NEW YORK — New York City Mayor Eric Adams met with President-elect Donald Trump's incoming ''border czar'' on Thursday, with the Democratic mayor expressing an enthusiasm to work with the incoming administration to pursue violent criminals in the city while Trump promises mass deportations.
The mayor's meeting with Tom Homan, who will oversee the southern and northern borders and be responsible for deportation efforts in the Trump administration, came as Adams has welcomed parts of the president-elect's hardline immigration platform.
Adams told reporters at a brief news conference that he and Homan agreed on pursuing people who commit violent crimes in the city but did not disclose additional details or future plans.
''We're not going to be a safe haven for those who commit repeated violent crimes against innocent migrants, immigrants and longstanding New Yorkers,'' he said. ''That was my conversation today with the border czar, to figure out how to go after those individuals who are repeatedly committing crimes in our city.''
Homan said the two connected as career law enforcement officers and that he came away from the meeting with ''a whole new outlook on the mayor.''
''I've called him out this past year, many times, about being more of a politician than a police officer. I was wrong,'' Homan said during an interview with Dr. Phil McGraw on his Merit TV network. ''He came through today as a police officer and a mayor that cares about the safety and security of his city.''
The meeting marked Adams' latest and most definitive step toward collaborating with the Trump administration, a development that has startled critics in one of the country's most liberal cities.
In the weeks since Trump's election win, Adams has mused about potentially scaling back the city's so-called sanctuary policies and coordinating with the incoming administration on immigration. He has also said migrants accused of crimes shouldn't have due process rights under the Constitution, though he eventually walked back those comments.