Bill de Blasio concedes 'defund the police,' and Biden's border failures were mistakes
Bill de Blasio, the man who slashed $1 billion from the NYPD's budget in 2020, now says the whole idea behind it "made no sense."
The former New York City mayor appeared on the "Hang Out with Sean Hannity" podcast and delivered a string of concessions that would have been political heresy in his own party just a few years ago.
Defund the police? A mistake. Biden's handling of the border? He didn't like it. Is the Democratic Party deserving of criticism on these issues? Absolutely.
Even Sean Hannity seemed caught off guard. "We're not disagreeing, right? This is amazing."
The Record He Left Behind
De Blasio served as mayor from 2014 to 2021, a stretch that covered some of the most turbulent years in modern New York history. When protests flared in the wake of the death of George Floyd, de Blasio didn't just sympathize with the "defund" movement. He acted on it.
As reported by the Post, the City Council approved an $88.1 billion budget overnight that included shifting roughly $1 billion away from the NYPD. De Blasio supported the cut. He said at the time that the city was "reducing the size of our police force by not having the next recruit class," cutting overtime, and "shifting functions away from police to civilian agencies." He called himself "very comfortable, we struck the right balance."
That comfort didn't last. By April 2021, he had reversed course and decided to spend $105 million to build a new NYPD precinct in Southeast Queens, reversing a decision to eliminate the project the prior year.
So the man who stripped a billion dollars from law enforcement turned around and poured money back in less than a year later. And now, years after leaving office, he tells us the whole thing was a mistake. The timeline tells its own story.
The Border Confession
De Blasio then turned to immigration, and the concessions kept coming. He told Hannity plainly: "OK – I don't like what Biden did with the border."
Hannity's follow-up was the obvious one: "Why didn't you say it then?"
De Blasio's answer was revealing, not for what it admitted, but for what it exposed about how Democratic politicians operate: "Because honestly, I didn't think it was as bad as it was."
He then tried to credit Biden for tightening the border in his "final year," but Hannity fired back that moving too late doesn't earn a turnaround award. The damage was already done. Biden's lax border policy triggered a migrant crisis that flooded New York City and other municipalities with hundreds of thousands of desperate asylum seekers. De Blasio could have walked past the Roosevelt Hotel in Midtown Manhattan, which was temporarily used as a migrant shelter, to see how bad things had gotten.
But he didn't need to look. He needed to speak. And he chose silence when it mattered.
Hindsight Without Consequence
This is the pattern with Democratic leaders on public safety and immigration. They ride the political current when the left demands ideological purity, then reverse course when the consequences become undeniable, then claim credit for acknowledging reality years after the damage is done.
De Blasio admitted as much on the podcast:
"We, as Democrats, rightfully deserve that critique."
Gerard Kassar, the state Conservative Party chairman, captured the sentiment that most New Yorkers probably share:
"Even a stopped clock is right twice a day. Unfortunately, de Blasio didn't say this when he had the power to make a difference. But I'm glad he's admitting he's wrong."
That last line is generous. Because admitting you were wrong after you've left office, after the cops were cut, after the illegal immigrants flooded the shelters, after the crime surged, and the city struggled to recover, costs absolutely nothing. It's confession without penance.
What This Really Tells Us
The significance here isn't that Bill de Blasio changed his mind. It's that the facts were so overwhelming, so impossible to deny, that even one of the most progressive mayors in American history couldn't keep pretending. Defund the police collapsed under its own absurdity. Open borders collapsed under the weight of real human consequences in real American cities.
Conservatives said this in real time. They said it in 2020 when "defund" was a rallying cry and anyone who pushed back was labeled a reactionary. They said it when Biden dismantled border enforcement, and entire communities bore the cost. None of this required hindsight. It required honesty.
De Blasio found some of that honesty on a podcast. He deserves no medal for it. The people of New York lived through the policies he's now disowning. They didn't have the luxury of waiting until the consequences were obvious. They felt them every day.
The admission is welcome. The timing is years too late. And the lesson is the same one it always is: when progressives finally admit conservatives were right, they do it quietly, after the bill has already come due.



