New York Billionaires Have Found Their Savior: Eric Adams

Fox News’ efforts to ensure that the Democratic candidate of Mayor Zohran Mamdani seems to be a bad influence for New York only makes him more attractive.
After Mamdani’s shock victory during Tuesday primary, conservatives and far -right influencers worked for overtime frame Mamdani as a “Marxist”, a “terrorist sympathizer” and a “Muslim jihadist”.
But the angle of Fox News on the legislator of Queens, aged 33, did not seem so bad. Wednesday, the network broadcast A screen full of Mamdani’s “socialist promises”, in particular that it supports “without childcare costs for city residents, wants to provide” baby baskets to newborns “and plans to develop the minimum wage of New York at $ 30 per hour.

“Nothing says” radical “like being able to eat and having a child without needing to live in a tent”, ” replied a user x.
“The next on Fox & Friends: why the cradles are Marxists and the bibs are a bridge towards complete communism,” hinder another.
The Mamdani campaign platform offers details on how the potential mayor plans to implement its policies.
The campaign has argued that the supply of daycare solutions funded by the public in the city is essential to keep New Yorkers in New York: “New Yorkers with children under the age of 6 leave double the rate of all the others” due to the exorbitant cost of childcare in the city, according to Mamdani’s campaign.
The program would offer free childcare services “for each New York aged 6 weeks to 5 years,” said the campaign.
And Mamdani said he intended to base his “baby basket” policy on “more than 90 similar programs in the world”. Its official platform said that the investment would cost less than $ 20 million and provide new parents and tutors free of charge “a collection of essential goods and resources, including articles such as strata, baby wipes, nursing cushions, post-partum pads, moving and books”, as well as a new-norma-normation program.
Raise the Minimum wage at $ 30 This would be another objective for a potential administration of Mamdani by 2030, which has argued philosophically that “the realization of the minimum wage should not mean living in poverty” and that wages at the level of poverty paid by some of the richest societies in the world only cost the public more, because social programs must effectively “subsidize” these employers at low prices.