By Ryan Schwach
Queens locals condemned Councilmember Vickie Paladino during a rally outside her office on Sunday after she called for the deportation of Muslim Americans and for “massive sweeps of Muslim neighborhoods.”
The public denunciation of the Republican member, who is no stranger to controversy, came days after colleagues called for her expulsion on the Council floor following a vote by the body’s Standards and Ethics Committee to investigate her conduct.
“There is no place for hate in our city, New York, our beautiful city,” said Queens Imam Safraz Bacchus. “A city that is shaped by diversity and sustained by the shared belief that every human being is created with dignity.”
“This hate that we are denouncing is against all forms, hate directed to our Jewish community, the Sikh community, the Hindu communities, the African American community,” the imam added.
Sunday’s rally, which was organized by former City Council candidate Japneet Singh and included remarks from other local political candidates – but no sitting elected officials – was a direct response to comments Paladino made last week.
Her initial comments, made on X following the terror attack at Bondi Beach in Australia, argued that Western nations, including the United States, need to “begin the expulsion of Muslims.”
“The administration needs to begin developing a formal legal framework for the denaturalization process and get it over with before we end up with another 9/11 or worse,” she said.
Paladino, who deleted the post after being asked to do so by presumptive Council Speaker Julie Menin, doubled down on those remarks days later, adding in an op-ed to the Queens Jewish Link that there should need to be “massive sweeps of Muslim neighborhoods" in order to facilitate the mass deportations of what she described as “radical Muslims.”
She was swiftly condemned by her elected colleagues. Brooklyn Councilmember Shahana Hanif, who is Muslim, called for the Council to expel Paladino during the final stated meeting of the year.
“She won't apologize, just like every other time,” Hanif said. “So, I ask you, where do we draw the line?”
“We must send a clear message to the New Yorkers that we represent, that racism is unacceptable,” she added. “This colleague must be expelled or at the very, very least, censured.”
Locals continued to criticize Paladino outside her office on Sunday.