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NYC offered Amazon more incentives than previously known for HQ2: Report

NYC offered Amazon more incentives than previously known for HQ2: Report Joanne Lipman, journalist and distinguished journalism fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, and Ed Lee, corporate media reporter for the New York Times, join "Squawk Box" to discuss a new report that New York City offered Amazon $800 milion more than previously known in tax credits and grants for the interent retailer to build its second headquarters in the city.

Amazon signed a deal to lease more than 335,000 square feet of space in Manhattan’s new Hudson Yards neighborhood, office realty group SL Green Realty announced Monday. The Wall Street Journal first reported the deal on Friday.

The deal comes less than a year since Amazon announced on Valentine’s Day it would halt plans to build its new headquarters in the Long Island City neighborhood of Queens, New York. Amazon and lawmakers who brokered the deal behind closed doors faced pushback from local activists and city council leaders who criticized the nearly $3 billion in performance-based incentives offered to the company in exchange for bringing 25,000 jobs to the area.

To those who opposed the exchange of tax breaks for jobs, the new Hudson Yards space is something of a victory.

“Won’t you look at that: Amazon is coming to NYC anyway - *without* requiring the public to finance shady deals, helipad handouts for Jeff Bezos, & corporate giveaways,” Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a New York Democrat who represents the region where Amazon planned to build its HQ2, tweeted Friday following the Journal’s report.

But the new lease will bring just a fraction of the jobs Amazon promised as part of the HQ2 deal. The company will have over 1,500 employees at the new site, according to the Journal. Amazon had made clear it would continue to grow in New York even after it pulled out of its HQ2 project there. The new Amazon jobs will also be located in Manhattan, not the developing neighborhood of Long Island City in Queens.

An Amazon spokesperson told CNBC that the new office space will open in 2021 and house employees from its consumer and advertising teams. The spokesperson also said the office is part of the company’s previously announced plan to add jobs “organically” in many U.S. cities, including New York City.

Even so, in a separate tweet, Ocasio-Cortez argued the 25,000 job Amazon promised “was a 10-20 year fantasy” rather than a firm commitment.

New York State Senator Michael Gianaris, who represents the Long Island City district, echoed Ocasio-Cortez’s statements in an interview with CNBC’s Andrew Ross Sorkin Monday.

“The argument is that Amazon was coming to New York, they were always coming to New York, and they will continue to come to New York because that’s where the talent pool is, that’s where their competitors are hiring talented people,” Gianaris said, noting Facebook and Google’s expansions. “If those jobs are coming anyway, which I believe they are, then we are in fact saving that money for use on other things.”

Sorkin pushed back on Gianaris’ argument, pointing out the jobs will not be coming to his district with this new deal and recalling that the tax incentives were based at least in part on the numbers of jobs Amazon ultimately brought to the area. Gianaris said he’d still expect Queens residents will end up working for Amazon even though it’s not setting up shop in the borough and added that Amazon never made a binding commitment to bring jobs to the area.

Even though the jobs won’t come to his district specifically, Gianaris said Long Island City is doing just fine without Amazon. While growth is not happening in such a “splashy” way as the HQ2 project would have seen, it is continuing at an organic pace, he said.

Shortly before Amazon formally ended its HQ2 plans in New York, Governor Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat, pleaded with the public and described what he saw as a huge loss if Amazon pulled out of the deal.

“There is no business that brings 25,000 jobs anymore. They don’t exist. I spend days trying to bring a business that has 100 jobs or 200 jobs,” he said. “Every project has local opposition. ... People just oppose change.”

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