Northeast
NY Mayor Adams says Dems prioritized 'fascist' attacks on Trump over talking to everyday Americans
New York City Mayor Eric Adams told “The View” Friday that the Democratic Party needs to focus less on calling its political enemies fascists and focus more on speaking to the needs of everyday Americans.
Adams, a Democrat, was pressed about “defending” President-elect Donald Trump from comparisons to Adolf Hitler made by his own former staff. The mayor clarified he wasn’t defending Trump but criticizing the left’s hyperbolic rhetoric.
“We’ve reached a point in this country where we no longer want to engage in conversation. They were even calling him Hitler,” he said, adding, “That was an insult to the millions of Jews and others who died. We know what Hitler did.”
YALE PSYCHIATRIST CALLS IT ‘ESSENTIAL’ FOR LIBERALS TO CUT OFF TRUMP-VOTING LOVED ONES DURING HOLIDAYS
New York City Mayor Eric Adams told “The View” he believes the Democratic Party have lost sight of everyday working class voters while fixating on painting Trump as a fascist.
Adams last month denounced former Trump White House Chief of Staff John Kelly’s comparisons of his ex-boss to the infamous Nazi leader as well as descriptions of Trump as a fascist.
“I have heard those terms hurled at me by some political leaders in the city, using terms like Hitler and fascist. My answer is no, I know what Hitler has done and I know what a fascist regime looks like,” he told the press.
He laid it out for the co-hosts of “The View,” noting how this type of rhetoric ratchets up civil tension across the board.
“And what I said to our country, when I’m on the streets talking to my young people who are protesting on college campuses wearing Hamas signs and calling for the destruction of groups, I said, ‘We have to bring down this rhetoric. We have to start engaging in conversation.’”
“This is not the divided states, this is the United States. We’re the greatest country on the globe and people are watching us,” he added.
‘THE VIEW’ CO-HOST AGREES WITH ADVICE TO CUT OFF PRO-TRUMP FAMILY AT HOLIDAYS: ‘A MORAL ISSUE FOR ME’
Co-host Joy Behar pushed back, asking, “But do you think Trump should’ve brought down the rhetoric?”
“Everybody should,” he answered.
Behar fired back, “Well, let’s start at the top then, because maybe it trickles down.” Again, Adams said, “Everybody should.”
Later pressed about Harris underperforming President Biden’s 2020 New York performance by 11 points in the 2024 election, Adams attributed the loss of support for state Democrats to the party having “stopped talking about working-class people issues.”
“When mom and pops are afraid – ‘I can’t pay my college tuition,’ ‘The rent is too damn high,’ ‘Healthcare is too expensive’ – we stopped talking to everyday New Yorkers and Americans,” he declared.
He continued, “When I’m in the streets talking to them, they’re not asking me, ‘Eric, tell me about fascism.’ They’re talking about finance. They’re not talking about Hitler. They’re talking about housing. We need to talk to everyday working-class people, and we stopped doing that. And those are the issues that they are afraid of. They’re afraid of the future of their children.”
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Northeast
NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani set to earn nearly $260K, about 80% more than his prior salary
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New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani is set to earn nearly $260,000 a year, in line with the salary paid to his predecessor.
The figure is based on public payroll records showing that former Mayor Eric Adams earned $258,750 in total pay.
Mamdani previously earned about $142,000 as a state assemblyman, according to Ballotpedia, an increase of roughly 80%.
Mamdani’s office did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment on whether he plans to accept the full salary or donate a portion of it.
NEW YORK CITY IS ABOUT TO TEST MAMDANI’S PROGRESSIVE ECONOMIC VISION
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani delivers his inaugural address Thursday, Jan. 1, 2026, outside City Hall. (Fox News/Pool)
New York City consistently ranks among the most expensive cities in the country, with housing costs far above the national average.
An annual salary of about $260,000 would place Mamdani among the city’s top earners, more than three times New York City’s median household income of roughly $80,000, according to the most recent Census Bureau data.
Mamdani posted on his Instagram account in December that he and his wife Rama would move from their home in Astoria, Queens, to Gracie Mansion, the official, rent-free residence of the mayor on Manhattan’s Upper East Side, in January.
MAMDANI DISPUTES ANTISEMITISM DEFINITION AMID BLOWBACK FROM JEWISH COMMUNITY ABOUT DAY 1 EXECUTIVE ORDERS
Gracie Mansion in New York, on Sept. 26, 2024. (Victor J. Blue/Bloomberg)
“This decision came down to our family’s safety and the importance of dedicating all of my focus on enacting the affordability agenda New Yorkers voted for,” he wrote.
Mamdani was sworn in Jan. 1 as the 112th mayor of New York City, becoming the first Muslim to hold the office.
Mayor Zohran Mamdani reacts after speaking during his inauguration ceremony, Thursday, Jan. 1, 2026, in New York. (Heather Khalifa/AP Photo)
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“City Hall will deliver an agenda of safety, affordability and abundance—where government looks and lives like the people it represents, never flinches in the fight against corporate greed, and refuses to cower before challenges that others have deemed too complicated,” Mamdani said in his inaugural address.
“In so doing, we will provide our own answer to that age-old question—who does New York belong to? Well, my friends, we can look to Madiba and the South African Freedom Charter: New York ‘belongs to all who live in it.’”
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Boston, MA
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Pittsburg, PA
Hemingway’s Cafe in Oakland closing after more than four decades
A longtime staple near Pitt’s campus is closing its doors after more than four decades of business in Oakland.
Hemingway’s Cafe announced Thursday that it will be closing for good in May after more than 40 years along Forbes Avenue in the heart of Oakland.
“Since opening in 1983, Hemingway’s has been more than just a bar – it’s been a home, a meeting place, and an Oakland staple for generations of students, alumni, locals, and friends at the heart of the University of Pittsburgh,” the bar said.
The bar said while they are sad to be closing, they’re also grateful for the decades of memories, laughter, friendship, and traditions over the years.
“Thank you for making Hemingway’s what it has been for over four decades,” the bar said.
A final closing date for Hemingway’s hasn’t been announced.
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