NYC Council welcomes new mayor with bill that would dramatically raise salaries for city officials
Zohran Mamdani and other top New York City officials could see their salaries jump under a proposed 16% pay hike that council members are hoping to push through soon, according...
By Fox News · Fox News
Zohran Mamdani and other top New York City officials could see their salaries jump under a proposed 16% pay hike that council members are hoping to push through soon, according to reports. A bill introduced by Councilwoman Nantasha Williams, D-Queens, would raise members’ salaries from $148,500 to $172,500, the New York Post reported Tuesday. If passed, the pay hike would also apply to the new mayor, public advocate, comptroller and borough presidents. It would put Mamdani’s pay at nearly $300,000, up from the current $258,000, the outlet said. NYC MAYOR-ELECT MAMDANI ASKS SUPPORTERS FOR $4M TO FUND TRANSITION, VOWS NO WEALTHY DONORS Other top officials, such as the comptroller, public advocate, and borough presidents, would see comparable increases. The legislation would be introduced this week with a hearing by year’s end, allowing the next City Council to vote in January for a swifter approval. Council members last received a raise in 2016. Interestingly, it was Mamdani who built out a platform centered on affordability for working-class New Yorkers. FOX NEWS' MARTHA MACCALLUM TO INTERVIEW NEW YORK MAYORAL CANDIDATE ZOHRAN MAMDANI The Ugandan-born 34-year-old pledged free buses , rent freezes on rent-stabilized apartments, universal childcare and city-run grocery stores during his campaign for New York City mayor. He also campaigned on a gradual increase of the minimum wage to $30 an hour by 2030. Mamdani has said these proposals would be funded primarily by raising taxes on wealthy individuals and large corporations. As a state assembly member in 2022, Mamdani also voted for a pay raise for state legislators. MAMDANI LAUGHS OFF CRITICISM THAT HIS TAX HIKE PROPOSALS WILL COMPEL NEW YORKERS TO FLEE The latest NYC pay hike plans were originally headed for Mayor Eric Adams’ desk, but that schedule was shelved, according to the Post. "If we have a hearing on the bill this year, we don’t need a hearing on it next year. It’s pre-considered," Williams told The Post. Wh…