06/23/2026
π¨ 2 days to go.
This is your final stretch reminder.
On Thursday, June 25, join the Donald J. Trump Kings County Republican Club for MID-YEAR MOMENTUM: Petitions, Progress & July 4th Action Meeting.
We will cover the status of active petition drives, review progress on local accountability and administrative transparency efforts, and finalize coordination for our July 4th morning event.
Plus, Tzippy Feldman, Conservative Political Activist, will speak on how candidates and clubs can leverage social media to get their message out, reach voters, and build momentum.
Do not wait for someone else to organize.
Do not wait for someone else to show up.
Do not wait for someone else to carry the message.
Be in the room.
π
Thursday, June 25, 2026
π 6:30 PM β 8:30 PM
π John Hughes Club
1305 86th Street, Brooklyn, NY 11228
π RSVP:
https://parteaevents.com/event/mid-year-momentum-petitions-progress-and-july-4th-planning
π Questions? 718-541-5721
π www.djtnyc.com
06/23/2026
A growing political and legislative backlash is forming around Mayor Zohran Mamdani following reports of a $200 million emergency shelter contract extension tied to a nonprofit whose leadership is facing federal corruption allegations. The controversy is rapidly shifting from a procurement dispute into a broader test of how New York City manages emergency spending authority.
The fallout is now feeding directly into campaign messaging and legislative resistance. Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman has seized on the issue in his gubernatorial positioning, using it to frame downstate governance as structurally vulnerable to mismanagement and weak oversight. At the same time, tensions inside City Hall are intensifying as segments of the City Council push back against continued reliance on emergency procurement channels.
For New Yorkers, the concerns are escalating:
City Council members are moving to restrict or suspend emergency procurement authority for certain nonprofit contracts
Oversight committees are preparing subpoenas targeting DHS decision-making and vendor vetting processes
Budget negotiations are becoming increasingly tied to demands for procurement reform and tighter controls
The central issue is not a single contract but the governing framework that enables rapid, large-scale spending with limited pre-approval scrutiny. In that view, the combination of political pressure, emergency housing demands, and constrained oversight capacity is now forcing a structural reassessment of how long-term shelter services are contracted and supervised.
06/22/2026
π₯ Brooklyn, this is the meeting to attend.
On Thursday, June 25, we are gathering for MID-YEAR MOMENTUM: Petitions, Progress & July 4th Action Meeting, hosted by the Donald J. Trump Kings County Republican Club.
We have petition drives to advance.
We have progress to review.
We have July 4th planning to finalize.
We have a message to get out.
This meeting will focus on active petition updates, local accountability, administrative transparency, volunteer coordination, and the work needed to move our community initiatives forward.
Special guest speaker Tzippy Feldman, Conservative Political Activist, will speak on how candidates and clubs can use social media to get their message out, reach voters, and build real momentum.
Do not wait for others to organize. Be in the room.
π
Thursday, June 25, 2026
π 6:30 PM β 8:30 PM
π John Hughes Club
1305 86th Street, Brooklyn, NY 11228
π Register here:
https://parteaevents.com/event/mid-year-momentum-petitions-progress-and-july-4th-planning
06/22/2026
β‘ 3 days to go.
Petitions. Progress. July 4th action. Social media strategy. Grassroots momentum.
That is what we are bringing into the room at MID-YEAR MOMENTUM: Petitions, Progress & July 4th Action Meeting.
We will review active petition drive status, discuss local accountability and administrative transparency efforts, and coordinate our upcoming July 4th morning event.
We are also welcoming Tzippy Feldman, Conservative Political Activist, who will speak on how candidates and clubs can leverage social media to get their message out, reach voters, and build momentum.
This is a meeting for people who want to do more than complain. This is for people ready to help move things forward.
π
Thursday, June 25, 2026
π 6:30 PM β 8:30 PM
π John Hughes Club
1305 86th Street, Brooklyn, NY 11228
π Register here:
https://parteaevents.com/event/mid-year-momentum-petitions-progress-and-july-4th-planning
π Questions? 718-541-5721
π www.djtnyc.com
06/22/2026
A major procurement scandal is intensifying scrutiny of Mayor Zohran Mamdaniβs administration after reports that a $200 million emergency shelter contract extension was quietly approved for a nonprofit whose leadership is now under federal indictment for alleged kickback and embezzlement schemes.
The controversy centers on the use of New York Cityβs emergency declaration framework by the Department of Homeless Services (DHS), which allowed the contract extension to proceed without standard competitive bidding or full-scale pre-payment audits. Critics argue that repeated reliance on emergency procurement powers has blurred the line between crisis management and routine contracting, significantly weakening normal oversight safeguards.
For New Yorkers, the concerns are escalating:
Emergency procurement rules are being used to bypass standard comptroller and anti-fraud review processes
Large-scale shelter contracts are being awarded to vendors under active criminal investigation
The cityβs shelter system budget is expanding rapidly while oversight mechanisms struggle to keep pace
The central issue is structural dependence on emergency mechanisms that were designed for short-term crises but are increasingly used for long-term service delivery. In that view, the combination of rapid spending authority and limited pre-contract scrutiny creates persistent risk exposure, particularly when major vendors face unresolved legal allegations.
06/21/2026
π₯ 4 days to go.
The June meeting is almost here, and this is not the time to sit back.
Join us for MID-YEAR MOMENTUM: Petitions, Progress & July 4th Action Meeting, a working session focused on petition updates, accountability efforts, transparency initiatives, and July 4th planning.
Special guest speaker Tzippy Feldman, Conservative Political Activist, will speak on how candidates and clubs can use social media to get their message out, reach voters, and build real momentum.
This meeting is for members, volunteers, candidates, organizers, and every concerned New Yorker who knows that strong communities are built through action.
Show up. Speak up. Help organize.
π
Thursday, June 25, 2026
π 6:30 PM β 8:30 PM
π John Hughes Club
1305 86th Street, Brooklyn, NY 11228
π RSVP now:
https://parteaevents.com/event/mid-year-momentum-petitions-progress-and-july-4th-planning
π Questions? 718-541-5721
π www.djtnyc.com
06/21/2026
Political backlash is intensifying around New York Attorney General Letitia James following her decision to withhold full personal tax returns and rely instead on standard state financial disclosure filings, a move critics say is deepening partisan tensions and sharpening scrutiny of her officeβs transparency standards.
The controversy has been amplified by national and state-level political organizations, including Republican-aligned groups and watchdog advocates, who argue that the shift from detailed tax documentation to summary ethics forms reduces the level of public visibility into income streams, investments, and asset structures that would normally be available in full returns. Critics contend this gap undermines confidence in the consistency of transparency expectations applied to public officials.
For New Yorkers, the concerns are escalating:
Opponents argue summary disclosures provide insufficient detail compared to full tax returns
Debate is growing over whether senior legal officials should follow stricter voluntary transparency norms
The dispute is fueling broader partisan disagreement over accountability standards for statewide offices
The broader issue is institutional trust, warning that perceived inconsistencies between enforcement standards applied to the public and the disclosure practices of top officials can weaken confidence in future regulatory or prosecutorial actions. In that view, the controversy is less about a single filing decision and more about the expectations placed on public integrity in high office.
06/21/2026
A federal corruption probe tied to New York City migrant shelter contracts has led to the arrest of a former NYPD sergeant and three homeless-services providers, raising renewed concerns about oversight of taxpayer-funded programs.
Prosecutors allege the group orchestrated a scheme involving more than $1 million in kickbacks by steering and manipulating city-funded shelter contracts. The accusations include the use of shell companies, no-bid arrangements, and subcontracting deals tied to nonprofit providers operating migrant housing and shelter services across the city.
According to the indictment, the ex-NYPD sergeant is accused of accepting bribes in exchange for directing security contracts, while two nonprofit executives are alleged to have diverted funds from their organization. A fourth contractor is also charged in the case. All defendants have pleaded not guilty or are contesting the allegations, and the investigation remains ongoing.
Itβs about how large-scale public contracts, especially in emergency housing systems, can become vulnerable to fraud and abuse if oversight mechanisms fail. The case highlights concerns about procurement transparency, contractor vetting, and the risks that come with rapidly expanded shelter spending.
For New Yorkers, the concern is that corruption in migrant and homeless shelter contracts could divert funds away from essential services, reduce trust in public programs, and ultimately harm the very populations those programs are meant to support. When oversight breaks down, taxpayers and vulnerable residents often bear the consequences.
Ex-NYPD sergeant arrested in connection to federal corruption probe over migrant shelter contracts
The ex-NYPD police sergeant was indicted on bribery and conspiracy charges.