web analytics
Saturday, May 2, 2026 LIVE NYC, NJ & CT updates
Big New York - BigNY.com
YOUR ONE-STOP
NY NEWS PORTAL
ADVERTISE
WITH US LEARN MORE
Breaking News NYC Extends Emergency Executive Order 2.22: What It Means for Migrant Shelters and the City

Белый Дом. How U.S. Anti-Corruption Policies Impact New York and the Tri-State Area

By Big New York · 10/16/2024
USA-news U.S. Achievements in the Global Fight Against Corruption

The Biden administration’s anti-corruption initiatives are reshaping financial oversight, immigration policies, and public safety in New York and the Tri-State area. Stricter laws targeting financial crime protect NYC’s banking institutions, while border controls address migration drivers. Federal crackdowns on organized crime also strengthen security across the region, ensuring safer communities and more accountable governance.

FACT SHEET: U.S. Achievements in the Global Fight Against Corruption

Corruption poses a grave and enduring threat to U.S. national interests and those of our partners. When officials abuse their entrusted power for personal or political gain, the interests of authoritarians and corrupt actors win – at the expense of citizens, honest businesses, and healthy societies. As the Biden-Harris Administration took office, this longstanding challenge had metastasized. In some countries, oligarchs were teaming up with foreign kleptocrats to warp policy and procurement decisions in exchange for kickbacks – with no accountability. Corrupt officials were laundering stolen assets through the U.S. and global financial systems, while local investigators were ill-equipped to follow the money. Reformers in countries saddled with corruption had scarce public resources to actually address development needs. The Biden-Harris Administration tacked these challenges starting Day One, to ensure democracy delivers and corrupt actors are held to account.

The first National Security Study Memorandum of the Biden-Harris Administration established countering corruption as a “core U.S. national security interest,” leading to the issuance in December 2021 of the first United States Strategy on Countering Corruption. Since then, the United States has taken action at home and around the world to curb illicit finance, hold corrupt actors accountable, forge multilateral partnerships, and equip frontline leaders to take on transnational corruption. The result has been historic progress in protecting the U.S. financial system from money-laundering, including in the residential real estate sector, while enhancing corporate transparency. This Administration has mobilized record levels of foreign assistance dedicated to anti-corruption, including $339 million in Fiscal Year 2023 alone – almost double the yearly average during the previous four years. This new assistance has unlocked support for anti-corruption institutions, leveled the playing field for law-abiding businesses, enabled journalists to team up across borders, and more. Expanded law enforcement cooperation and capacity-building have generated convictions of corrupt actors as well as the seizure, forfeiture, and return of criminal proceeds, while new anti-corruption offices at the Department of State (State) and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) energized diplomatic and stakeholder engagement. The United States imposed sanctions on more than 500 individuals and entities for corruption and related activities, and established – for the first time in any jurisdiction globally – a new visa restriction for those who enable corrupt activity.

U.S. progress on anti-corruption has produced concrete benefits for the American people and stakeholders around the world – enhancing prosperityeconomic securitysafety, and democracy, as outlined below. To bolster and sustain this work, the U.S. government has also modernized its approach to addressing corruption as a cross-cutting priority. Today, Deputy National Security Advisor for International Economics Daleep Singh will highlight the benefits of this work to American businesses and workers at a White House anti-corruption roundtable with leaders from 15 major U.S. companies.

Advancing economic opportunity abroad

Protecting the U.S. financial system from abuse

Keeping America and our partners safe

Defending democracy by rooting out corruption

Modernizing and coordinating U.S. government efforts to fight corruption

Expanded interagency capacity has been complemented by the National Security Council’s establishment of a dedicated Director for Anti-Corruption position, for the first time, to ensure whole-of-government coordination and advance anti-corruption within key policy processes.

October 16. 2024 Washington, DC

How U.S. Anti-Corruption Policies Impact New York and the Tri-State Area

  1. Do stricter financial regulations interfere with free-market principles?
    Could these policies create additional burdens for small businesses, real estate investors, and entrepreneurs in New York and beyond?
  2. Is federal overreach infringing on states’ rights?
    Critics argue that increased federal oversight on local issues, such as migration and organized crime, may undermine the autonomy of state and municipal governments.
  3. Will border security measures unfairly target lawful immigrants?
    How does the administration ensure that new immigration controls do not violate the civil liberties of immigrants and their families in the Tri-State area?
  4. Are these initiatives truly focused on public safety, or are they political theater?
    Some Republicans question whether the anti-corruption efforts are primarily intended to create positive headlines while failing to address deeper social and economic problems in NYC.

Sources: White House WH.govMidtown Tribune,
Big New York news BigNY.com

Big New York – New Jersey, Connecticut News Business – Job- Moneymakers – Resume – Services – Hospitals-ITTri-state area –  New York – New York City – Manhattan – Brooklyn – Queens – Staten Island – Bronx – Long Island