New York will terminate Trump’s contracts after the Capitol uprising

Mayor Bill de Blasio says New York City will terminate trade deals with President Donald Trump after last week’s uprising at the U.S. Capitol

“I’m here to announce that New York City is terminating all contracts with the Trump Organization,” de Blasio said in an interview with MSNBC.

The city can legally terminate a contract if the management of a company is engaged in criminal activities, the Democratic mayor said. “Inciting an insurrection – let’s be very clear, we say the words again – inciting an insurrection against the U.S. government is clearly a criminal activity,” he said.

An email was sent to the Trump organization on Wednesday.

The move to end Trump’s trade deals in the city he previously called home is the latest example of how January 6’s failure by violent Trump supporters affects the Republican president’s business interests.

The PGA of America voted Sunday to withdraw the PGA Championship from its New Jersey golf course next year, an action that came after social media platforms disabled Trump’s accounts and Shopify withdrew stores in line affiliated with him.

De Blasio had previously said the city was examining its legal options to end Trump’s contracts. He said Wednesday that city attorneys determined that if Trump sues for the move, the city will win. Trump “incited a crowd to attack the Capitol,” Blasio said, adding, “Lawyers looked at it and it was as clear as a bell motivating the rupture of those contracts and we will do so immediately.”

But the split with Trump’s eponymous company will not occur immediately. De Blasio said in a press release that terminating the contract to run the Ferry Point golf course in the Bronx is complex “and is expected to take several months.”

The termination of the contract to run Wollman Rink and Lasker Rink in Central Park will take effect 30 days after written notice, Blasio said. The termination of the carousel execution contract, which is now closed due to the coronavirus pandemic, will take effect 25 days after written notification.

The city will look for new vendors from all the attractions, the mayor said.

Removing Trump’s name from the courts, carousel, and golf course won’t erase him from New York City. It will still operate the Trump Tower on Manhattan’s Fifth Avenue and the Trump International Hotel in Central Park West. Trump moved his official Trump Tower residence to Florida in 2019.

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