New York City Mayor Eric Adams holds a press briefing after former Governor Andrew Cuomo enters the mayoral race on March 03, 2025 in New York United States.
Selcuk Acar | Anadolu | Getty Images
New York City Mayor Eric Adams will run for reelection as an independent, opting out of the Democratic primary just one day after a federal judge dismissed corruption charges against him.
"I have always put New York's people before politics and party — and I always will. I am running for mayor in the general election because our city needs independent leadership that understands working people," Adams said in a Thursday morning post on X.
The news comes after bribery and wire fraud charges against Adams were permanently dismissed by a judge on Wednesday. Adams was indicted in September after prosecutors alleged that he received more than $100,000 worth of plane tickets and luxury hotel stays from Turkish nationals for nearly a decade as he was serving in local government.
"To the extent that the Government may be seeking to extract policy concessions from the Mayor, dismissal with prejudice rather than continuation of the prosecution best addresses that concern," U.S. District Judge Dale Ho ruled wrote in a 78-page order dismissing the charges. "It ensures that going forward, the charges in the Indictment cannot be used as leverage over Mayor Adams or the City of New York."
The Justice Department moved to dismiss the charges against Adams in February under the stated rationale that it would interfere with the mayor's ability to govern and threaten "federal immigration initiatives and policies."
In a Thursday interview with Politico, which first reported the news, Adams explained that he wants to "mount a real independent campaign" now that he is "uninhibited" by the federal bribery case that "handcuffed him." The independent campaign, he explained, would rely on a "solid base of people" outside Manhattan.
"I have been this racehorse that has been held back," he added. "This is so unnatural for me."