
NYC moderates scramble to team up to beat Zohran Mamdani, but candidate grudges derail deal
The mayor and ex-Gov. Andrew Cuomo, both set to appear on November ballots as independents, spent Monday bashing each other as former Gov. David Paterson argued the remaining candidates should make a deal so that only one of them actively runs against democratic socialist Mamdani in the general election.
The candidate who continues to campaign would be determined by an independent poll closer to the election or by leaders across Big Apple institutions.
3 Paterson said other candidates should help back the strong one to face Mamdani.
Matthew McDermott
But Adams made clear that he had no interest in dropping out just as he started his campaign, claiming the energy, fundraising and support is all 'overwhelming.' Hizzoner is a Democrat but opted out of the party primary earlier this year.
He said Cuomo — who lost the primary to Mamdani — should quit instead. Hizzoner brought up the ex-governor's 2021 resignation in the face of sexual harassment claims which he has strongly denied.
'The only reason we are in this situation is because Andrew stepped down from his office and did an embarrassing run for mayor. He knew when he ran on an independent line he was setting up this scenario,' a campaign spokesperson told The Post.
'He needs to put his selfish ambitions to the side and do what is best for the city,' the Adams camp added.
'Andrew stepped down for a reason, and the public hasn't forgotten. If he couldn't finish his last term, why should voters believe he can lead the city now? He'll step aside again — because New Yorkers want progress, not the politics of the past.'
Cuomo essentially went head-to-head against Mamdani in a crowded Democratic primary, losing to the far-left Queens assemblyman by a whopping 12 percentage points after all ranked-choice voting was calculated.
3 Adams said his campaign is just getting started.
William Farrington
A rep for Cuomo insisted Adams was actually the candidate only looking out for himself – and had no shot at reelection.
'We do not see any path to victory for Mayor Adams,' campaign spokesperson Rich Azzopardi said in a statement.
'This is the time to put aside the usual political selfishness and agree to do what is truly best for all New Yorkers.'
Still, Azzopardi stressed Cuomo's campaign is reviewing the proposal that would have candidates all be included in an impartial poll to determine who has the best shot in November.
'While this is unorthodox, these are unusual times,' the campaign said. 'We are at a dangerous moment for our city.'
The polling proposal was first offered by another independent candidate, attorney Jim Walden, who said the four 'free-market' candidates, including GOP candidate Curtis Sliwa, could participate in a rank-choice poll in the fall and whomever came out on top would get support from the other three candidates.
There are glaring caveats though.
Sliwa, like Adams, doesn't appear willing to get on board with helping another candidate.
3 Cuomo lost in the primary to Mamdani.
LP Media
'Andrew Cuomo couldn't beat Zohran Mamdani in a primary. Eric Adams is polling dead last with no support from either party,' the Guardian Angels founder tweeted Monday. 'I'm running on the issues and I will beat Mamdani on November 4th and bring this city back.'
The other issue is the three candidates that suspend their campaign could possibly be forced to pay back the public funds received from the city's Campaign Finance Board, Walden admitted in a press release.
Ex-Gov. Paterson, during Monday's press conference along with Gristedes owner John Catsimatidis and 770 AM personality Judge Richard Weinberg, said he would not say which candidate should step down.
'What we are really doing is calling on the candidates who are still in the race to find a way to unite behind one of them. Now, most candidates, you have to give them credit. They work hard. They're working 24/7. They're trying to get your vote,' said Paterson, who backed Cuomo in the primary.
'The idea of pulling back and supporting someone else is very difficult for anyone to accept.'
The candidates' names would all be on the November ballot even if they stopped campaigning.
Paterson said leaders from the education, financial, business and political world could help sort out which candidate is best to run in November. He also suggested another good indicator would be which candidate has the most robust fundraising in the coming months.
Paterson, in a statement released after the press conference, also said surveys and polls in the coming weeks could signal which candidates is strongest.
He took a shot at Mamdani and said his policies would cripple Gotham.
'If [Mamdani's] the cure for what ails the [Democratic] Party, then cyanide is the cure for a headache,' Paterson argued.
A poll released last week to bolster support for Adams fell flat for the mayor. It showed Mamdani with a comfortable 41% of the vote with Cuomo collecting 26% and Adams only taking home 16%. Sliwa cashed in with just under 10% of support.
Cuomo has yet to commit to running for an actual campaign ahead of November while Adams is pressing the political scion to drop out.
On CNBC, Adams said Monday Cuomo asked him in a conversation to drop out, but Adams rebuked that suggestion.
'I said, 'Andrew, are you that level of arrogance?' I'm the sitting mayor, the sitting mayor of the City of New York,' Adams claimed he told Cuomo.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Politico
2 hours ago
- Politico
Trump defends Bondi amid MAGA turmoil
Trump and many of his allies — including Bondi, and now-FBI Director Kash Patel and Deputy Director Dan Bongino — entertained conspiracies about Epstein, particularly in the runup to the 2024 election. Trump and his senior law enforcement officials had pledged to reveal the truth behind Epstein's crimes and his death — promising to release a purported 'client list,' that some believed would show that Epstein was blackmailing prominent elites, and entertaining the idea that he may have actually been killed to silence him. But once in office, that all began to change — culminating in a statement from the Department of Justice and FBI put out earlier this week that said Epstein did, in fact, end his own life and that there was no incriminating client list. 'We have a PERFECT Administration, THE TALK OF THE WORLD, and 'selfish people' are trying to hurt it, all over a guy who never dies, Jeffrey Epstein. For years, it's Epstein, over and over again,' Trump wrote on Saturday, insisting that any such files were actually written by Trump's enemies in previous Democratic administrations. Much of the post-release furor has focused on Bondi, after some MAGA commentators speculated that she was slow-walking the truth. The Trump administration has spent the last couple days furiously denying reports that Bongino — who regularly engaged in Epstein conspiracies as a podcaster — was considering resigning from his position after a fight with the attorney general.


New York Post
3 hours ago
- New York Post
Trump set to join prestigious presidential roadway honor roll near his beloved Florida estate
A stretch of Florida roadway leading to Mar-a-Lago could soon be renamed in honor of President Donald Trump – the latest effort by many lawmakers throughout the country to memorialize the current commander-in-chief. Palm Beach County commissioners this week unanimously approved a measure to rename Southern Boulevard 'President Donald J. Trump Boulevard,' according to The Associated Press (AP). The east-west roadway leads to Trump's home in Palm Beach. It's the route Trump's motorcade takes when he travels to and from his Mar-a-Lago estate and Palm Beach International Airport. Trump supporters frequently line Southern Boulevard to greet the president during his trips home from Washington. But it wouldn't be the first boulevard in Palm Beach County to be named after a Republican president. A street in Delray Beach – about 20 miles south of Mar-a-Lago – was renamed George Bush Boulevard in honor of former President George H.W. Bush in the early 1990s. 6 Supporters wave at President-elect Donald Trump's motorcade as it passes along Southern Boulevard on Bingham Island as it returns to Trump's Mar-a-lago Club on December 03, 2024 in Palm Beach, Florida. Getty Images Former President Barack Obama, a Democrat, has two Palm Beach County roadways named after him. Riviera Beach, about 12 miles north of Palm Beach, renamed a roadway President Barack Obama Highway in 2015, two years after the city of Pahokee – in the western reaches of Palm Beach County near Lake Okeechobee – changed the name of a street to Barack Obama Boulevard. 6 Elon Musk and President Donald Trump hold a press conference in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, DC on Friday, May 30, 2025. Francis Chung/UPI/Shutterstock The Federal Highway Administration told Fox News Digital it does not have a directory or database of federal roadways named after U.S. presidents. But the U.S. Census Bureau released a list of the most popular street names in 1993. It revealed that George Washington, the nation's first commander-in-chief, leads all presidents with the most roadways named after him. Abraham Lincoln, the 16th president, is second on the list, followed by Andrew Jackson, the nation's 7th president. 6 Abraham Lincoln (1809 – 1865), the 16th President of the United States of America. Getty Images The fourth-most common street surname is Johnson – in honor of Andrew Johnson (17th president) and/or Lyndon B. Johnson (36th president). Others on the list include Thomas Jefferson (3rd president), Woodrow Wilson (28th), Adams (in honor of John Adams, 2nd president, or son John Quincy Adams, 6th president), Zachary Taylor (12th) and James Madison (4th). Roadways of modern presidents represented in many major U.S. cities include John F. Kennedy (35th), Ronald Reagan (40th) and Barack Obama (44th). 6 Former US President Barack Obama speaks on the second day of the Democratic National Convention (DNC) at the United Center in Chicago, Illinois, on August 20, 2024. AFP via Getty Images Reagan has parkways (in Georgia and Indiana), a highway (in Ohio) and a freeway (in California) named after him. There's also the Ronald Reagan Trail in Illinois, Ronald Reagan Boulevard in Texas and the Ronald Reagan Turnpike in Florida. Obama has had several avenues (in Florida, Illinois, Mississippi and Ohio) and boulevards (in California, Florida, Georgia and Missouri) named after him. 6 American president Ronald Reagan makes an announcement from his desk at the White House, Washington DC. Getty Images Kennedy has an expressway in Chicago, a boulevard in Philadelphia and a street in Cambridge, Massachusetts. In downtown Minneapolis, a sequence of streets is named after presidents, going west to east in chronological order. Elsewhere in the country, nearly two dozen miles of a U.S. highway in Oklahoma were renamed for Trump in 2021, while states like Arizona and Kentucky have proposed similar legislation. 6 US President Donald Trump during a bilateral meeting with Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel's prime minister, not pictured, in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, US, on Monday, April 7, 2025. Bloomberg via Getty Images Trump also has an avenue named after him in Hialeah, Florida, a suburb of Miami. Under Florida law, if a 'bridge or road segment being designated is located in more than one city or county, resolutions supporting the designation must be passed by each affected local government prior to the erection of the markers.' Since Southern Boulevard passes through West Palm Beach and Palm Beach, those municipalities must still approve such measures.


Newsweek
3 hours ago
- Newsweek
Democrat Lawmaker Blasts 'Alligator Alcatraz' as 'Internment Camp'
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Representative Debbie Wasserman Schultz, a Florida Democrat, on Saturday toured the Everglades migrant detention site, known as "Alligator Alcatraz," and denounced the facility as an "internment camp." "The conditions that we saw inside this internment camp—which it is nothing less than that description—were really appalling," Wasserman Schultz told reporters. Newsweek has reached out to Wasserman Schultz's office by email outside of normal business hours on Saturday afternoon for comment. Why It Matters Florida's Democratic representatives have tried for weeks to gain access to the Everglades facility, which was hastily established at the site of the Dade-Collier Training and Transition Airport and rapidly filled with detainees. National scrutiny over the conditions of the facility have remained a significant focus amid ongoing controversies about the treatment of detainees, particularly migrants and non-citizen residents, at U.S. immigration facilities. The center is part of the Trump administration's effort to crackdown on illegal immigration. President Donald Trump has vowed to carry out the largest mass deportation in U.S. history, an initiative that has seen an intensification of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids across the country. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis and other Republicans have touted the detention center as efficient despite concerns about the makeshift nature of the establishment, largely constructed of tents, trailers, and temporary buildings that flooded the day after Trump toured the facility. The Everglades facility now holds an estimated 400 people, has drawn backlash from immigration, environmental and Indigenous groups and is facing a lawsuit from the group Friends of the Everglades and the Center for Biological Diversity. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Kristi Noem said during a press conference on Saturday that it is "held to the same standard that all federal facilities are." Beds are seen inside a migrant detention center, dubbed "Alligator Alcatraz," located at the site of the Dade-Collier Training and Transition Airport, as President Donald Trump tours the facility in Ochopee, Florida, on July 1.... Beds are seen inside a migrant detention center, dubbed "Alligator Alcatraz," located at the site of the Dade-Collier Training and Transition Airport, as President Donald Trump tours the facility in Ochopee, Florida, on July 1. Inset: Representative Debbie Wasserman Schultz, a Florida Democrat, is seen during a press conference after visiting "Alligator Alcatraz" on July 12 in Ochopee, Florida. More Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images //What To Know Florida lawmakers on Saturday took a state-arranged tour of the facility after some were blocked earlier from viewing it due to the large number of Democrats and Republicans who turned up on Saturday morning. The lawmakers were divided into multiple groups that toured the facility, and Wasserman Schultz told reporters ahead of her visit that lawmakers had arrived because they wanted to ask questions and get a sense of conditions even if they were not going to be allowed into the facility. The congresswoman has remained a vocal opponent of the state's detention facilities, previously railing against the Glades County Detention Center in Moore Haven, Florida, telling Newsweek at that time that "there's just too many credible reports that people are not properly cared for there, and that's an understatement" and that it was "time to close this facility." After her tour of the Everglades facility on Saturday, Wasserman Schultz called the facility an internment camp and described the conditions. "Throughout this entire tour, it was repeated over and over that the state is working hand in glove with ICE," Wasserman Schultz said. "This facility was inspected by ICE. They review their detention standards. They are using cages. These detainees are living in cages. The pictures that you've seen don't do it justice." She described the detention areas as "cages, wall-to-wall," that held 32 people per "cage," which contained only bunk beds and "three tiny toilets" that are a toilet and sink combined into a single unit. "They get their drinking water, and they brush their teeth, where they poop, in the same unit," the congresswoman said, adding that officials "bragged that they went above standards, supposedly." She described the shower facility as having "no privacy at all," with 900 men sharing the space and having only "small walls in each shower." However, her greatest shock was reserved for the food provided to the detainees: The congresswoman said that when shown the "meal prep area," she saw that employees at the facility were fed "large pieces of roast chicken, large sausages," while detainees ate "small, gray turkey and cheese sandwiches and apple and chips, and that's it." "We're talking about fully grown men being fed very small portions," she said. What People Are Saying Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin in an emailed statement to Newsweek regarding Wasserman Schultz's comments: "Beyond disgusting. The vilification of ICE must stop. This type of rhetoric directly contributes to ICE law enforcement facing a nearly 700% increase in assaults against them. Our brave law enforcement should be thanked for risking their lives every day to arrest violent criminal illegal aliens including gang members, murderers, and pedophiles." Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem previously wrote on X, formerly Twitter: "Alligator Alcatraz can be a blueprint for detention facilities across the country. It will provide DHS with the beds and space needed to safely detain the worst of the worst." Bacardi Jackson, executive director of the ACLU of Florida, wrote in a statement: "As President Trump doubled down on his agenda of fear and division, we're reminded that this cruel and inhumane stunt is part of a broader strategy to expand the abusive mass detention machine, and in turn, criminalize and disappear members of our communities. Building a prison-like facility on sacred indigenous land in the middle of the Everglades is a direct assault on humanity, dignity, indigenous sovereignty, and the constitutional protections we all share." Representative Maxwell Frost, a Florida Democrat, wrote in a statement: "I've toured these facilities myself – real ones, not the makeshift tents they plan to put up – and even those detention centers contain conditions that are nothing short of human rights abuses. Places where people are forced to eat, sleep, shower, and defecate all in the same room. Places where medical attention is virtually non-existent. Anyone who supports this is a disgusting excuse for a human being, let alone a public servant." What Happens Next? While the Everglades facility is ostensibly established as a temporary response to the needs of the Trump administration's deportation effort, it remains unclear how long officials plan to continue using the facility, especially as national scrutiny continues to grow. This article includes reporting by The Associated Press.