
NEW YORK — New York City Mayor Eric Adams abruptly suspended his re-election campaign on Sunday, September 28, 2025, just five weeks before Election Day, citing funding woes and relentless media scrutiny that he said had crippled his bid for a second term. The announcement, delivered in a nearly nine-minute video posted to X, marks the end of a tumultuous tenure for the one-term Democrat and could consolidate opposition votes behind former Gov. Andrew Cuomo, potentially tightening the race against Democratic nominee Zohran Mamdani.
Adams, who rose from NYPD captain to Brooklyn borough president before winning the mayoralty in 2021 as the city’s second Black mayor, framed his exit as a reluctant necessity. “Despite all we’ve achieved, I cannot continue my re-election campaign,” he said, his voice steady but somber against a backdrop of city skyline footage. “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.” He acknowledged lingering voter unease from his dismissed federal corruption case, insisting, “I was wrongfully charged because I fought for this city, and if I had to do it again, I would fight for New York again.”
The mayor’s departure from the race—where he had been polling in the low single digits as an independent—leaves a crowded field led by Mamdani, the 33-year-old state assemblyman and democratic socialist who stunned observers by winning the June Democratic primary. Recent polls show Mamdani commanding 43% to 47% support among likely voters, far ahead of Cuomo’s 23% to 29% and Republican Curtis Sliwa’s 9% to 17%. Adams hovered below 10% in most surveys, a sharp fall from his early-term popularity amid post-COVID recovery efforts.
Adams did not endorse any candidate, but his remarks carried clear barbs at Mamdani’s progressive platform, warning of “extremism growing in our politics” and “insidious forces [who] use local government to advance divisive agendas with little regard for how it hurts everyday New Yorkers.” He urged voters to choose leaders “not by what they promise, but by what they have delivered,” a nod to his own record of crime reductions and quality-of-life investments. “Major change is welcome and necessary, but beware of those who claim the answer is to destroy the very system we built over generations,” he added. “That is not change, that is chaos.”
The decision caps a year of speculation fueled by Adams’s scandals, including a September 2024 federal indictment on charges of bribery, wire fraud, and illegal campaign contributions—dismissed in February 2025 at the Trump Justice Department’s urging to enlist the mayor in immigration enforcement. Critics alleged a quid pro quo, with then-interim U.S. Attorney Danielle Sassoon resigning after orders to drop the case. Adams denied any deal but admitted the probe had eroded trust.
As recently as early September, Adams vowed to stay in, declaring himself “the only one who can beat Mamdani.” He skipped the Democratic primary to run independently, a maneuver that spared him from Mamdani’s upset victory but isolated him further amid liberal backlash over his rapport with President Donald Trump. Trump’s overtures—suggesting Adams and Sliwa exit to boost Cuomo—added to the pressure, though Sliwa has rebuffed calls to withdraw.
Adams’s exit could reshape the November 4 contest, potentially funneling his supporters—outer-borough Black and Latino Democrats, Orthodox Jews—to Cuomo, the centrist independent who has positioned himself as Mamdani’s chief foil. In head-to-head hypotheticals without Adams and Sliwa, Mamdani’s lead narrows to 48%-44%, per a New York Times/Siena poll, though he still holds a double-digit edge in multi-candidate scenarios. Cuomo, speaking after an unrelated Queens event, called the dropout “a game-changer,” praising Adams’s resilience: “Only in New York can a child raised in a tenement in Bushwick… rise to become mayor.”
Mamdani, campaigning on affordability in the world’s priciest city, dismissed the shift on X: “Trump and his billionaire donors might be able to determine Adams and Cuomo’s actions. But they won’t decide this election.” Sliwa, the Guardian Angels founder, faces internal GOP pressure but insists on staying, despite Trump’s quip that he’s “not exactly prime time.”
Gov. Kathy Hochul, who endorsed Mamdani, lauded Adams: “He leaves the city better than he inherited it.” Trump, in a Reuters interview, predicted Adams’s votes would flow to Cuomo. Republican Rep. Mike Lawler urged Sliwa’s support to “defeat Zohran Mamdani.”
Adams pledged to serve out his term, battling COVID fallout, crime surges, the migrant crisis, and economic woes. “This is not the end of my public service,” he said. “I will continue to fight for this city… to make our streets safer and our systems fairer.” He implored his successor to expand his initiatives on policing, mental health, and homelessness.
With Adams out, the race—New York’s first competitive general election in decades—pivots to a potential Cuomo-Mamdani showdown, testing the city’s appetite for bold progressive change against centrist pragmatism. Polls suggest Mamdani’s enthusiasm edge among younger voters could prove decisive, but Cuomo’s consolidation play keeps the outcome fluid. As one X user quipped amid the frenzy, “Eric Adams was given a choice… dropout, and turn Fed evidence against the NYC crime machine.” Whether that’s hyperbole or harbinger, the Big Apple braces for a bruising finish.


