Mamdani Asks 179 Adams Staff Members to Quit
In City Hall Housecleaning, Mamdani Asks 179 Adams Staff Members to Quit
Zohran Mamdani will be sworn in as mayor on Jan. 1. His request for resignations targeted political appointees.

Zohran Mamdani, the incoming mayor of New York City, has requested the resignations of 179 staff members in Mayor Eric Adams’s administration, Mr. Mamdani’s spokeswoman confirmed on Tuesday.
The requests target political offices in City Hall, including people who work in the office of intergovernmental affairs, in communications and in other offices overseen by the city’s deputy mayors. Employees, including many whose tenure at City Hall predate the Adams administration, have been told that they will no longer have jobs starting Jan. 1.
The move comes as Mr. Mamdani’s transition team cranks into higher gear, with less than six weeks to go before he is sworn in as mayor. He has already named Dean Fuleihan, a longtime government hand, as his first deputy mayor and has retained the police commissioner, Jessica Tisch. On Monday, he unveiled a 400-person transition advisory group, divided into 17 committees.
“As is standard practice for a mayoral transition, the mayor-elect and his transition team are working to build their City Hall plan, which includes new staff in key roles to ensure they can deliver effectively on their agenda,” Dora Pekec, Mr. Mamdani’s spokeswoman, said in a statement.
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It is typical for new administrations to clear out political appointees who served the prior mayor, though it is not always done with as much lead time or so extensively.
That Mr. Mamdani’s housecleaning should be so thorough might be a testament to the unusual extent to which Mr. Adams filled City Hall with longtime friends whose principal qualification often seemed to be loyalty to the mayor.
The political pendulum swing from Mr. Adams to Mr. Mamdani is also pronounced.
Ursulina Ramirez, who helped lead Bill de Blasio’s transition in 2013, said Mr. Mamdani’s housecleaning was reminiscent of Mr. de Blasio’s after he succeeded Michael R. Bloomberg.
That change in administration also marked a notable political shift.
“From my recollection, this is normal,” she said. “To be fair, a lot of people transitioned anyway. They were like, ‘Don’t worry I’m already transitioning Jan. 1.’”
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Fabien Levy, a spokesman for Mr. Adams, said that the outgoing mayor handled things differently when he transitioned into office in 2021, “keeping on longtime public servants who served in the Bloomberg and de Blasio administrations.”
“We’re extremely disappointed that working-class New Yorkers who dedicated their lives to bringing us out of Covid, managing the asylum-seeker crisis, and doing so much more for their fellow New Yorkers were not even considered for roles in the incoming Mamdani administration,” Mr. Levy continued.
He said the employees “should not be the victims of political gamesmanship” and called the decision to part ways with them “the incoming Mamdani administration’s first governmental mistake.”
Certainly, some current City Hall staff members have seen the writing on the wall, and have been preparing résumés and seeking new job opportunities.
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Others, including some of the less political policy employees, have been living in limbo, unsure if they will be able to stay on in a Mamdani administration or have to find new employment.
Mr. Mamdani has a lengthy roster of individuals eager to work for him at City Hall. According to Ms. Pekec, the transition has received roughly 70,000 résumés.
Dana Rubinstein covers New York City politics and government for The Times.
More on Mayor-Elect Zohran Mamdani
Progressive Mayor Questions Approach: Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani won praise for his meeting with President Trump. But Michelle Wu, the like-minded mayor of Boston, said “flattery is not the way.”
Tensions With Jewish Leaders: The mayor-elect chastised a synagogue that hosted an event promoting migration to Israel and settlements in occupied territories. His stance further tested his strained relationship with pro-Israel Jews.
Trump Meeting: A meeting at the White House between President Trump and Mamdani was strikingly warm as they seemed to cast aside months of traded insults, a development that seemed good for New York City but odd to some Trump followers. Read the transcript of the news conference.
Tamped Down Fears Over National Guard: After the friendly White House meeting between Trump and Mamdani, the prospect of the National Guard being deployed to the city seems less likely.
Challenges Ahead: Being mayor of New York City is often referred to as the second hardest job in the country, but the task may be even more complicated for Mamdani. There are pressing housing issues and the challenge of fixing New York City’s schools.






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