Mayor Zohran Mamdani mentioned Friday that he’s reviewing two New York Metropolis Council payments handed on Thursday that require the NYPD to develop plans to deal with protests close to homes of worship and colleges when there’s a threat of bodily obstruction, harm, intimidation, or interference.
Screenshot by way of YouTube/@nycmayor
Mayor Zohran Mamdani mentioned Friday that he’s reviewing two New York Metropolis Council payments handed on Thursday that require the NYPD to develop plans to deal with protests close to homes of worship and colleges when there’s a threat of bodily obstruction, harm, intimidation, or interference.
The mayor mentioned he’s conscious of “serious concerns” that the measures might restrict New Yorkers’ constitutional rights.
Requested at an unrelated Decrease Manhattan press convention on March 27 whether or not he deliberate to signal or veto the payments, Mamdani mentioned he would contemplate these issues whereas looking for to guard each “the right to prayer and the right to protest.” He added that the measures had been considerably amended from once they had been initially proposed and that he would evaluate the ultimate variations “by the legal timeline.”
The payments reached Mamdani after the Metropolis Council on March 26 authorised a broader anti-hate package deal that included measures requiring the NYPD to develop and publicly put up plans for protests close to homes of worship and academic amenities when there’s a threat of bodily obstruction, bodily harm, intimidation or interference.
The homes-of-worship invoice, Intro 1-B, handed 44-5 — a veto-proof majority. The faculties invoice, Intro 175-B, handed 30-19. The legislative language is just like an government order then-Mayor Eric Adams signed earlier than leaving workplace, which Mamdani nullified by way of a blanket government order issued after turning into mayor on New 12 months’s Day.
What can Mamdani do on protest payments?
Like different mayors, Mamdani has the choice to signal or veto the laws; if he rejects the payments, the Council would nearly actually transfer to override the veto for at the least Intro. 1-B.
Mamdani additionally has the choice to take no motion on both invoice; if that occurs, the invoice(s) would mechanically grow to be regulation after 30 days.
The payments had been born out of demonstrations outdoors Park East Synagogue in Manhattan and a synagogue in Kew Gardens Hills, Queens, in addition to broader political fallout from pro-Palestinian protests on faculty campuses that intensified debate over antisemitism, protest rights and public security.
Supporters mentioned the payments had been designed to enhance transparency and accountability, not ban speech.
Speaker Julie Menin mentioned her measure would require the NYPD to create a plan to deal with dangers of obstruction, harm, intimidation and interference at homes of worship whereas preserving rights to free speech, meeting and protest.
Bronx Council Member Eric Dinowitz mentioned his colleges invoice would create “safe passages” for college students who reported being harassed, intimidated or bodily obstructed whereas coming into faculty buildings.
Opponents, nonetheless, mentioned the measures would give police an excessive amount of discretion and lift severe constitutional issues. Brooklyn Council Member Shahana Hanif mentioned the payments threatened protected speech and conflicted with town’s protest settlement framework, whereas the New York Civil Liberties Union and allied teams urged lawmakers to reject what they known as “no-speech buffer zones.”




