Will the City Council speaker try to become the second Mayor Adams in a row?
Feb. 20, 2025, 11:36 a.m.
As candidates eye chaos at City Hall, another Adams could shake up the race.

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Could Mayor Adams be replaced by… Mayor Adams?
New York City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams, a moderate Democrat from southeast Queens, is known for her even temperament, which she uses to muscle through budget and policy fights with the mayor.
But her patience has worn out. She called for Mayor Eric Adams’ resignation on Monday, saying the city had endured enough, “scandal, selfishness and embarrassment.” On Tuesday, she was among the elected officials invited to Gov. Kathy Hochul’s office as the governor contemplates whether to remove him from office.
“ We are living in a time right now where the world is upside down,” Speaker Adams said Sunday in Albany, where she attended the Black, Puerto Rican, Hispanic and Asian Caucus weekend.
“But Shirley Chisholm is telling me, ‘stand up, daughter!’” she said, accepting an award named for the first Black woman elected to the U.S. Congress and the first woman to run for president.
Speaker Adams is the first Black person, mother and grandmother to hold her post, and leads the most diverse and first female-majority City Council in the city’s history.
Attendees at the weekend’s events said the speech fueled chatter that she could try to accomplish another first: New York City has never elected a woman as its mayor.
Speaker Adams, who is term-limited at the end of this year, has long dismissed questions about potential bids for higher office. Now, sources say she is reconsidering her next move, though she doesn’t have a lot of time to make up her mind.
She has no track record running citywide, no campaign infrastructure and no active campaign committee to start raising and spending campaign money. But she does have a loyal base of predominantly Black voters in a high-turnout district. She also has the bully pulpit of the speaker’s office. And oddly, although she and the mayor aren’t related, his name recognition might buoy her candidacy.
If she did decide to run, she would be only the second woman in the race. The other is state Sen. Jessica Ramos of Queens, but her fundraising and poll numbers are weak.
And if Speaker Adams does jump in, her move could frustrate the plans of another rumored contender: former Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who is widely considered the front-runner despite not actually being in the race. The speaker could appeal to a large swath of moderate and Black voters – the same base that Cuomo often leans on, and the same one that put Mayor Adams in office.
“No matter what craziness comes from the other side of City Hall, for me in government, we move forward with truth and dignity and courage,” Speaker Adams said Sunday. The crowd responded with chants of, “Run, Adrienne, Run!”
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