Ed Mullins, head of the Sergeants Benevolent Association, slammed de Blasio's comments as "moronic," NY Daily News reported, and argued that the mayor "doesn't belong" in New York. "He has a security detail of New York City police officers assigned to protect his family. And yet he's making statements that his son shouldn't feel safe with New York City cops," Mullins said on John Catsimatidis' radio show on AM970. "Ultimately, if this individual who's in charge of running this city doesn't have faith in his own son being protected by the NYPD, he may want to think about moving out of New York City completely. He just doesn't belong here," he added. De Blasio has also been criticized by Patrick Lynch, head of the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association, the city's largest police union, who accused the mayor of throwing police "under the bus" by telling his son to be wary of police officers. NYC Police Commissioner Bill Bratton further added that many police officers feel that they are "under assault" in America as a result of the protests that have swept the nation. "Policing at the moment is under attack, it really is," Bratton said.De Blasio (that's his name for the time being) should have been removed from office over that corrupt fiasco over the horse-drawns in Central Park. And he and his freakshow 'family' doesn't belong in the public eye, or anywhere else.
“He has a security detail of New York City police officers assigned to protect his family. And yet he’s making statements that his son shouldn’t feel safe with New York City cops,”
Money quote. Kind of like Rosie O opposing guns and hiring armed bodyguards to take her kids to school.