De Blasio’s staff, like many New Yorkers, are already less than pleased at the prospect of the monumental cost sure to result from Trump’s plan to split his time between the White House and Trump Tower. Phillips wasted no time in calling out Spicer on what form his “appreciation” should really take:
Instead of addressing the very real issue of who should bear the hefty cost (estimated at over $1 million a day) of Trump’s decision to bombard the NYPD with security-detail overtime for the next four years, Trump’s media director Dan Scavino Jr. got in on the action with a nasty (and awkwardly-written) ad hominem attack against Phillips.
Phillips isn’t letting it go, though. He responded by sticking to the issue:
Fighting over the financing of Trump’s dual residence is likely just warming up. While House Republicans passed a resolution that set aside $7 million (one fifth the amount Mayor de Blasio requested) to fund security costs for Trump’s transition, that budget won’t begin to cover costs accruing after January 20.
De Blasio has positioned his administration in opposition to basically everything for which the incoming Trump administration stands. Recently, at a speech at Cooper Union, de Blasio said:
“The results of an election don’t change who we are. A single office-holder doesn’t change who we are; a law that gets passed in Washington doesn’t change who we are. We are 8.5 million strong, and we ain’t changing. We are always New York. Somos siempre Nueva York.”
Who will fund the enormous expense of securing Fifth Avenue remains to be seen, but one thing is certain. #AlwaysNewYork versus Trump is guaranteed to produce some great Twitter wars, and the battle of the press secretaries is just the opening salvo.
[Images via Shutterstock]