Democrat Eric Adams breezed to victory in Tuesday’s mayoral election, becoming just the second Black man in history to get picked for the city’s top job after running a campaign centered on public safety and his deep experience in New York politics.

Adams, the Brooklyn borough president and a born-and-bred New Yorker, was declared the winner of the mayoral race shortly after polls closed as early results from the city Board of Elections showed him holding a commanding lead over long-shot Republican contender Curtis Sliwa.

In a city as deeply Democratic as New York, Adams’ win was expected.

Eric Adams gives a thumbs-up after voting for himself Tuesday morning at PS 81 in the Bedford Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn. (Luiz C. Ribeiro/for New York Daily News)

Carried by a diverse coalition of supporters across the five boroughs, the victory gives him a powerful mandate to take over the reins from Mayor de Blasio, who’s leaving office at the end of this year due to term limits.

See the full results of the 2021 New York City Elections »

Adams — who’s set to be sworn into office on Jan. 1 as the first African-American mayor since David Dinkins — prevailed in the far more competitive Democratic primary this summer by portraying himself as a reformer who spent decades as an NYPD officer fighting police misconduct and racism from inside the department.

NYC MAYORAL RACE 2021

Mayor New York City

CANDIDATE VOTES Eric Adams (Dem) 676,481 66.5%

Curtis Sliwa (GOP) 293,127 28.8%

78% of precincts reporting

At the same time, he came out as a fierce opponent of the progressive push for defunding the NYPD, instead pitching New York on blending a beefed-up police force with more rigorous accountability for officers engaged in misconduct.ADVERTISEMENT

“Public safety is the prerequisite to prosperity,” Adams said often on the campaign trail.

The 61-year-old Adams has been a staple New York politics since being elected to a State Senate seat representing Brooklyn in 2007. Prior to that, he served in the NYPD for over two decades until his retirement as a captain in 2006.

Republican mayoral candidate Curtis Sliwa arrives to vote at Frank McCourt High School on W. 85th St. on Tuesday in Manhattan, New York. (Barry Williams for New York Daily News)

Since 2014, he has held forth as the borough president of Brooklyn, though he’s long had his scope set on City Hall, according to his advisers.

Adams, who grew up with a single mom in Brooklyn and Queens and often recounts living in abject poverty as a child, courted support from Democratic progressives and moderates alike after his primary win and has vowed to work with both factions as mayor.

“No matter who you are,” he said over the summer, “we are wearing the ‘team New York’ jersey on this one.”

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