Governor Hochul’s proposal to further delay New York’s already-lagging Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act has critics noting that postponing the “cap and invest” program leaves billions for clean-energy aid in limbo, while average elect…
The U.S. Supreme Court began weighing President Trump’s push to end birthright citizenship for children of undocumented immigrants, hearing Trump v. Barbara as the president watched from the gallery. Both liberal and conservative justices probed whether an executive order can rewrite constitutional precedent, with Chief Justice Roberts drily noting, “It’s the same Constitution”—despite claims about “eight billion people” and modern air travel’s wonders.
Fiscals general from New York and beyond pressed the Supreme Court to strike down Donald Trump’s 2025 executive order denying birthright citizenship to US-born children of undocumented immigrants, arguing the move mangles the Fourteenth Amendment and century-old precedent. Even Chief Justice John Roberts termed the administration’s logic “very peculiar”—a choice of words suggesting the Constitution’s plain sense may yet carry the day, if not everyone’s patience.
New York legislators, missing their budget deadline yet again, are haggling over whether to squeeze more from the rich or to tweak protections for immigrants and the environment; Governor Kathy Hochul, arm-twisted from all sides, warns of fiscal Armageddon, but Albany’s annual April standoff remains gloriously predictable—like spring rain, only harder to forecast and even less popular with those asked to chip in.
New York City’s Council floated a $6 billion plan to dodge Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s proposed 9.5% property-tax hike, instead pinning hopes on re-jigged estimates, spending trims, and a friendly windfall from Albany. The mayor dismissed the scheme as creative accounting and mathematically challenged, noting that neither Manhattan optimism nor legislative tweets are recognized as legal tender when it comes to closing real deficits.
Donald Trump’s latest attempt to scrap birthright citizenship came before the Supreme Court as Executive Order 14160, which would deny automatic U.S. citizenship to children born to unauthorized immigrants and temporary visitors. Even with a conservative super-majority, the Justices appeared unconvinced, and Trump’s personal appearance—having previously slammed the Court as “STUPID”—seemed more show than strategy. This was political theatre in lieu of legal mastery.
We learn that over one-fifth of New York City sits atop “Blue Zones”—areas that were, are, or will be wet, according to a New York Botanical Garden study mapping historic and future flood risks across all five boroughs. With 1.2 million residents and major sites like JFK and LaGuardia in the soggy crosshairs, planners now have a digital map; the city, as usual, may soon be underwater only metaphorically.
Marking his 91st day in office, Mayor Zohran Mamdani clashed with City Council Speaker Julie Menin over how best to plug New York's looming $5.9 billion deficit. He accused the Council of peddling optimistic math and risking vital services, while she dubbed his tax-heavy fix a burden for ordinary homeowners. Both invoke fiscal stability, but it seems consensus is the most underfunded service of all.
New York’s City Council wants to expand Fair Fares, its discounted transit scheme, to deliver truly free subway and bus rides for nearly 1 million low-income residents—though how this squares with a $5 billion budget hole remains a matter of creative accounting. The mayor says deeper pockets must pay more, while critics warn magical math alone rarely gets even the 6 train to arrive on time.
Gothamist
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