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Run It Back pt.2

By Eddie Castro
It is finally baseball season again, and as the sunny weather makes its long-awaited return, so will Yankees baseball. As we go to press, the New York Yankees will kick off their 122nd season this afternoon at Yankee Stadium against the Milwaukee Brewers.

The team will look to get back to the World Series after falling short of winning it all last year losing in five games to the Los Angeles Dodgers. According to ESPN Bet, the Yankees come into the 2025 campaign with the third-best odds to win the World Series at +850 behind the Atlanta Braves and the reigning champs Dodgers. There have been some good and bad takes when it comes to this current Yankee roster. However, manager Aaron Boone will try to piece it all together in hopes of capturing a 28th World Title.


If the Yankees hope to get back to the Fall Classic, they will have to do it without superstar Juan Soto, as Soto elected to sign a massive deal with the New York Mets, as I spoke about in last week’s column. General Manager Brian Cashman was able to do some good with the money that was expected to go to Soto by bringing in some key players.

The team signed Ace pitcher Max Fried and first baseman Paul Goldschmidt in free agency. Cashman was also able to swing a few trades for star closer Devin Williams, Cody Bellinger, and Fernando Cruz. Unfortunately, Spring Training has been a disaster for the Ball Club losing their veteran Ace pitcher Gerrit Cole until at least the summer of 2026 with Tommy John surgery. One of the team’s biggest contributors during their playoff run last year, Giancarlo Stanton will be out indefinitely with what’s being called Tennis elbow in both of his elbows.

Last year’s American League Rookie of The Year, Luis Gil will be out until at least July with a strained latissimus dorsi. DJ Lemahieu went down this spring with a strained calf, and pitcher Clarke Schmidt will also start the season on the Injured List. Boone will have yet another challenge in front of him this year, playing matchmaker with the lineup and pitching rotation.
As tough of spring as it was for the Yankees, Boone still has a pretty solid team to pencil in come to Opening Day.

After all, they still have the reigning 2-time MVP Aaron Judge. Let’s also consider another thing: the Dodgers were down a few starting pitchers due to injury and a not-so-healthy Shohei Ohtani. Still, they managed to overcome the obstacles that were the Yankees. If the Yankees can weather the storm with all the injuries they have endured thus far and still find a way to get wins, fans in the Bronx could very well see just how dangerous this team can be when at full health. It is sure to be a long but exciting season for the Yanks.


Sports Notes: (Boxing) Sad news to report in the boxing world as former 2-time heavyweight champion of the world and Hall of Famer George Foreman passed away last week. Foreman has one of the most impressive boxing resumes of his long career, marking a win-loss-record of 76-5. He won the world title in 1973-74 and again from 1994-97, marking the longest gap between title reigns. He was also the oldest boxer to win the heavyweight title at 45 and won the Olympic gold medal in 1968. Foreman also endured success outside the boxing ring when he launched his George Foreman Grill in 1994. Foreman was 76.

Spring’s Here, Brooklyn’s Rock Steady

By Bernice Elizabeth Green
The Rappin’ Max Robot metal installation at Borough Hall Plaza holds court there for just a few more days. Next month, the 18-foot tall and 7,000 lb metal hunk with his 10-ft long boombox moves from its Brooklyn outdoor space to a permanent installation at Place de la Bastille-de-Stalin n Paris, France. Prior to its six-month stay here, Max held court at the Hip Hop Museum in The Bronx. The sculpture was created by Welder Underground, a Brooklyn-based program that hosts six-month paid apprenticeships for aspiring young Brooklyn welders and fabricators.

Dem. Leader Hakeem Jeffries and Black Caucus Chair Rep. Yvette Clarke ‘Medicaid Day of Action’ at One Brooklyn Health

By Mary Alice Miller
Days after Trump signed a short-term spending bill that avoided a government shutdown, Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries organized a national Medicaid Day of Action. The bill passed on party lines in the House with Democrats united in opposition and with 10 Democrat votes in the Senate.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer has been excoriated for his support of the bill, but the alternative would have shut down the entire federal government and given the Trump administration carte blanche to selectively maintain the closure of select agencies.


The spending bill, which would theoretically fund federal agencies through September despite Elon Musk’s DOGE dismantling of the very same federal agencies that Congress funds, will cut $13 billion in non-defense spending from FY 2024 levels and increase defense spending slightly by $6 billion.


Medicaid, Medicare, and Social Security are the three most significant parts of non-defense federal spending. Since Social Security and Medicare are automatic spending, Medicaid is at risk for deep cuts.


In addition, the spending bill effectively gives the Trump administration a blank check to direct spending as Trump sees fit. Usually, spending bills have specific funding directives for certain programs. The current bill does away with hundreds of those directives.


Seeing the writing on the wall, House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries came to One Brooklyn Health’s Interfaith Campus to call for a Medicaid Day of Action.


“Republicans have proposed the largest Medicaid cut in American history because they want to pass massive tax breaks for billionaire donors like Elon Musk and wealthy corporations,” said Leader Jeffries. “It will devastate children, families, people with disabilities, older Americans, women, and everyday Americans in this community, in the city of New York, and across the country.”


Jeffries declared, “It’s unacceptable. It’s unconscionable. It’s un-American, and together we’re going to do everything we have to do to stop these cuts from ever taking effect.”


This Medicaid cut that has been proposed all across the country, we’re having a
Medicaid Day of Action to save Medicaid here in New York City in New York
State, in blue states, in purple states, in red states all across America, Medicaid is healthcare, and we believe that in the United States of America healthcare is not simply a privilege it is a right.

Medicaid is health care we’re going to fight to make sure that that right is alive and well and save Medicaid in the United States of America. Congressional Black Caucus Chair Rep. Yvette Clarke joined Jeffries at OBH.


“We say no cuts to Medicaid. it is an assault on health care,” said Clarke. “I’m proud to stand at Leader Jeffrey’s side for this Medicaid Day of Action, just as I am proud to call myself a colleague to Democrats across this nation who are speaking the same message. We are today relaying the same dangers of this spending bill, and standing for the same people and families it will hurt.”


Clarke spoke of serving on the committee of jurisdiction for health care in the House of Representatives, the Energy and Commerce Committee. “We have been sent a mandate essentially to cut 880 billion dollars from the federal budget in order to provide space in the budget for the trillions of tax cuts to the wealthiest, the wealthiest in the United States of America,” said Clarke.


She added, “This is a humanitarian crisis. Know that House Democrats will use every tool at our disposal to stop this devastating scheme. It is clear that Republicans have put a bullseye on the most vulnerable Americans among us. We will not sit down and stay quiet.”


Clarke said in the 9th Congressional District alone, cuts to Medicaid will severely impact over 65,000 people over the age of 65, 24,000 disabled children and adults, 146,000 young adults, 85,000 parents and caretakers, 149,000 children, and 11,000 pregnant women.
“These cuts will hurt roughly 500,000 people within my district alone.

That’s almost half of our district. There are real people who will lose more than $5 million in Medicaid benefits and the services they rely on. You’ll see similar disturbing figures across this nation,” she said.


Clarke explained the related impact of cuts to Medicaid.
“The cascading effect of cutting $880 billion dollars out of health care will not only mean the threat to our health and well-being. It will mean higher unemployment. It will mean the closure of hospitals and federally qualified healthcare institutions within our communities,” said Clarke. “It will mean devastation at every turn. We have just recovered from a pandemic.

We are seeing the outbreak of measles across this nation. Without your health, nothing else matters.”


She added, “This is not the time for the wealthiest in our nation – the top 1% – to line their pockets at the expense of the health and well-being of the people of the United States. It’s time to stand up. It’s time to fight. Democrats will continue to fight back by holding Republicans accountable.”


“We’re having a Medicaid Day of Action, engagements, site visits, town hall meetings, press conferences, interactions with our constituents, hearing from healthcare providers all across the country to elevate their voices to make sure that the American people understand that this is a matter of life and death when it comes to saving Medicaid,” said Jeffries.


He continued, “It’s inhumane what the Republicans are trying to do. We’re going to expose their scheme all across the country.

It’s a scheme to jam these massive tax cuts down the throat of the American people for their billionaire donors and wealthy corporations who don’t need it, and then they want to force working-class Americans to pay the bill by robbing working-class Americans of their healthcare. We will not let it happen.”


“We are all aligned on the fights that are in front of us on behalf of the people that we represent here in Brooklyn, and New York City, and across the country. That is saving Medicaid, saving Social Security, saving Medicare,” said Jeffries. “Elon Musk and Donald Trump and the Republicans want to take a chainsaw to Medicaid.

They want to take a chainsaw to Social Security. They want to take a chainsaw to Medicare. But let me be clear we’re going to take a chainsaw to Project 2025.”

Independent politicking, matching funds-denied Democratic Mayor Adams just may pivot

By Nayaba Arinde
Editor at Large

Independent living and right-of-center political thinking may be on the horizon for 1990s-Republican registered Eric Adams, the embattled Mayor of New York, who is currently Democratic assigned.


Late last year, Adams said the “Democrats left me. ” Now, he is not ruling out running as an independent and skipping the contentious June primary altogether.


Mayor Adams told the assembled media, “When I’m ready to roll out my official re-announcement and my plan, I will do so. I’m going to make sure all of you are invited to it. You can stand in the back with me if you want and just be part of my support group, like others who support.”


On Monday, as other mayoral candidates reveled in qualifying for New York Campaign Matching Funds, Adams was denied but said, “Everyone is catching up to me. I started raising early.”


Under scrutiny by the feds and the media in general, after last year’s five federal corruption and bribery indictments, Adams has not been able to tap into the money-boosting process, even though he has a hefty-election war chest at over four million dollars.


As they gear up for what will probably be a hectic primary run-up, politicos such as Zohran Mamdani and Zelnor Myrie are hitting the campaign at warp speed, glad-handing and pushing their vote-inspired agendas.


All were told they qualify for the 8 public dollars for every one dollar collected by the candidate. Big money. It is a system designed to help regular people run even without massive corporate or big-buck donors.


But, last September, U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said: “As alleged, Mayor Adams abused his position as this City’s highest elected official, and before that as Brooklyn Borough President, to take bribes and solicit illegal campaign contributions.”


Even though currently off the books–at President Donald Trump’s discretion, the 5 indictment case can be reinstated if he feels Adams is not complying with whatever the alleged details are in the largely speculated quid pro quo arrangement of deporting certain immigrants en masse.


The incumbent mayor says that he is running full steam ahead for re-election.
Adams stated, “We were finished with all of our fundraising, so everybody’s catching up to me, not only in fundraising, but in policies.” Adding, “Not only are they catching up to me on fundraising, they’re catching up to me on policies.

You know, how do you have to defund the police? Brad Lander, now saying you wanna keep my police commissioner? I keep asking y’all, look at their policies. All of their policies are Eric Adams policies. You know, these are Eric-like candidates. Don’t go with Eric-like people when you’ve got Eric.”


Meanwhile, as former governor Andrew Cuomo rides his big-money-backed populist mayoral campaign, fellow candidate City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams’ campaign noted, “Approximately 60% of the Democratic primary electorate is female, and 65% of Black Democratic primary voters are women.

” They form “the energized core” of her support, she stated. “As the first Black Speaker of the City Council and a leading candidate to become New York’s first woman – and first Black woman – mayor, [my] election would deliver a clear rejection of Trump’s divisive politics, both for these voters and for all New Yorkers.”


Hefty $128,000 fundraising in less than a week, “We’ve done a phenomenal job in just five days,” she declared.


To cash in, as it were–on the CFB process, certain criteria must be met.
“Candidates need to bring in at least $250,000 in qualifying donations from 1,000 contributors to be eligible for matching funds, per the city board,” said Politico.

City Comptroller Brad Lander, former Comptroller Scott Stringer, State Senator Zellnor Myrie, and Assemblymember Zohran Mamdani did just that.


As usual, Adams brushed off any dissent and asked folk to sign his petition if they saw him out and about and support his re-election bid.


Assembly Member Latrice Walker addressed over 100 ‘Women for Cuomo’ at a breakfast and stated, “As a born and raised native of Brooklyn, it breaks my heart to hear from my friends and neighbors about how New York City has almost overnight become a place only the rich can afford.”


The Brooklyn 55th Assembly District representative campaigned, “Under Andrew Cuomo, rent was more affordable, homeownership was attainable, quality and affordable healthcare was accessible throughout our state, and our schools performed better…it was the result of his leadership.

As Governor, Andrew Cuomo was a truly battle-tested leader, and as our next Mayor, he can lead our great City into a new era of prosperity for everyone, and that’s why I’m endorsing his campaign.”


Nothing is mentioned by the fervent supporters about alleged Cuomo culpability in either the case where seniors were sent from hospitals back to care homes during the pandemic, and many passed away; or the dozen women who charged Cuomo with harassment, and not even his controversial $5 million Covid management book deal.


This week, Brooklyn Democratic leader Rodneyse Bichotte-Hermelyn, a one-time die-hard Adams ally, endorsed Cuomo, as have party vice chair Henry Butler, Carl McCall—the Democratic 2002 nominee for Governor and former New York State Senator and Comptroller—and City Councilmembers Farrah Louis and Darlene Mealey.


Adams, who has a 20% approval rate, said that he does not “take any of this personally.” He insists that “Politics is not personal…We move forward. And you don’t personalize this stuff.”


He denies the allegations that his 2021 campaign conspired to receive illegal domestic and also foreign donations from the Turkish government.
His opponents are seizing on these legal issues and using it as cannon fodder in their relentless attacks.


“I’m not running against candidates. I’m running against myself,” Adams said. “And there’s only going to be one person that’s gonna come through the primary. All those eight, nine, 10 people…They’re all running around, calling me names, and all of that. I’m focused on running the City of New York.”


With a monthly deadline, Adams said he was going to seek for the CFB to reverse their decision.
Confident that her supporters will come through in strong numbers and financial backing, Speaker Adams’s campaign spokesperson Lupe Todd-Medina said, “By the end of the race we’ll have made matching funds.”


Cuomo, with $1.5 million in his campaign wallet, missed the deadline to file the paperwork but seems unfazed.


“Former Governor Cuomo entered this race as the frontrunner after months of planning,” stated Speaker Adams through her campaign. “He is formidable, leading in polls and pulling a significant share of the Black vote from Eric Adams.

But his entry has also intensified the demand for an alternative that represents the future instead of a return to the 20th-century Democratic establishment. Cuomo is polarizing, vulnerable, and weighed down by sky-high negatives.


Cuomo isn’t the first ex-governor who resigned in scandal to attempt a comeback. Eliot Spitzer tried the same in 2013, leveraging his name recognition and early poll leads of up to 15 points, running on voter affection for his pre-resignation record. In both Spitzer’s and Cuomo’s cases, their early leads relied on Black voters – support neither could take for granted.

Black voters may know Andrew Cuomo, but there’s little indication in polling or public sentiment that black voters love Andrew Cuomo. Cuomo’s standing in the Black community is especially fragile now that his path to victory depends on stopping the first Black woman from becoming mayor.”

The Bronx Celebrates “Warrior Queen” Bessie Mae Jackson’s 99 Years of Life and Legacy at Gala

by Louise Dente
The Bronx was alive with celebration on Saturday, March 8, as family, friends, and community members gathered to honor Bessie Mae Jackson’s remarkable life on her 99th birthday. The grand gala, held at the Eastwood Manor, was a heartfelt tribute to a woman whose dedication to education, writing, and community activism has left an indelible mark on the lives of many.


Throughout the evening, guests shared stories and memories, reflecting on the profound impact Bessie has had in their lives and the community. Her commitment to activism and education was highlighted in a series of proclamations and speeches that recounted her journey, from her early days as a teacher to her influential role in advocating for African American history.

Bessie Jackson is not just a birthday celebrant; she is a lifelong educator and a passionate advocate for African American history. For decades, she has served as the New York State Director of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History (ASALH), championing the importance of recognizing and celebrating African Americans’ contributions to society. In 2020, she became the founder of bill#506658, known as Abolition Commemoration Day in New York State.


A dedicated educator and community activist, Mrs. Jackson led the movement to establish a holiday commemorating the abolition of slavery in New York. In 2004, she spearheaded efforts to celebrate Emancipation Day at the United Christian Baptist Church, Rev. Reginald Parris, Pastor — which marked the historic moment when New York began to confront its legacy of slavery. This annual event continued until 2006, laying the groundwork for future initiatives.


Recognizing the importance of remembering this pivotal chapter in history, Jackson and her supporters organized a series of prayer breakfasts starting in 2007. These gatherings focused on advocating for the abolition of slavery in New York State to be officially recognized as a holiday.

Community leaders, educators, and activists came together, signing petitions and approaching politicians to rally support for this vital cause.
The campaign gained traction, but significant legislative progress was made only in 2018. The Abolition Commemoration Day Bill was placed on the state calendar on August 7, 2019.


This bill, sponsored by Assemblyman Gary Pretlow and co-sponsored by Speaker of the NYS Assembly Carl Heastie, marked a critical step toward formal recognition. On August 21, 2019, a parallel effort was led by then-State Senator Jamaal Bailey, who introduced Bill #506658, co-sponsored by then-Senator Brian Benjamin.

This legislation sought to declare the second Monday in July Abolition Commemoration Day, honoring the Abolition Act passed by New York State legislators on March 31, 1817, which abolished slavery in the state effective July 4, 1827.


The culmination of these efforts came on July 22, 2020, when the bill was passed by the New York State Legislature. It was signed into law by Governor Andrew Cuomo on October 7, 2020, marking a historic victory for advocates of social justice and recognition of the African American experience in New York.


Bessie Jackson’s unwavering dedication to this cause reflects her lifelong commitment to education and community empowerment. By championing the establishment of Abolition Commemoration Day, Mrs. Jackson has ensured that future generations will remember and honor the struggles and triumphs of those who fought for freedom and equality in New York.


One of the presenters, distinguished scholar Dr. William Seraile, Professor Emeritus of African & African American History at Lehman College, described Bessie Jackson as a “Warrior Queen in the struggle to disseminate African American history to a wider audience.”

Seraile also went on to say that it was, in fact, Bessie who first advocated for the use of the term “African American” two years before Rev Jessie Jackson did during an appearance on the legendary Gary Byrd show on WLIB Radio.


Throughout the evening, guests shared stories and memories, reflecting on the profound impact Bessie has had on their lives and the community. Her commitment to activism and education was highlighted in a series of proclamations, including one from Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, and speeches that recounted her journey, from her early days as a teacher to her influential role in advocating for African American history.


From the start to the end of the event, guests were treated to an atmosphere of joy and reverence. The warm ambiance was enhanced by the rhythmic beats of the African percussion group led by Atiba Wilson and Songhai D’jeli, who performed a vibrant selection of music celebrating African heritage and culture.


As the night progressed, Bessie took to the mic and thanked all who made the event possible. She was overwhelmed by the love she received in that hall.