Town Marketing campaign Finance Board on Thursday as soon as once more denied Mayor Adams over $3 million in public matching funds for his reelection effort — reiterating issues the board laid out earlier this month.
“Regarding Mayor Adams, the board determined Mayor Adams’ campaign has failed to demonstrate eligibility for public funds payment at this time on two grounds,” CFB chair Frederick Schaffer mentioned at a gathering on the Board’s downtown headquarters.
“One, failure to provide requested information, and two, reason to believe the campaign violated the law — the same two grounds that were the basis for the finding of ineligibility on August 6, the board’s last payment date,” Schaffer continued. “The board’s investigation of the Adams campaign is ongoing.”
Adams has not acquired marketing campaign matching funds since late 2024, when the CFB cited his ongoing federal corruption indictment and excellent requests for data as justification for witholding the funds.
The Trump regime dropped all federal fees in opposition to Adams this spring, however the CFB has been conducting its personal investigation into straw donations it suspects Adams illegally solicited for his 2021 and 2025 mayoral runs with the intention to improperly accumulate matching funds from town.
Adams filed swimsuit in opposition to the CFB earlier this month. Within the swimsuit, Adams alleges the CFB “has shown a deplorable and anti-democratic bias against the Adams campaign” in denying matching funds since late final yr.
Todd Shapiro, a spokesman for the Adams marketing campaign, mentioned in an announcement Thursday that the mayor “has followed all proper procedures, put everything in order under the legal process, and filed accordingly.”
“We are still awaiting a decision from the judge regarding our legal action,” Shapiro mentioned. “We strongly believe that the Mayor’s rights must be treated fairly and equally, just as with every candidate in this race.”
The general public funds, which match donations from metropolis residents as much as $250 at an 8-to-1 fee, are vital to the incumbent mayor, who’s dealing with excessive disapproval rankings and lagging ballot numbers as he mounts his a reelection bid as an impartial candidate.
Frontrunner Zohran Mamdani, the Democratic candidate for Mayor, was given $1.9 million in matching funds by the CFB Thursday. Republican candidate Curtis Sliwa received $1.4 million.
Former governor Andrew Cuomo — who, like Adams, is operating on an impartial ticket — netted his first public funds disbursement, receiving simply over $482,000 in matching funds after crossing the donation threshold for the final election cycle.
Jim Walden — one other impartial vying for Gracie Mansion — received simply $34,515 in public funds.

