Mayor Eric Adams speaks at Israel Independence Day celebration on Could 11, 2025.
Benny Polatseck | Mayoral Images Workplace
Lower than a month after visiting Israel, outgoing Mayor Eric Adams signed two govt orders on Wednesday in assist of the Center Japanese nation and Jewish New Yorkers.
The manager orders come lower than a month earlier than Zohran Mamdani takes the mayor’s workplace on Jan. 1. Mamdani, a Democratic socialist, has been important of Israel and has, prior to now, supported the Boycott Divest and Sanction (BDS) motion towards the Jewish state. These positions and his pro-Palestinian rhetoric led to a variety of New Yorkers accusing him of being antisemitic.
One order Adams issued on Dec. 3, No. 60, prohibits metropolis officers and appointees who deal with contracts from discriminating towards Israel, Israelis or these linked to Israel of their buying selections.
Based on the mayor’s workplace, the order additionally prohibits the chief pension administrator and mayoral trustees of the town pension system from opposing divestment from bonds and different belongings that may discriminate towards Israel or its residents, or these related to the nation.
“New York City not only has a strong bond with the State of Israel because of our commitment to protecting a Jewish homeland, but also because it has always been a sound financial investment, and our financial decisions should continue to reflect that truth,” Adams stated in a press launch. “Today, we are proud to sign this executive order and affirm that our investments and contracts should be made on the basis of what is best for New York City and our economic future, and not in pursuit of discriminatory policies on the basis of politics and national origin.”
The opposite govt order, signed on Dec. 3, No. 61, directs the NYPD commissioner to judge potential adjustments to the police officer patrol information, inspecting proposals for regulating protests close to homes of worship.
New York News contacted Mamdani’s transition staff for touch upon the orders and is awaiting a response.
The outgoing mayor isn’t the one native politician who has advocated for reforms relating to protests close to homes of worship. A number of state lawmakers on Wednesday, led by NYS Meeting Member Micah Lasher and state Sen. Sam Sutton, introduced a invoice that may set up a transparent 25-foot buffer zone round healthcare services and homes of worship, together with church buildings, synagogues, mosques and temples.
The invoice nonetheless must progress by the state legislative course of earlier than it’s accredited.






