Eric
Adams Heads to Mar-a-Lago to Meet With Trump
The New York
mayor, who is under federal indictment, has spoken warmly about President-elect
Donald J. Trump in recent weeks and has said he is open to receiving a pardon
from him.
Maggie
Haberman Dana Rubinstein Christopher Maag
By Maggie
HabermanDana Rubinstein and Christopher Maag
Jan. 16,
2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/01/16/nyregion/eric-adams-trump-mar-a-lago.html
Mayor Eric
Adams of New York City, his re-election chances in doubt and a federal
indictment looming over him, flew to Florida on Thursday to meet with
President-elect Donald J. Trump at Mar-a-Lago just four days before the
inauguration.
The mayor, a
Democrat, made the trip with no advance announcement. His aides said only that
the two men would discuss “New Yorkers’ priorities” when they meet on Friday.
Mr. Adams
joins a diverse roster of leaders from around the world who’ve made the trip to
Mar-a-Lago since the election, and he is not the first Democrat. John
Fetterman, the Democratic senator from Pennsylvania, met with Mr. Trump last
week. Other recent visitors have included Viktor Orban, the authoritarian prime
minister of Hungary, and Justin Trudeau, the liberal prime minister of Canada,
who is leaving office soon.
The mayor
requested the meeting, according to two people with knowledge of the trip. The
city is funding the trip because it has a "city purpose,” the mayor’s
spokeswoman said. No other city officials will accompany the mayor, aside from
his security detail, she added.
Mr. Trump,
who was convicted of 34 felonies in New York City in May, and Mr. Adams have
grown publicly closer since Mr. Adams’s indictment in September on five federal
corruption charges. It is part of an investigation that the mayor argues is
political retribution for his criticism of President Biden’s immigration
policies.
Mr. Trump
has publicly commiserated with Mr. Adams and seconded his depiction of a
Justice Department run amok. Mr. Adams has expressed openness to the notion of
receiving a presidential pardon.
While a
pardon for Mr. Adams might clear up some legal problems for the mayor, it could
also prove politically toxic for an incumbent already facing an uphill path to
re-election in a highly competitive June primary in a city dominated by
Democrats.
The mayor
has drawn criticism from members of his party for appearing to cozy up to Mr.
Trump.
But Mr.
Adams’s spokesman, Fabien Levy, said the mayor had only the city’s interests in
mind. “Mayor Adams has made quite clear his willingness to work with
President-elect Trump and his incoming administration on behalf of New Yorkers
— and that partnership with the federal government is critical to New York
City’s success,” Mr. Levy said.
“The mayor
looks forward to having a productive conversation with the incoming president
on how we can move our city and country forward,” he added.
A spokesman
for Mr. Trump did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Some of Mr.
Adams’s opponents in the upcoming Democratic primary attacked him Thursday
night for the Mar-a-Lago trip.
“Eric Adams
should state immediately that he will not seek or accept a pardon from Donald
Trump,” Brad Lander, the New York City comptroller, said. “New Yorkers deserve
to know that their mayor is putting their interests ahead of his own.”
State
Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani, also a candidate in the Democratic primary, called
the trip “a pathetic and embarrassing gambit by a disgraced mayor to keep
himself out of federal prison, nothing more.”
He added,
“He’s willing to let our neighbors be deported and our city’s budget be
slashed, if it helps him get a pardon from our president.”
“I imagine
it’s easier to ask for a pardon in person,” said State Senator Jessica Ramos,
who is also running for mayor. She said the mayor’s failure to disclose the
trip on his schedule until Thursday night was inappropriate. “It makes New
Yorkers feel like he is hiding. ”
Mr. Trump
has a famously fraught relationship with New York City. Though he grew up in
Queens and later was celebrated for real estate deals and tabloid sizzle, the
city resoundingly rejected his first bid for the presidency, and New Yorkers
responded to his election in 2016 by stripping his name from several high-rise
buildings. Mr. Trump, in turn, took every opportunity to disparage New York.
In 2019, he
complained of his treatment at the hands of New York’s leaders and changed his
primary residence from Manhattan to Palm Beach, Fla.
In the 2024,
New York City voters also rejected Mr. Trump’s presidential bid, albeit by
smaller margins. And New York City’s mayor has adopted a far more conciliatory
tone.
For months,
Mr. Adams has adopted a warm posture toward the incoming president.
In the
run-up to the November election, his apparent reluctance to criticize Mr. Trump
and to endorse Kamala Harris for president raised questions about whom he
intended to vote for. On Election Day, he told reporters he did in fact plan to
vote for Ms. Harris.
Since Mr.
Trump’s victory, Mr. Adams, who was for a period of time in the 1990s a
registered Republican, has repeatedly said he wanted to work with the
president-elect, not war with him.
During an
interview in December, he did not immediately rule out running for re-election
as a Republican, only to later clarify that he did in fact intend to run as a
Democrat again.
The same
month, he met with Mr. Trump’s incoming “border czar,” Thomas D. Homan, and
said they shared “the same desire” to go after undocumented immigrants who had
committed crimes in the city. Mr. Homan, who played a central role in Mr.
Trump’s first-term family separation policies, proceeded to go on the TV show
“Dr. Phil” and praise the mayor.
Around the
same time, two of Mr. Adams’s advisers were quietly trying to secure a ticket
for him to attend Mr. Trump’s inauguration in Washington on Monday.
At a charity
event in September, Mr. Trump said he felt a kinship with Mr. Adams.
“We were
persecuted, Eric,” Mr. Trump said at the Alfred E. Smith Memorial Foundation
Dinner. “I was persecuted, and so are you, Eric.”
At a news
conference three months later, Mr. Trump said he would consider a pardon for
Mr. Adams.
William K.
Rashbaum contributed reporting.
Maggie
Haberman is a White House correspondent, reporting on the second,
nonconsecutive term of Donald J. Trump. More about Maggie Haberman
Dana
Rubinstein covers New York City politics and government for The Times. More
about Dana Rubinstein
Christopher
Maag is a reporter covering the New York City region for The Times. More about
Christopher Maag
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