Democratic socialist Mayor Zohran Mamdani wasted no time trying to erase his predecessor’s legacy — signing a sweeping executive order just hours after taking office that wipes out most of the orders issued by Eric Adams following his indictment.
The move, one of five executive orders the 34-year-old pol signed in Brooklyn Thursday, will revoke all orders issued by Adams after Sept. 26, 2024 — the same day he was slapped with federal corruption charges — to ensure a “fresh start” for his incoming administration.
But he vowed to reissue certain Adams-era orders from that period of time, including one that would maintain the Office to Combat Antisemitism.

“We speak about this day as a new era. And in order to fulfill that hope, we have to reckon with why so many New Yorkers have turned away from politics over the last few months, the last few years, the last few decades,” Mamdani said.
“And that was a date that marked the moment when many New Yorkers decided that politics had nothing for them, but more of the same.”
Adams made history when he became the first sitting Big Apple mayor to be indicted. He was accused of allegedly taking Turkish government funds to greenlight a Turkish consulate in Manhattan.
The historic federal corruption case against Adams was dropped by President Trump’s Department of Justice rather than the White House issuing a pardon.

The mayor’s team said some orders will be reinstated if the new administration deems them essential to “delivering continued service, excellence, and value-driven” leadership.”
The Post’s latest on NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s inauguration day celebration:
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The full list of recycled orders was not immediately available.
Mamdani also signed a flurry of orders that fulfill his promise to take on Big Apple landlords, including revitalizing the Mayor’s Office to Protect Tenants and establishing two new task forces aimed at speeding up housing construction on city-owned land and boosting supply.
“First, we will need to revive the Mayor’s Office to Protect Tenants,” the mayor boasted.
Follow The Post’s live coverage of New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s inauguration
“They will no compromise on housing quality. if your landlord does not responsibly steward your home, city government will step in. We will make sure that the 311 violations are resolved, and we will hold slumlords to account for hazardous and dangerous threats to your well-being.”
The new LIFT (Land Inventory Fast Track) Task Force will leverage city-owned land to accelerate housing development, increase supply, and drive down costs, the mayor’s team said.
The SPEED (Streamlining Procedures to Expedite Equitable Development) Task Force will target bureaucratic and red tape that inflates costs and stalls housing projects, making it cheaper to build and easier to access housing in New York City.


