
WATCH: Former Dem ousted from party over 'defund the police' takes on Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg
EXCLUSIVE: After being ousted from the Democratic Party over a disagreement about the push to defund the police, Maud Maron, a former progressive turned conservative Republican, is running to unseat Alvin Bragg as Manhattan district attorney.
In an interview with Fox News Digital, Maron, an attorney and mother of four, said that under Democratic rule, crime in New York City has spiraled out of control to the point that the city is facing a serious "public safety crisis."
She described a situation in which a criminal slashed police officers in the neck and face inside a Manhattan courthouse. In any other city, this occurrence would have been outrageous and unheard of, but Maron said that due to Democratic District Attorney Alvin Bragg's policies, it is a familiar scene.
According to Maron, after entering office in 2022, Bragg issued a day one memo in which he directed the assistant district attorneys in his office to simply not prosecute whole categories of crimes or "charge as low as possible and to seek as little jail time as possible."
"That's a recipe for chaos, disorder, and violence in our streets, and that's exactly what we've seen," she said.
In just the three years since Bragg took office, Maron said that the decline in New York City is palpable and can be experienced just walking in the streets or taking the subway.
"If you're going to commit a crime, best do it when Alvin Bragg is in office, because he will make sure you get the least amount of prosecution, the least amount of jail time, if jail time is in your future, the least amount of accountability," she explained. "He is going to absolutely make sure that it's the friendliest place for the people who break the law, which conversely makes it a very scary place for people who want to walk down the street or take the subways."
As a lifelong New Yorker, Maron said the change in the city is personal.
"I'm a public school mom and I have four kids who have taken subways to school," she said, adding that "over 300,000 New York City public school students take the subway by themselves as their commute to school."
"Our subways have gotten dirty, they're now places where mentally ill people who can't clean themselves are sleeping or doing worse things on the subways. And we've seen someone set on fire, we've seen people slashed and hurt," she said.
"I just don't think it's progressive to put children and tourists and workers and commuters through that kind of dangerous gauntlet on the subway. And it also just doesn't help that mentally ill person who can't clean themselves or restrain themselves. So, it's not compassionate for me on any ground, in any way, to follow Alvin Bragg's ideology," she said.
If elected, Maron said that she would issue a day-one memo of her own titled "The People's Plan for Public Safety," that would lay out "a clear, unapologetic commitment to law and order rooted in common sense, accountability, and community protection."
Maron said that she would restore the assistant district attorneys' ability to charge and prosecute the crimes committed instead of downgrading charges.
"What we need to do is, first of all, rescind Alvin Bragg's day one memo. We need to stop with the idea that there are categories of crime that the Manhattan District Attorney's Office doesn't prosecute," she said. "The thinking behind Alvin Bragg's day one memo is to keep the offenders out of jail as often as possible. But that doesn't take into consideration the people who have been hurt and the people who need justice. And it certainly doesn't take into consider future victims. If your whole goal is to keep people out of jails as much as possible, you're setting up future victims to be hurt by those very people."
Though New York City is seen as a deeply blue city, Maron believes that between independents and moderates in both parties there is enough frustration with Bragg's soft-on-crime policies to vote him out and flip the district red.
"Everybody that I talk to is deeply unhappy with the public safety crisis in our city," she explained, adding that in her estimation, "it's a matter of convincing people to go out to vote."
Bragg's office did not respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment by the time of publication.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
15 minutes ago
- New York Times
Is Mamdani Really a Gift to Trump and the G.O.P.?
The votes were still being tallied last night when Representative Elise Stefanik, the New York Republican, sought to blame a potential political rival for Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani's all-but-official upset victory in the Democratic primary for mayor of New York City. 'Make no mistake, it is BECAUSE OF Kathy Hochul and the NY Democrat Party's inept weakness and sheer incompetence that this has happened,' Stefanik wrote on X, referring to Gov. Kathy Hochul of New York. Never mind that Hochul didn't so much as endorse Mamdani. Stefanik, who is contemplating a run for governor next year after President Trump pulled her nomination to be his United Nations ambassador, saw an obvious target. So has much of her party. In the hours since Mamdani, a 33-year-old democratic socialist, opened up a healthy lead over former Gov. Andrew Cuomo in the first round of the city's ranked-choice voting, Republicans have gleefully seized on a fresh new boogeyman for 2025. They've denigrated Mamdani's age, his criticism of Israel and its treatment of Palestinians, and his progressive politics. Some on the right have directly vilified his Muslim faith. 'We've had Radical Lefties before, but this is getting a little ridiculous,' the president wrote on his social media site a few hours into his flight from Amsterdam to Washington today, adding that Mamdani 'looks TERRIBLE.' Representative Mike Lawler, a moderate Republican from the Hudson Valley, said New York Democrats would 'pay the price for this insanity.' The National Republican Congressional Committee called Mamdani 'proudly antisemitic' — a charge he has forcefully rejected — and demanded that moderate Democrats like Representatives Tom Suozzi and Laura Gillen of New York say whether or not they support him. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.


New York Times
15 minutes ago
- New York Times
Young Muslims Loved Zohran Mamdani, and Their Parents Listened to Them
It was late in the afternoon on Tuesday, and Bilquees Akhtar was still at work as an assistant to the principal of EPIC High School North in Richmond Hill, Queens. Suddenly her phone exploded with text messages and DMs on Instagram and TikTok from her five adult children. Each of them had already cast a vote for Zohran Mamdani in New York City's Democratic mayoral primary. 'MOM, WHY ARE YOU STILL AT WORK?' Ms. Akhtar's 24-year-old son, Humza Mehfuz, wrote to her. 'YOU HAVE TO VOTE!' While Ms. Akhtar had previously supported Mr. Mamdani's main opponent, Andrew M. Cuomo, when he ran for governor and, years before that, had voted for his father, former Gov. Mario Cuomo, she told her children to calm down. After their relentless campaign of showing her TikTok videos of Mr. Mamdani — 'This kid is brilliant,' she had to admit, 'and so friendly!' — she had made her decision. 'All of Cuomo's ads tried to make Mamdani look like a terrorist,' said Ms. Akhtar, 56. 'But he's a New Yorker like me.' By Wednesday, Mr. Mamdani, a state assemblyman from Queens, had won 43 percent of votes counted, all but clinching perhaps the greatest political upset in New York City politics in a generation. (The final tally is not expected to be completed until next week, but Mr. Cuomo conceded the race on Tuesday night.) If Mr. Mamdani were to win the general election this fall, he would be the first Muslim mayor in the history of New York, and also the first mayor of South Asian descent. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.


CBS News
16 minutes ago
- CBS News
Fort Worth to pay $250,000 settlement in deadly 2023 police chase
The City of Fort Worth has agreed to pay $250,000 to the family of a man killed during a high-speed police chase in 2023. The settlement, approved Tuesday by the Fort Worth City Council, resolves a wrongful death lawsuit filed by the father of Andre Craig, 57, who died after a collision with a police vehicle in South Fort Worth. City records note the settlement is not an admission of wrongdoing by the City of Fort Worth. Craig was killed in July 2023 when a Fort Worth police officer, pursuing a reported stolen vehicle, collided with Craig's car at an intersection. Witnesses said Craig had a green light. The police report stated the chase reached speeds of up to 100 mph on Evans Avenue, where the speed limit is 30 mph. For nearly two years, Craig's family has pushed for accountability, urging the department to "own up" to its role in his death. The department has not said whether the officer followed its pursuit policies, but no disciplinary action was taken following an internal investigation. A Tarrant County grand jury later cleared the 20-year veteran officer of criminal wrongdoing. The case prompted a nearly two-year investigation by the CBS News Texas I-Team into the Fort Worth Police Department's vehicle pursuit policy. In response to public records requests from the I-Team and other media outlets, the city sued the Texas Attorney General to block the release of the full policy. While portions were released in spring 2024, the department argued that disclosing the entire policy could compromise officer safety and effectiveness. The man police were chasing, Brian Hunter, was charged with evading arrest causing death — a felony that carries a potential sentence of up to 20 years in prison. His next court hearing is scheduled for September. Neither Craig's family nor the Fort Worth Police Department responded to requests for comment on the settlement.