As Judge Dale Ho's decision on Friday further extended uncertainty about whether Mayor Eric Adams has practical hope for him to run for reelection, the city government's sanity forces have been announced in June. They may not have a standard representative at all in the Democratic primary election on the 24th.
This is where Jessica Tish can offer her hopes.
A practical and effective veteran of city government with unquestionable integrity, Tisch has the height and grit to firmly restore New York City on the path to stability and prosperity growth.
Other options go beyond the dark. Hellishly far leftist executives in exacerbating urban issues, faded his long-standing radical beliefs, perhaps to win a centralist Democrat He was caught in hell in exacerbating the problems of the city led by fudging socialist Brad Lander. Proves primary and decisive.
Furthermore, the man's polls have been placed as the current favourite (though he is not even official in the race yet) Ex-Gov. Andrew Cuomo – claims to be moderate, but in his last year as governor, he wreaked havoc on the left.
It wasn't just he signed a bail-free law and other “criminal justice reforms” that he saw crime rise soon. After another and heavily restricted law enforcement cooperation with the ice – to boost his progressive credibility as he turns to the run of the future president.
His other harsh gifts to New York include raiding through crowd pricing schemes and imposing an insane “climate agenda” that began to send high prices in electricity and gas from these years onwards. I'm giving a gift for.
And so far, he has shown no evidence that he can show regret for these mistakes. He not to mention the heartbreaking claims that he sent thousands of elderly people to their deaths during Covid.
Meanwhile, the Autumn Republican candidate looks like Curtis Swa. . . Also.
New Yorkers who have suffered for a long time deserve better.
While many New Yorkers only learned her name when they took over the police department last November, Tish has more than 20 years of experience in public services that began with the NYPD's Anti-Terrorism Bureau in 2008.
After she served as the city's high-tech emperor under Mayor Bill de Blasio, Adams tapped her to lead the Department of Health, where she actually made great strides in winning the mayoral war with Rat. It's done.
Enriched enough with the detailed details of making the city government work, she is whatever but “Go ahead” Careerist: Taking over the NYPD, Tisch quickly went to zero to recidivism as a major factor in the city's crime pain.
At the NYPD address status, she told the crowd, including Gov. Kathy Hochul and Mayor Adam, that the “revolving door” system “repeated offenders will be redirected back to the streets again and again.” . . It's unsustainable. It goes against common sense and screams for corrections to the course. ”
And amen.
She also ran the NYPD and moved quickly to the house a month later. She chased over a dozen top police officers. It was a crucial move after the post was told that Director Jeffrey Madrid had exchanged sex for overtime wages.
She does not tolerate the whims of corruption and misconduct between her ranks, which are important traits for those on the city hall.
Yes, tissue is a technocrat. It is capable and efficient and is not afraid to violate traditional thinking (from left, right, or center) or overturn the status quo.
The Big Apple is facing crisis on multiple fronts, including unsafe streets and subways, still poor local economy, the outcome of an influx of immigrants, and the ongoing departure of enough people.
To move on, the city needs a mayor who tells the truth to other powers, is realistic about all issues, plaguing Gotham and getting the job done.
We know: Tisch has never asked for an elected office and shows no signs of running now. She needs to build a campaign from scratch. She has little recognition of her name. Her entry into the race removes the noses of all established urban political athletes from the joint.
But show us your dreams.
The public is furious at the usual creation of New York politics, and political regulars show no indication of understanding the rage, let alone addressing the cause of the rampage.
In these times, New York City needs to find effective leadership in unexpected places.





