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Tuesday, December 30, 2025

'Adams wants NYC commission to reshape primaries, sanctuary status'

 Mayor Eric Adams is setting up a commission that could rescind the city’s sanctuary status – and Zohran Mamdani may not be able to stop him, The Post has learned.

The outgoing Hizzoner is expected to hand-pick another independent Charter Revision Commission that would also look again at changing the deeply blue city’s primary elections so that scores of unaffiliated voters could cast ballots, according to sources.

But a top issue that has been floated in closed-door conversations about convening a new commission is reviewing the city’s sanctuary city laws which limit how city law enforcement works with immigration officials.

Mayor Adams could convene the board as one of his final acts.Luiz C. Ribeiro for NY Post

The temporary commission, filled with handpicked Adams appointees, would have the authority take on whatever changes its members see fit even after Mayor-elect Mamdani and a new City Council take office. Any of its recommendations to amend the city charter would then have to be put up for public vote as a measure on a future election ballot.

“As a one-term mayor, Eric Adams has nothing left to protect,” one insider said. “He hates the system and is going scorched earth, including taking shots at Zohran Mamdani on the way out, and we’re all here for it.”

Sources said the commissioner will be announced on Wednesday as one of Adams’ final hurrahs.

Councilman Bob Holden (D-Queens), who is term-limited this year, is expected to serve as chair of the commission along with election attorney Marty Connor and ex-governor David Patterson.

Another source took a shot at Adams for setting the commission with vast power to propose changes to the charter as he leaves office as “undemocratic.”

“Gratuitously screwing over an incoming mayor is monumentally pathetic,” they said. “Imagine the kind of meltdown Eric would have if the same were done to him.”

No other prior mayor has set up a Charter Review Commission in their last days in office to carry over to the next administration.

The commission would put any charter changes to voters next November.Getty Images
Sanctuary city laws could be in the crosshairs of the commission.ZUMAPRESS.com

Mamdani would seemingly be helpless to prevent the commission from putting forward any ballot measure he disagrees with and would face steep legal hurdles if he tried to dissolve the group.

The last Charter Commissioner, which was set up by Adams and had 13 members, also recommended changing the primary process at first in an attempt to woo more voters to the polls.

One proposal from the group was to allow independents to vote in one of the two primaries and cast their ballot for their choice of the Democratic or Republican nominee.

The other was to open the primary to include all candidates, and the top vote-getters move on to the general election in November.

In its final report, though, the commission decided not to put the proposed charter changes on the ballot.

Primaries, especially since ranked-choice voting was implemented, have been a point of contention for Adams. The system allows party members to vote for multiple candidates on a ballot.

Another issue left on the table by Adams admin that the commission is expected to look at is the banning of horse carriages in city.

A rep for City Hall did not respond to questions.

https://nypost.com/2025/12/30/us-news/eric-adams-wants-nyc-commission-to-reshape-primaries-sanctuary-status-and-mamdani-may-not-be-able-to-stop-it-sources/

Gov. Abbott appointee shot dead in Texas — incident being investigated as homicide

 A prominent businessman and appointee of Texas Gov. Greg Abbott was shot and killed at a business in McAllen, a border city in the Rio Grande Valley, over the weekend, authorities said.

McAllen police identified the victim as Eddy Betancourt, 61, of Mission, Texas.

Officers responded Saturday afternoon to the 800 block of North Ware Road after a 911 call reported a man on the floor who was possibly shot and not breathing.

Betancourt was found unresponsive, with no pulse, and appeared to have suffered a gunshot wound, police said.

His death is being investigated as a homicide, police said.

Police on Sunday identified Reynaldo Mata-Rios, 60, as a suspect in the shooting.

A warrant charging Mata-Rios with murder, a first-degree felony, was issued by the McAllen Municipal Court.

Authorities said Mata-Rios indicated he intended to surrender but had not done so as of Sunday afternoon.

Authorities said that Texas businessman Eddy Betancourt, 61, an appointee of Gov. Greg Abbott, was shot and killed in the Rio Grande Valley this past weekend.James Breeden for the NY Post

Mata-Rios is 6 feet tall and weighs approximately 195 pounds, according to police.

He has brown hair and brown eyes.

In 2020, Abbott appointed Betancourt to the Texas Facilities Commission, which oversees construction, maintenance and leasing of state-owned buildings.

Betancourt’s death is being investigated as a homicide.Hidalgo County Appraisal District
Police revealed that they identified Reynaldo Mata-Rios, 60, as the suspect in the fatal shooting of Betancourt.McAllen Police Department

He was reappointed in 2023 to a term set to expire in 2029, according to the governor’s office.

Along with serving in state government, Betancourt was president of R&B General Construction Co. Inc., co-owner and president of National Tire and Wheel LLC, and a general retail partner manager for E2H Investment.of the McAllen Board of Realtors and the National Association of Realtors.

Police said the investigation remains ongoing. Authorities have not released a possible motive.

Fox News Digital has reached out to the Texas Department of Public Safety and the Department of Homeland Security for comment.

https://nypost.com/2025/12/30/us-news/gov-abbott-appointee-shot-dead-in-rio-grande-valley-police/

Trump admin freezes all childcare payments to Minn. after massive fraud allegations

 The Trump administration is freezing all childcare payments to Minnesota and demanding a comprehensive audit of the state’s day care centers as a mushrooming billion-dollar fraud scandal engulfs the state’s human services department.

“We have frozen all child care payments to the state of Minnesota,” Deputy Health and Human Services Secretary Jim O’Neill wrote on X Tuesday afternoon, days after a viral video investigating alleged fraud at day care centers in the state drew national attention.

“Funds will be released only when states prove they are being spent legitimately,” the HHS secretary said.

O’Neill said Minnesota has “funneled millions of taxpayer dollars to fraudulent daycares across Minnesota over the past decade,” and outlined three actions the department has taken in an attempt to cut off the flow of exploitable funds.

Quality Learning Center sign and a security camera in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Millions of taxpayer dollars have gone to facilities like the “Quality Learing Center” which is at the center of fraud allegations.LP Media for NY Post

The first action will impose the requirement for “a receipt or photo evidence” for any payments made to states through the US Administration for Children & Families (ACF).

O’Neill said he has “demanded” Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz conduct a “comprehensive audit” of the centers highlighted.

“This includes attendance records, licenses, complaints, investigations, and inspections,” he writes.

He specifically cited YouTuber Nick Shirley’s video published on Friday, in which he visited day care centers across Minneapolis receiving millions in state funds that appeared to be closed or out of operation.

Third, HHS has launched a hotline and email address dedicated to reporting fraud at childcare.gov.

“Whether you are a parent, provider, or member of the general public, we want to hear from you,” he said.

“We have turned off the money spigot and we are finding the fraud.”

So far at least $1 billion in fraud has been confirmed by authorities, and 92 people have been charged, 82 of whom are Somali immigrants, according to the US Attorney’s office, which warned the number could be as high as $9 billion.

https://nypost.com/2025/12/30/us-news/trump-admin-halts-all-childcare-payments-to-minnesota-amid-massive-fraud-allegations/

Rich People Won’t Just Sit Still While You Tax Them

 As New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani prepares to take office, tax-happy progressive groups are eager to let you know that the idea that rich people move because of taxes is all a big myth. There are no consequences to raising taxes on rich people, they argue, because rich people will be rich no matter what. 

It’s a pretty picture, and a convenient one for those who have never met anything economically productive that they didn’t want to tax. The only problem is that the data proves it just isn’t true.

The latest media blitz comes in response to Mamdani’s campaign proposals to raise the income tax rate for top earners in the city from 3.9 percent to 5.9 percent. That’s in addition to statewide rates, which currently run as high as 10.9 percent. That means that, under Mamdani’s proposal, the wealthiest Big Apple residents would face state and local income taxes as high as 16.8 percent, even before federal taxes.

But never fear, say progressive groups such as Patriotic Millionaires — Zohran can tax to his heart’s content without fear of millionaire tax flight. They attempt to fortify their claims with research by the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities and tax-happy academics who make points that are technically true, yet entirely miss the point.

For instance, Patriotic Millionaires cites data showing that the millionaire population in New York grew in the wake of recent tax increases on the wealthy at the state level. But of course it did — the population of millionaires is constantly growing across the country due to economic growth and inflation. The more important thing, as the New York-based Empire Center shows, is that New York’s share of the nationwide millionaire population has dropped precipitously in recent years, from 12.7 percent in 2010 to 8.7 percent in 2022.

Others point to a spike in sales in the New York City luxury real estate market to suggest that “there is no Mamdani effect.” But that actually is an indication of the ongoing exodus, not a rebuttal. The New York City housing market has such a severe shortage of housing that when some wealthy New Yorkers pack up and leave, it’s no surprise that remaining millionaires snap up those luxury properties quickly. It’s no coincidence that inquiries from New Yorkers to the Miami Beach Ritz-Carlton for beachfront penthouses worth $10 million or more nearly tripled in the wake of Mamdani’s election.

Looking at the impact of net migration, the highest-tax states lose big among the wealthy every year. In the most recent IRS data, New York lost the second-most wealthy residents (shocker: California lost the most). On the other hand, Florida gained the most new wealthy residents from other states, followed by Texas.

If pressed further, progressive tax advocates may fall back on another true yet ultimately irrelevant point: that specific tax increases, generally speaking, raise more money than they lose in tax flight. And, indeed, Zohran’s two-percent income tax surcharge would likely leave the city with more revenue in the short term. But the cost comes in the long term, and has been coming for spending-addicted cities and states for some time. 

The National Taxpayers Union Foundation estimates that New York will have $3.8 billion less tax revenue to work with at both the state and local levels in 2025 because of out-migration. New York and New York City are losing that revenue year after year, shrinking the tax base and making future spending binges even harder to finance. 

As the cash cows in the top income brackets leave for greener pastures, there are only two options for politicians who treat the idea of “reining in spending” as an odd foreign custom. One is to increase taxes further on the wealthier New Yorkers who are left, which only exacerbates the problem. The other is to start to shift more and more of that tax burden onto the middle class.  

And guess what? A lot of those wealthy emigrants take their businesses — employers who provide jobs and pay a lot of tax revenue — with them. No state is losing firms to other states faster than New York

Even long-time New York City staples are looking elsewhere, as Mamdani’s election has managed to accelerate the already exploding growth of the Dallas counterpart to Wall Street (affectionately known as “Y’all Street”). Big names such as Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase continue to shift more and more of their operations to the Lone Star state, and Texas now boasts more jobs in the financial services sector than New York does.

Progressives should not stick their heads in the sand about the consequences of their policies. Many wealthy New Yorkers will choose to stay after yet another tax hike from Mayor Mamdani, and some of those will stay after the next tax hike as well. But with death by a thousand cuts, it’s the steady bleeding that kills you.