Could Eric Adams' Corruption Charges Sink His Signature Zoning Reform?
The New York City Council takes up the mayor's City of Yes for Housing Opportunity reform package the same day Adams is indicted on federal corruption charges.

Yesterday was a momentous day in the politics of New York City.
That afternoon, the City Planning Commission voted 10-3 to approve a suite of zoning reforms championed by Mayor Eric Adams to eliminate parking requirements, allow accessory dwelling units (ADUs) in residential areas, and permit larger residential projects on commercial lots and near transit stops.
The Mayor's City of Yes for Housing Opportunity package, as it's called, now goes to the New York City Council, which now has 50 days to review, amend, and vote on the reforms.
That's some tricky timing given yesterday's other big news coming out of New York City.
A few hours after the planning commission's vote, Adams was indicted on federal corruption charges for allegedly accepting free travel, luxury accommodations, and illegal campaign contributions from Turkish business people and government officials.
So, in short, the city council will be considering Adams' signature land use reform at the same time that the mayor will be facing federal corruption charges and mounting calls for him to resign.
Even before the mayor's indictment, City of Yes faced an uncertain future at the city council, says Alex Armlovich, a senior housing policy analyst at the Niskanen Center.
"This is the first time that [city councilmembers] are going to be engaging with a citywide upzoning with different characteristics than any other small area upzoning," says Armlovich.
That offers the opportunity to change some minds of councilmembers who are typically hostile to individual development proposals, says Armlovich. It also opens up the risk that council members will try to water down the City of Yes reforms, especially around parking and ADUs.
The mayor has a significant role to play in the process, both politically and procedurally.
On the political side of things, Armlovich notes that Adams' base of supporters is concentrated in the areas of the city that have been most opposed to his own housing reforms.
Compare the two maps below. This top one, from The New York Times, shows how the city's mayoral candidates performed at the district level in the 2021 Democratic primary that Adams won.

The bottom one, from City Limits, shows how local community boards voted on Adams' City of Yes for Housing Opportunity.

The mayor's personal popularity in those areas is an asset in winning over city council members who might otherwise be tempted to vote against the City of Yes. But if Adams' indictment makes him politically toxic, his ability to whip reluctant votes is much diminished.
Procedurally, the mayor has the power to veto land use changes approved by the city council. (The city council can override that veto with a two-thirds vote).
Since City of Yes is Adams' baby, he obviously wasn't going to veto it.
Should he resign, he'll be replaced by New York City Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, who'll then have 90 days to schedule a special election.
Willams has been equivocal in his support for City of Yes.
When asked about the plan by reporter Ben Max during a May podcast interview, Willams said that "in theory, I've been leaning yes from the beginning" adding that "we can't stop the progress of building in the housing crisis that we're in."
In the same interview, Willams also said that community fears about development should be taken seriously, and that "black, brown, [and] poor neighborhoods" shouldn't have to bear the brunt of new development. He signaled that he'd be willing to accept preserving some areas in exchange for density elsewhere and that new density allowances should be paired with housing affordability mandates.
None of Williams's comments imply that he would veto City of Yes. But it does sound like he'd be willing to tolerate (or even push for) the city council watering down the proposal.
Already, City of Yes for Housing Opportunity is an exceedingly modest response to the scale of New York's housing problems. Adams has described it as a "little more housing in every neighborhood" and everyone seems to think that's an accurate description.
The plan "should push NYC's permits for new housing units meaningfully higher than would have been the case, had the legislature not acted," wrote the Manhattan Institute's Eric Kober in a recent brief. "However, housing will remain in critically short supply in the city."
If the city council waters down the existing plan even more, say by preserving parking mandates, ditching ADUs, or upping affordability requirements, then City of Yes will produce even less housing still.
There's an irony in the fact that Adams' own corruption charges threaten his signature zoning reforms. Underlying the entire City of Yes is the idea that more types of development should be "by-right"—meaning the builders of that housing shouldn't need to ask for discretionary government approval to move forward with their projects.
Giving government officials the ability to approve or deny individual development applications, where millions of dollars are at stake, is itself a major source of corruption.
The federal indictment of Adams accuses him of speeding up the issuance of an occupancy permit for a Turkish government building. A New York Times story from last month about the startling number of corruption cases coming out of California places a lot of city councilmembers' power over individual projects.
A more by-right system, where the rules are written down and projects that meet those rules are automatically approved gives politicians a lot less power to sell.
Adams alleged corruption could end sinking a zoning reform plan that would reduce future opportunities for corruption in New York City.
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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So the policy question about Eric Adams's indictment is zoning reform, not his immigration reform?
Trump just did a news conference. He refused to condemn Adams. Says he doesn't know the details but that he predicted that Adams would be indicted a year ago for his immigration positions. I don't know all of the details but at first blush it looks like this indictment is a lot less than the government is advertising. The DOJ is claiming that this indictment is proof that the agency is not politicized. Looky here, we indicted a Democrat. The problem of course is that this particular Democrat has been a thorn in the side of the regime. If Trump is correct, this is right out of the Obama play book. They did it to Blago and now Adams. The regime is completely non partisan only when one of their own doesn't do as they're told.
God damned Trump. I have never been in the mood to like the guy and he keeps growing on me. I mean he's been infinitely preferable to the Democratic Party to be absolutely sure, but this kind of stuff is exactly why he's got such a loyal following: he just says what he thinks. Even if he what he thinks isn't great, he says it anyway.
In this case his instincts are right: whatever Adams' shortcomings might be, and I'm certain he has a ton, this is obviously not some grand pursuit of justice and trying to stamp out corruption. He's of no use to the Party anymore and has got to go. That's it. The party that can't seem to stop hiring and sleeping with Chinese spies keeps trying to dip into the "he took money from foreign powers" well.
Same for Cuomo. Three years ago Cuomo was next in line for a POTUS run. They me too-ed him and it had absolutely nothing to do with Covid. In fact, at the time, he was held as the Covid gold standard.
Cuomo begged the wealthy to come back to NY, lower taxes. Leftists don’t like property ownership or wealth (unless it’s the political class)
Equity- equal outcomes
Anyway, a leftist is supposed to take over if they can successfully lock up Adam’s.
It's an article from Christian, not Fiona so you get zoning not immigration.
wow, Ken Klippenstein.
Adams may end up in the big house.
City of No.
You mean the bigger house.
"Could Eric Adams' Corruption Charges Sink His Signature Zoning Reform?"
Adams is part of the democrat party and will never be sent to jail...unless he commits the egregious sin of not giving Joe Biden his ten percent.
He publicly criticized the DNC/gentry class's voter replacement project. He's going to get the full Bill Cosby treatment.
This isn't true. I remember the Blagojevich situation. Rod ran afoul of trying to pretend that as Governor of Illinois, the choice to pick who would replace Barack Obama as senator was his. Of course Barack had a significant disagreement with that otherwise legally sound argument. When Rod refused to cooperate, all of his Democratic Party protection magically disappeared and he found himself in prison soon thereafter (sentenced to 14 years).
So Adams likely pissed somebody off he wasn't supposed to piss off. The Democratic Party does not play nice.
Interestingly Rod, the now former Democratic Governor of Illinois, is a big supporter of Trump (who commuted his ridiculously long prison sentence in 2020), and offered up some insight on the topic of politically motivated prosecutions. While Blagojevich was certainly guilty of much impropriety, he was right to ask "why the hell am I being singled out for something everyone else, including Obama, is doing?"
Yeah I brought up Blago below. Should have scrolled down. You beat me to it. But yeah. When I heard about the Adams kerfuffle Blago was the first thing that came to mind. He was a typically corrupt Illinois Democrat and I didn't vote for him. But the similarity with Adams is inescapable.
He traded favors for favors, which is what legislators, governors, etc. do all the time as part of normal business.
I've heard this prosecution cited by a Dem supporter as proof of the Biden administration's bipartisan impartiality. That and the prosecution of Hunter Biden and one other fellow I forget the name of.
So the guy that points out that the Dem immigration insanity isn't free gets jammed up the moment they can harm him the most and them the least.
What Blago was convicted of I considered a normal part of politics. There are lots of decisions pols make that are neutral in terms of their aggregate effects on the public, but out of the vast resources of government, they swing a tiny bit to their advantage instead of being personally neutral, and that's what Blago did. Same with a friend of mine, Dan Halloran.
Even what Watergate was ostensibly about (though more serious stuff came out once it was opened up) didn't bother me. Why shouldn't politicians spy on each other? Why are their records of what they plan to do to us entitled to privacy? Some of the plumbers' other tricks were legitimately evil though IIRC.
Adams is not blessed by the left. They don't like him. They want him out.
Wait, I don't get it. Isn't Adams a Democrat?
Some Democrats are more equal than others.
And no Democrats are free to deviate from The Narrative.
Yes, but one that called out Biden-Harris for allowing so many illegals in some of whom ended up in NYC. Martha’s Vineyard was able to reluctantly and strategically relocate the ones there but not as much an option for a land based metropolis such as Gotham.
He's been scheduled for deactivation.
It is sad that, in a few weeks, he committed suicide in his cell.
Why would the Socialists of America want free market housing or property rights/ownership? How are we going to get to Soviet block housing projects and demand the entire population wards of the state if they are allowed to participate in free market exchanges?
Major league corruption, Democratic Party shenanigans, and election year consequences, and the Reason take is "zoning"?
If the corruption has zero net effect on the public, then, yeah, why shouldn't the choice of headline be the effect on zoning or other things that do affect the public?
Has he ever been in a Turkish prison?
Has he ever seen a grown man naked?
does he like ... gladiator movies?
If you don't let the Democrats flood your city with illegals, and praise them for doing so every minute of every day, they are going to destroy you.
I have a feeling it will end very badly for the democrats when a significant amount of the public has had enough of their shit.
You’re a fucking traitor!!!
Of adams didn't push back against the invasion he would be able to rape and murder children in time square and the gov and media would not care
I was talking to the other groomer marxist democrat homosexuals and we decided…
We are gonna kill you!!!
That was a joke and not a very funny one. I’ll take the L for that. But it is obviously a joke just case anyone tries to lie about me again.
I am going to quote you out of context and follow you around the internet to ruin your life. Actually, that's just too much work so I'll let it slide this time. /sarc
Any city plan that ties zoning and re-development to affordable housing mandates is doomed to failure. The reason the proposal is aimed heavily towards "brown, black and poor" areas is that affordable housing mandates have turned them into slums due to the lack of profit in replacing the structures with better housing. Why would any developer go in with government assuring him that he would not be able to make a profit? Actually, after watching the political hatchet job NYC took to Trump why would any developer operate in that state especially in NYC?