Friday, May 25, 2018

Mayor de Blasio’s Emails, Uncensored and Unforgiving

 
A trove of City Hall emails, released under court order, shows a mayor sensitive to news media criticism and quick to lash out at aides. 

By J. David Goodman and Jeffery C. Mays

For years, Mayor Bill de Blasio has resisted disclosing thousands of emails between members of his administration and outside advisers, on the grounds that doing so would impede his ability to get the best, unvarnished advice.

Now it seems like Mr. de Blasio had an even more pressing and personal concern: He did not want to make public his own raw — and sometimes profane — emails to those same advisers, whom the de Blasio administration had characterized as “agents of the city.”

On Thursday, City Hall reluctantly released more than 4,200 pages of emails, the final stage in a two-year court battle that the de Blasio administration lost to NY1 and The New York Post earlier this month.

The emails shed light on the close involvement of those outside advisers from the start of Mr. de Blasio’s first term in 2014. They worked with City Hall on a range of issues from universal prekindergarten to funding for the Metropolitan Transportation Authority.

Click here for the full article. 

Source: The New York Times (via Empire Report New York) 

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