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Honestly, the way they are acting, it's as if they don't think there will be a midterm election, so no need to not sound completely unhinged.

Trump is stupid enough to try delaying elections.

I can see him coming up with a BS excuse relating to a national crisis to justify it.

I wonder though. Would Americans go along with it or would that be a step too far?
 
Elections in the US are state matters. There's no federal management of elections. There's oversight. But the actual execution of elections are by state authorities. So no, Trump won't be able to cancel those. I'm sure he'll have some rhetoric about it.
 
Elections in the US are state matters. There's no federal management of elections. There's oversight. But the actual execution of elections are by state authorities. So no, Trump won't be able to cancel those. I'm sure he'll have some rhetoric about it.

Normally I'd agree with you but this is Trump we are talking about

Governors seem to bend to his will.
 
...and I am pretty sure those in key positions who bend to his will are aware of this.
 
Let's see what ambassadorship or cabinet position Trump gave him just to help Andrew Cuomo... QUID PRO CUOMO!




New York City Mayor Eric Adams suspends his reelection bid



New York City Mayor Eric Adams is ending his reelection bid, a move long sought by rivals of Democratic nominee Zohran Mamdani who have wanted to consolidate the opposition against him.

Adams announced his decision Sunday in a video posted to X, saying “despite all we’ve achieved, I cannot continue my reelection campaign, the constant media speculation about my future and the campaign finance board’s decision to withhold millions of dollars have undermined my ability to raise the funds needed for a serious campaign.”

“This campaign was for the underserved, the marginalized, the abandoned and betrayed by government,” Adams said. “Since then, it has been my honor to be your mayor, and I’m proud to say that we took that victory four years ago and turned it into action, making this city better for those who have been failed by government.”

Cuomo allies have long pushed Adams to withdraw to give himself a better chance against Mamdani in November. President Donald Trump, a native New Yorker, has also suggested the field should be narrowed, and one of his top aides, Steve Witkoff, met with Adams to discuss potential jobs in the Trump administration.

Given Adams’ own unpopularity, it’s not clear how many votes the mayor’s withdrawal might throw to Cuomo. Adams has been running fourth in most public polls behind Mamdani, Cuomo, and Republican nominee Curtis Sliwa. And Trump’s intervention into his hometown’s politics has helped Mamdani too

State and national Democrats are increasingly coalescing around Mamdani in recent weeks due in part to Trump’s push to reshape the race in Cuomo’s favor. New York Gov. Kathy Hochul has endorsed Mamdani as has former Vice President Kamala Harris.

In recent weeks, Adams has lashed out at the media accusing the press of “undermining his campaign,” saying negative coverage about his administration had complicated his ability to raise badly needed funds.

Adams was repeatedly denied public matching funds for his re-election by the city’s Campaign Finance Board, which said the campaign had failed to provide required information about its donors. The board, which doles out taxpayer funded matching funds to candidates who meet a strict set of requirements, began denying funds to Adams shortly after his federal corruption indictment last year.

The end of Adams’ reelection campaign comes less than four years after he took office as New York City’s second Black mayor, describing himself as the future of the Democratic Party.

A retired NYPD captain and former Brooklyn borough president, Adams was elected in 2021 on a platform focused on public safety and economic recovery following the COVID-19 pandemic.


He pitched himself to New Yorkers as a blue-collar working-class mayor who could relate to the city’s working class and their struggles. The campaign mixed appeals to working-class voters with tough-on-crime rhetoric that delivered a broad coalition of support across the city’s five boroughs.

Instead, Adams has been hobbled by a steady stream of corruption scandals involving his inner circle and some of his most trusted aides.

The mayor faced his own federal corruption and bribery charges last spring after federal prosecutors accused him of soliciting donations from Turkish nationals and trading favors to benefit wealthy donors.

The charges were dismissed at the direction of Trump’s Department of Justice, who cited the need to work with the mayor to help enforce Trump’s immigration crackdown. While Adams has denied the charges and that he was indebted to Trump’s administration for dropping the charges, the episode combined with mounting corruption scandals cast a pall over his reelection chances.


Long faced with questions about whether he would leave the race, Adams insisted he would continue to run, saying he believed New Yorkers would give him a second chance to fulfill his agenda.

He had already opted out of the Democratic primary to run as an independent in the general election, in what observers had expected would be a clash with Cuomo as the Democratic nominee in his comeback bid following his resignation as governor over sexual harassment claims.

And he met with Witkoff, the Bronxite real estate developer turned top administration envoy, during what his office originally described as a personal trip to Florida. Among the jobs discussed for Adams were an ambassadorship to Saudi Arabia.
 
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