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Mayor Adams indicted: Gov. Hochul mum as calls for mayor’s resignation grow

Governor Kathy Hochul speaking
Gov. Kathy Hochul.
(Susan Watts/Office of Governor Kathy Hochul)

Gov. Kathy Hochul remained tightlipped Thursday on her embattled partner in City Hall, the now-indicted Mayor Eric Adams, even as numerous elected officials are calling for Hizzoner’s resignation.

Reached for comment, a spokesperson for Hochul — who under the state Constitution is empowered to remove local elected officials from office with cause — didn’t stake a hard position.

“Governor Hochul is aware of these concerning news reports and is monitoring the situation,” said Hochul spokesperson Avi Small. “It would be premature to comment further until the matter is confirmed by law enforcement.”

Federal prosecutors were expected to unseal an indictment against Adams on Thursday morning at the Southern District of New York offices in Lower Manhattan. The exact charges against the mayor remain unknown. His administration is facing several probes and has seen a wave of resignations in recent weeks.

The news outlet The City reported Mayor Adams is expected to be indicted for acting as an unregistered agent of a foreign government after taking campaign contributions; previous reporting has suggested this could be related to contributions from the Turkish government in exchange for pressuring fire code approvals at its new consulate building near the United Nations.

In a taped statement, Mayor Adams insisted he is innocent, arguing any charges against him were “entirely false, based on lies” and suggesting he is being targeted by the feds as political retribution. He rejected offhand calls for his resignation: “Make no mistake, you elected me to lead this city, and I will.”

Mayor Adams speaks about subway shooting
Mayor Eric Adams on Sept. 24, 2024.Ed Reed/Mayoral Photography Office

But the pending indictment has led to an outpouring of elected officials demanding that Adams resign — not least the mayoral hopefuls who are already seeking to unseat Hizzoner in 2025 in an unusually competitive race, with the incumbent facing low approval ratings and the looming investigative cloud over his head.

City Comptroller Brad Lander, who announced a run for mayor against Adams this summer, said that defending against federal charges would “require a significant amount of time and attention needed to govern this great city” and argued “the most appropriate path forward is for [Adams] to step down so that New York City can get the full focus its leadership demands.”

Brooklyn State Sen. Zellnor Myrie, who holds Adams’ old state Senate seat and is considering a mayoral run, similarly said the weight of Adams’ legal troubles would imperil his ability to lead the city.

“We need a leader who is fully focused, without distraction, on the enormous challenges we face — from housing affordability to public safety,” said Myrie. “A mayor under the weight of a serious indictment can no longer do that — and today I am calling on him to resign.”

Former Comptroller Scott Stringer, who plans to run against Adams a second time, said the indictment left New York’s government “a broken down trainwreck” and made a similar argument in calling for the mayor’s resignation: “His legal fight is not our fight.”

Numerous city, state, and federal legislators from progressive U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to conservative City Councilman Bob Holden — have called on the mayor to resign following the news of the indictment.

On the other hand, state Sen. Jessica Ramos, who announced her challenge of Adams earlier this month, stopped short of demanding that Adams quit in a Wednesday evening statement, though she did say that “a new day for our city is long overdue” following “weeks of FBI raids, indictments, and resignations.”

Meanwhile, Assembly Member Rodneyse Bichotte Hermelyn, head of the Brooklyn Democratic Party and a close ally of the mayor, declined to call for resignation, insisting the mayor is entitled to “due process.”

“Fairness demands simply that Mayor Adams is given what each of us would want: a presumption of innocence.”

Inquiries to U.S. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries, both of Brooklyn, were not returned Thursday morning. Before news of the indictment came down, Jeffries had declined to call for a resignation at a press conference.

“We need Eric Adams to be successful as mayor,” said Jeffries. “Because he is the mayor at this moment in time.”