelerate people getting permits?
Modernizing our system so we don't have all those layers.
And that's what I-
How do you do that?
We're doing that now.
With Commissioner Jimmy Otto,
former borough president,
my chief technology officer, Matt Frazier.
We're going in and looking at all of these systems
and we're asking the question,
do we need all of these layers?
For example, prior to our, before coming mayor,
we would do something called stop work orders
because there's a problem on a job site. What we've learned, there could be a problem with the carpentry, has nothing to do with
the electricity or dealing with the painters or what have you.
So why are we stopping the whole job?
Let's stop the part of the job that's the issue.
And now to get a stop work order of a whole job, you have to get signed off from the hierarchy of the building department. My contractors to say Eric
this was a home run for us because they were holding up our jobs and that's the
same thing we're looking at with building permits and other types of
permits as well. Yeah I would Rob what where is New York City in the speed of
permits of all the cities in America? Are you guys known as one of the slowest?
Would you say New York City's known?
I would say yes because we have so many rules
and regulations that were put in place
that was put in place not only by the agencies
but safety rules and regulations that were put in place
by laws and rules and proposals.
Is this a permits rap? Is this zoning permit. I believe so. Yes. Yes
Look at this new york city two to four plus years
Time for approval building restriction very high zoning reviews landmark. You got houston's
Zero to six months by the way houston just became the number three city in america
They passed up chicago. I believe they did if not, they're there now austin six to twelve months
That's where everybody is moving right now you
got you know Musk is there a bunch of guys even LA is one or two years Miami
is years Chicago's 12-12 months you guys are two to four years now let's now let's
break that down for a moment because and here's the solution to it also we have
all of these different procedures that community groups like
the Community Board must sign off. There's a lot of ladies. That's a ULIP.
ULIP is the Uniform Land Use Process. So what did we do this year? We put an
amendment on the ballot that will cut that time down to a year.
Voters must vote on it now. We had an entire, what we
call, you know, a review committee come in and look at how we modify the proposal
to do this. Everything from zoning to reviews to landmark to rules. That's
what's on the ballot right now that people will be voting on. So New Yorkers
must determine that, hey, we no longer want to go through this lengthy process
We knew it was a problem and that's why we put this battle this ballot amendment on the ballot
I think this is very big because you know and that's why I ask you when he said that the Duffy end up coming in
Or he never came. No, he can't we walk through together. He spent a couple hours. That's good. Here's the right guy
So he came in and I and I this is a big investment for the city
Yes, and to show that
you can collaborate with the existing administration and
Get a level of commitment from them that if you get elected so strategically for me would be if all of a sudden
You get a president Trump to say hey, I love New York City if
You guys go and support Mayor Adams
We're gonna be involved as a federal government to help come clean up New York's. I love New York City. If you guys go and support Mayor Adams, we're going to be involved as a federal government
to help come clean up New York because I love that place.
I grew up in that place, but there's no way we're doing that if Mamdani, if there's something
like that to be said, and I know he's aggressively not a fan of what Mamdani is doing, but I
think this would be very big to me.
Let me go to the second one, concern that I have on seeing how you're handling this.
Business.
When it comes down to business friendly places
for startups, and you said earlier
that a lot of younger engineers are coming in
and you were mentioning what's happening
with that last couple years.
When you think about taxes,
if you look at business tax friendly climate,
by ranking, I don't know if this is ranked,
I think that's alphabetical Rob,
but you know what, we can find a ranking.
You can put that bigger,
and I'll still be able to see the ranking there
if you can zoom in a little bit.
Okay, overall, go to the overall rank.
And California's 48, okay, California used to be 50,
by the way.
Go all the way down to New York,
you'll see New York is now 49th,
and the only one that's behind them
is Jersey.
The worst place for business, all in.
So let's look at the five rankings, Rob.
If you can go all the way to the top.
For corporate tax rate, let's see where New York ranks.
Corporate tax rate, New York is a little bit lower, Rob, I can't see it.
24th.
Okay. Second one, you're 50th. What's 50th? I can't see it, 24th.
Second one, you're 50th.
What's 50th?
Let's go see what's up there.
Individual income tax rank.
Holy shit, you guys are the worst.
50th.
Okay, sales tax rank, New York, and again, we're saying state, but you're running for
mayor, so I want to make sure that distinction.
You got 42.
Then what's the next one, 49.
Go to the next one to see what that is.
Property tax, 49th. Unemployment insurance tax rank is, where's New next one, 49? Go to the next one to see what that is. Property tax, 49.
Unemployment insurance tax rank is, where's New York at with that?
Okay, we got 39.
Okay.
Why would someone choose to build a small business and stay in New York City rather
than going and building it in Nashville, Tennessee, in Brentwood, in Fort Lauderdale,
in Boca, in Miami, in Orlando, in Jacksonville, in Plano, in Prosper, why would somebody stay
in New York if the tax climate, the regulation, the safety, why would someone stay in New
York or even go to New York? Well,
One reason only it's New York
When you look at what I hear all the time for my business leaders the talent
the diversity of talent when you look at the population
New York City has is considered the largest of Ukrainian population, one of the largest Chinese population,
largest Spanish-speaking population, largest Indian population.
That diversity of culture also allows you the diversity of creativity.
And what you find in New York, one of the best transportation systems to get anywhere
in the city, your workers can get anywhere in the city on a small fraction of a course.
You don't need a vehicle.
Outside in our outer boroughs, Bronx, Brooklyn, Queens, St.
Allen, you can find a home. There's quality of the schools because whenever someone
attracts their employees, there's two questions that they ask.
How good are the schools?
How safe is the community?
So when you bring down crime and you have quality schools,
you're able to attract that talent,
and particularly young people.
Young people, their entire life is not sitting
at an office desk.
Matter of fact, many of them not.
They want to have a nightlife.
They want to have a place that they could engage
and meet other young people in a very realistic way.
So I think it has a lot to do with the attractiveness
of the city and all that it has.
Yeah, and by the way, one thing we know for a fact,
because right now the candidates that are still in it
is Cuomo's still in it, right?
He hasn't stepped down yet.
So he's still in it, Mamdani's still in it, yourself and a Republican candidate, I always
get his last name right, Crutus Sliwa.
And what's his percentage?
Where is he at?
What percentage does he have, Rob?
Do we know?
It moves, you know, these polls move all over the place, you know?
Trying to see where he is at. So right, this is shown.
This is from who?
This is from Slingshot Strategies.
Do you trust, is this a trusted source?
Well, let's go, let's go here.
When I ran in 2021, Slingshot Strategies basically said,
I can't stand a chance against Andrew Yang,
but we're not calling Andrew Yang mayor, right?
No, we're calling you mayor.
So this has Mamdani at 35%, Cuomo at 25, Sliwa at 14,
and it only has you at 11.
Right, right.
You know, I think that when I ran in 2021,
they had me in fourth place also.
They had me behind, I think Scott Stringer,
someone else in there today.
So these polls have a history of not knowing my voters.
My voters, they're not calling for polling.
And the goal is gonna be a combination
of registering new voters, which is crucial to this race.
And that's what Madani did. He was successful in registering new voters, which is crucial to this race and that's what Madani did.
He was successful in registering new voters and for the first time telling my story. I haven't started campaigning.
I'm just starting campaigning, you know, and once I'm able to sell, tell my story, communicate with voters in an authentic way,
we know on victory day the only poll that matters is the poll that say you won.
I agree.
If Mamdani wins, okay, this is a big if, but let's just say if Mamdani wins.
And by the way, formidable guy, people cannot just think it's not going to happen.
Sometimes in elections, you know how people say, oh, we have it's a slam dunk, it's going
to be done.
I'm like, wait a minute, what?
The guy won?
Yes, he did.
If Mamdani wins, what happens to New York City?
Well, first of all, and I agree with you about slam dunks, Andrew Yang was walking around
with a tape measure, measuring the drapes of City Hall. He just knew he was going to
be the mayor. I knew differently because I know this city. And I think that if his policies
are put in place, if his policies are put in place if his policies
I'll put in place specifically and no matter who a candidate is if you have those policies
That are put in place. You're going to hurt small business. That's a real issue with our small businesses
We have 700,000 small landlords
It's going to hurt them if they can never raise rent, although
rent rolls are not meeting the repair.
And it's going to hurt poorer communities because buildings are going to fall into disrepair.
We saw this before in the 70s and 80s when rent rolls were not reaching what it costs
to run a building.
He's going to hurt public safety, defunding police.
He just announced the other day
he's not going to send police officers
to respond to domestic violence issues.
Officer Mora and Rivera, two officers that died
in the beginning of my administration,
they were going to a domestic violence call.
One of the most dangerous calls a police officer can go on is a domestic violence call. One of the most dangerous calls a police officer can go on is a domestic violence
call. You send civilians there, you are putting their lives in jeopardy. It hurts public safety
to empty out Rikers Island where you have some of the most dangerous criminals that are there,
if they're on Rikers Island. When you look at many of his projects just you know that he's put in place is the
Policies are going to hurt New Yorkers and it's gonna hurt low-income
New Yorkers working-class New Yorkers those who he stayed he represent did you see this young lady?
Who was a former a yes? Oh my god Rob. Do you have that clip? I would just love for the audience to see this.
Do you know who she is or you don't know? No, I don't. Okay, play this clip, Rob. Go for it. So,
New York City just nominated this guy, Zoran Mamdani, who is a socialist, to represent them
for the mayor's election. And I, if I was 25, I would be obsessed with Zoran. When I was 25,
I was actually 26, 27, I helped get AOC elected.
I made a video for her campaign that went super viral.
I met her a ton of times and I was a huge AOC person.
Now I'm 35 and like every stereotypical person
I've grown up and I've learned that these feel good politics
of promising free food, free college, free apartments,
like you get free, you get free, you get free.
It feels so good.
You feel as a young person when your frontal lobe is not fully developed and you're thinking
more in black and white that this is going to be good, right?
You're indoctrinated as a young person in America to believe that capitalism is bad
and all your problems are because of these evil business owners.
But I have to warn young people who are caught up in the mom, mom, Donnie vibe is that the road to hell is paid with good intentions
And we've seen time and time again in countries and cities that adopt these socialist programs
Is that the rich people who are gonna pay for them are gonna leave because of a high?
Taxes and then we just get more taxes and less for it
And one example of this on a smaller scale is in New York in 2019
for it. And one example of this on a smaller scale is in New York in 2019, there was a law that was passed by the state house, all Democrats to pause rent stabilization on sorry
to pause rent hikes on rent stabilized apartments so they can no longer rent hike. So say for
example, an apartment is rent stabilized, it's had the same tenants since the 1970s,
it comes up for rent. Landlords, because of this law, can only raise
the rent by 2%. So say in 1970s, someone was paying $200 a month, you're not going to be paying $220
a month in 2025. But the problem is that rent stabilized apartment needs to be renovated and
brought up 2025 code. So because of this law, what's happened is now there are tens of thousands of
empty apartments in New York that are rent stabilized that the landlords are not
Renovating because they know they cannot make their money back if they renovate them and again these landlords are not like evil people
And when you're indoctrinated into this sort of leftist oppressor oppressed
Mindset you think like business owners are evil. They're not many of them are small businesses, you know
They're living they're working on a margin and so it's not affordable for them to...
How do you...
Powerful, powerful...
Seriously.
Yes, it is.
Because idealism collides with realism.
Running a city is realism.
And we should be ideal, we should have hope, we should think about, you know, positivity
of the future, and that's what we believe in.
But running a city, you have to make tough choices and if you start saying a small
property owner seven hundred thousand we have in our city that you could never
raise the rent what happens is broken class people will see the quality of
their their housing go down we did we've before. You know, where you had landlords walking away
from their property, creating terrible environments.
And so what she just stated is that
we should all remain optimistic.
We should all have hope.
We should all want great things, you know.
But I lived in poverty.
I didn't study it in the school.
You know, and academic leaders
that never experienced Miss Mill Cramps don't really know what it's like.
And so just think about your journey.
You know, they're looking at you now,
everybody's looking at you right now.
This is your glory, it's not your story.
It's not your story.
And when people see just your glory
and don't realize your story,
growing up dyslexic was painful for me,
undiagnosed until I got to college.
Growing up on the verge of homelessness,
my mom used to give us, we used to line up at the door.
There was six plastic bags full of clothing,
change of clothing for the day,
because she thought we were going to come home
and we were going to be thrown out.
I used to turn that corner and my stomach
would have butterflies in it,
because I would be
Humiliated when the marshals were out there and anytime I saw a u-haul truck on the block. I was like done it
They thrown us out
That makes you think about what people are going through
And so when you live the luxury life the reason he thinks about giving everything away for free
It's because he got everything for free that was he raised with a silver spoon in his mouth.
Yes, and I was an actor, an actress, his dad was a, it was an, you know, an academic person.
This academic elitism is not how you run a city and I think she pointed it out well, her story.
Oh, absolutely. She would be somebody I'd bring on the team if I was you.
I'd find out who it is and I would, matter of fact, maybe reach out to them, get a hold
of the camp and speak with them.
In regards to Mamdani and New York, so New York City, 9-11, a day we'll never forget,
right?
Yes.
You definitely won't forget because you-
I was a lieutenant at the time.
You were a lieutenant at the time?
Yes, yes. And my brother was a sergeant. I went down to ground zero that night and that was a sight that
Really tore us apart.
You know
It was a it was one of those days that we'll never forget for the rest of our lives. Here's Bill Ackman
posting something about Mamdani's father, okay, and he says,
the Zohran Mamdani, the apple doesn't fall far from the tree, okay.
These are words from his father, a current professor at Columbia, okay, a school he tried
to go to where on his application he said he's African American, black, and Asian, okay.
Rob, if you can click on the picture so I can just read it.
Clearly, the prime objective of suicide bombers is not to terminate his or her own life, but
that of others defined as enemies.
We need to recognize the suicide bomber first and foremost as a category of soldier.
Does not the suicide bomber join both aspects of our humanity, particularly as it has been fashioned by political modernity in that we are willing
to subordinate life, both our own and that of others, to objectives we consider higher
than life.
Suicide bombing needs to be understood as a feature of modern political violence rather
than stigmatized as a mark of barbarism.
The danger of moral discussion of itself
How can any culture condone suicide is that it quickly turns into a replay of culture talks stereotyping etc etc you read this
Yes, it's kind of interesting. How do you process this?
And that I think that's what's important in this election
Because you and I both know that there are difference of opinions, how people view life and how they see life.
Sure. And your difference of opinion doesn't make you good or bad, it's just we think differently.
I don't support that. And the reason I don't support it doesn't mean there's not going to be others that support it.
But the question we need to ask as New Yorkers right now, does the majority of New Yorkers support that?
Or does the majority of New Yorkers believe suicide bombers are terrorists, that Hamas is a terrorist group,
that not calling or stating global infidata is wrong.
That's where we are right now.
Do we support the police or we don't support law enforcement?
Do we want people to commit crimes to serve their time or do we want to let them out on
the street?
Do we want our high income earners to stay here to pay their taxes, to help with our
city or we don't so we're just gonna that's the beauty of
Running against him. There's no gray areas
I'm just gonna lay out my case for the future of the city to continue to create
Opportunities for working-class people in a safe environment
I've read lay out the case and New Yorkers are going to have to make the determination.
Nine percent stated what they want, now we're going to find out what the other 91 percent
want.
This is very serious because 9-11 when it happened, it happened to, you know, some call
New York City the greatest city in the world.
Yes.
When that happened.
Devastating when we saw that.
So do we want the father of the son that may be the mayor of the city to speak like this
to make it seem like it's not a big deal?
I don't know.
I think this is concerning.
And when he said about cops just five years ago in a tweet, June of 2020, he tweeted saying
we don't need an investigation to know that the NYPD is racist, anti-queer, and a major
threat to public safety.
What we need to do is defund the NYPD.
This is that candidate.
Just so you know.
That's what he said, New York, if you're watching this.
But your deal with New York mayor uses budget tricks to keep as many cops as possible.
No to fake cuts, defund the police.
That's the guy.
That's five years ago.
You don't change a lot.
You change in 10 years.
You change in 20 years.
This is the core, and now he's kind of trying to reposition himself.
But I want to wrap it up with a couple questions
and then we'll finish it up.
I think one thing that's gonna be a big curve ball
for you is the following.
In your city, there was a major trade that happened.
There was a guy that used to play for the Yankees,
Juan Sota, that went to the Mets.
How you gonna handle it when the Yankees,
let's just say if Yankees face the Mets
this year in the World Series,
how is that gonna affect the election? That's catastrophic if you think, you gotta take a position, what are you going to handle it when the Yankees, let's just say, if Yankees face the Mets this year in the World Series, how is that going to affect the election?
That's catastrophic if you think.
You've got to take a position.
What are you going to do?
Well, I don't know if you have the picture of my hat that I wore, my hat during the playoffs,
the Yankee Mets hat.
Oh, you got one that has both?
Is that what you have?
You know, there's a hat.
Good images, Rob. That I have.
That's funny. That's funny.
Were you ever a Yankees guy or no? Were you ever a Yankees fan?
Once a team is in the playoff. I am a New Yorker. But how about regular season?
No, I grew up with the Mets. Oh, you're. Yes. Yes. Yes. I grew up who's your favorite
Who's your favorite baseball player like who was your guy coming all time? Yeah, who's your favorite Tommy?
Aged a crane pool
You look at Cleon Jones
Tell me girl those words. Those were good solid players
69 was my year Wow. I remember sleeping with Tom Seaver jersey
and just hugging it.
You know, I love those players.
Pitcher?
Yes, yes.
Wow.
Did you play, were you a guy that,
what sport did you play?
I played just about every sport.
That's cool.
Basketball, baseball, football.
You know, I enjoyed sports.
And sports is important.
You know, my son also played a great deal of sports soccer rugby of football respect
Right and and you know it builds that character for you know, you're going to strike out but there's other innings
You know, we you know, just think about think about what I was 15 months ago
think about that and
God is good. And all I did was get up every day and deliver for the city.
When you do an analysis of the day I was indicted and how much progress we made in the city
after that, it showed New York grit.
It's who we are as New Yorkers and really as Americans.
Because I said to myself, that mother that's living in public housing, no matter what she's going through. She has to get up and feed those children and mommy told me that she said listen
Get up you had to get up never
Surrender fight for what you believe in I believe in the city and I was sworn to protect them serve them and deliver them
And I was not going to give up no matter what I went through.
Well, we're rooting for New York to make the biggest comeback
and be that great city, safety, the whole nine.
And it concerns me who this guy is that's running in a big way.
Because everything New York City stands for,
you've always thought about how New York City was
with cops, on how they cleaned the street with the mobs
in the 70s and 80s, to what happened in the 2000
with Giuliani and what happened, you know,
how clean it was, right?
And then you always think about sports with New York.
New York is sports.
Everything is sports with New York, and then entertainment,
and then finance, private equity, hedge funds.
It's a very, very important city to the fabric of America like truly
It's very very important some excited see what happens
But I will tell you if the Mets and the Yankees go to the world
And the election has happened at the same time
The amount of high balls that's gonna be on that city. I hope you're ready for it because it's gonna be
And we got to we got the World Cup coming yeah, I know and I think the final is gonna be at the Jet Stadium
Yeah, it's gonna be yes in New York in New Jersey
Put it together. That's right side of time. I know it is. I know it's definitely what we're looking for
We're going to the game and folks if you're watching this and you would like to support the mayor
And folks, if you're watching this and you would like to support the mayor, Rob, if we can please put the website up that we can send them to.
And if you can put it in the chat as well.
The website is called eric2025.com.
Once again, eric2025.com.
If you'd like to support him, go to the website.
This is a very, very big election.
The last thing you want is to see New York City turn into the next Detroit and some of
these other places.
You need the right people to make sure we keep fighting for making that city great.
Mayor Adams, appreciate you for coming out, man, brother.
This was great.
Thank you.
Take care, everybody.
God bless.
Bye-bye.