President Trump and Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani will meet in the Oval Office on Friday, the president says. It will be the first time that Mr. Trump has met with his hometown’s mayor-elect. Mr. Mamdani has said consistently that he has wanted to meet with the president, so long as they could find a way to best serve New Yorkers in tandem. Mr. Trump has already started threatening to withhold federal funds from the city where he was born, raised, and grew his family business for the better part of eight decades. “Communist Mayor of New York City, Zohran ‘Kwame’ Mamdani, has asked for a meeting. We have agreed that this meeting will take place at the Oval Office on Friday, November 21st. Further details to follow!” the president wrote on Truth Social Wednesday night. Returning to Washington, D. C., from Florida on Sunday night, Mr. Trump told reporters on the tarmac that he was willing to meet with Mr. Mamdani so that they could figure out a way to make things “work” for New York City. “The mayor of New York, I will say, would like to meet with us and we’ll work something out,” the president said. “We want to see everything work out well for New York.” During an interview with MSNOW’s Chris Hayes on Wednesday night, Mr. Mamdani confirmed that the meeting was taking place. “I want to just speak plainly to the president about what it means to actually stand up for New Yorkers,” Mr. Mamdani said, adding that he wants to discuss the cost of living with Mr. Trump. “These are the stakes for New Yorkers and their ability to keep calling this city their home,” the mayor-elected said. Mr. Trump weighed in on the city’s mayoral race just hours before election day earlier this month, telling voters to support Governor Andrew Cuomo a longtime foe of Mr. Trump’s. The president went so far as to threaten the city’s federal funds if Mr. Mamdani was elected. “If Communist Candidate Zohran Mamdani wins the Election for Mayor of New York City, it is highly unlikely that I will be contributing Federal Funds, other than the very minimum as required, to my beloved first home, because of the fact that, as a Communist, this once great City has ZERO chance of success, or even survival!” the president wrote one day before the mayoral election. Mr. Trump has already tried to tie up New York’s federal funds in the past as a form of retribution for Democrats’ lack of acquiescence. At the beginning of the government shutdown in October, the Office of Management and Budget put tens of billions of dollars for infrastructure projects in the city on hold as a way to pressure Senator Chuck Schumer and Congressman Hakeem Jeffries. The major point of tension that could emerge most rapidly between Messrs. Trump and Mamdani once the latter is inaugurated in January will be the issue of immigration. Mr. Mamdani says he will not allow local cooperation with federal deportation or detention efforts, much to Mr. Trump’s chagrin.
https://www.nysun.com/article/trump-set-to-meet-with-communist-mayor-of-new-york-city
Tag Archives: zohran mamdani
With Zohran Mamdani, Everything That Has Already Failed Is New Again
Manhattan Contrarian ^ | 17 Nov, 2025 | Francis Menton Posted on by MtnClimber Our newly-anointed Mayor-elect, Zohran Mamdani, vows that he is a Socialist, and that he intends to implement an explicitly Socialist suite of policies. OK, the guy is only 34 years old. He was born on October 18, 1991, just a couple of months before the final collapse of the Soviet Union on the day after Christmas that year. He lacks the personal experience that we senior citizens have of reading every day for decades of the horrors of life in Brezhnev’s Soviet Union, or Mao’s China. But could a student really learn so little in fancy schools like Bronx Science and Bowdoin College that he could graduate in the 2010s and not know about this history? Shockingly, yes. And yet it gets worse. Socialism a la Mamdani does not involve the classic prescription of “seizing the means of production.” We have essentially nothing in today’s New York City in the way of “means of production” that you could usefully seize. There is almost no heavy industry or even light manufacturing left in New York City. Go into the big office buildings where people make high incomes and you will find literally nothing to seize that will enable you to produce what they produce. It’s just a bunch of standard-issue laptops. The high earners are making the money off their wits. So the “Socialist” policies advocated by Mamdani are different, more akin to the standard progressive playbook of a greatly expanded handout state financed by higher income taxes on the high earners. Of the various policies that Mamdani has advocated, the three that I think are most significant in their potential impact on the City are: (1) raising income taxes on high earners, (2) having the City as developer build 200, 000 new publicly-owned “affordable” housing units, and (3) “defunding” and/or downsizing the police department. To Mamdani and his twenty- and thirty-something acolytes, all this stuff seems so terribly new and fresh and creative. But the funny thing is that all of these policies have been tried before in New York. They were all implemented well before Mamdani was born, and then reversed by the time he was a little kid. In each case the reversal occurred because the policy had abjectly failed. I seriously doubt that Mamdani knows anything about the history. So let’s have a review. Raising the income tax rate on the highest earners Here are three sources that, taken together, give the history of top income tax rates in New York State all the way from 1919 (when the State income tax was first imposed) to 2024: this one from the State Tax Department covers 1919 to 1997; this one from the Fiscal Policy Institute covers 1976 to 2007; and this one, again from the State Tax Department, provides the most recent data. As relevant here, at the State level the top rate moved up through the single digits in the 1940s and 50s, until it hit 10% in 1959 and then they started to go really crazy. From 1961 to 1968 the top rate was 14%, and then it went to 15% from 1969 to 1977. After 1977, they started to back off, with the top rate dropping to 10% by 1981, and then by smaller increments through the 80s and 90s until hitting a low of 6. 85% by 2000. Since then, they have mostly kept the 6. 85% rate on incomes under $2 million, but have added some new premium rates on incomes above that level, up to a current top rate of 10. 9% on incomes over $25 million. And then there is the additional New York City income tax. It was first instituted in 1966, with a top rate of 3. 876%, and the rates have fluctuated modestly since then around an average of about 4%. The current top rate is actually the same 3. 876% as when the tax first began. During his eight years as Mayor, Bill de Blasio constantly tried to get the State Legislature to raise the top rate for high earners, but he never succeeded. Thus the combined top State/City income tax rate hit almost 19% in the 1970s. At this same time, the top federal rate was 70%. In those days, State and City income taxes were fully deductible from federal. So if you earned a dollar, paid 19 cents to the State and City, and then paid 70% of the remaining 81 cents to the feds, you ended up with only about 24 cents of the dollar for yourself. The top federal rate then came all the way down to 28% by the 1986 Tax Reform Act, before beginning its inexorable rise once again when President George H. W. Bush broke his pledge of “Read my lips: no new taxes.” New York City building “affordable”/low income housing as developer In 1935, New York City created the New York City Housing Authority as a vehicle to build what was then called “low income” housing. Construction did not really get going until after World War II. In total, NYCHA built about 180, 000 units of housing, almost all from the 1950s to early 1980s. The NYCHA units were all were built on the pure socialist model, with the City acting as owner and developer, providing the financing (through tax exempt bonds), and then renting the apartments to tenants at rents set by statutory formulas based on tenant income, rather than by a housing market. In the mid-1970s, the construction of NYCHA buildings hit a big roadblock when the City had a financial crisis, nearly defaulting on its debt in 1975. The deal to keep the City out of bankruptcy dramatically reduced its ability to continue to take on large amounts of debt for public housing. Construction of NYCHA projects slowed, but continued into the 80s at a lower pace, until the 1986 Tax Act. That law set limits on the amount of debt that a municipality could take on and qualify for tax exempt status on the interest. Since the 1986 Tax Act took effect, there has been very little further NYCHA construction. Essentially, the City ran out of other people’s money for this purpose. Size of the New York City Police Department According to this New York Times piece from December 6, 1981, the New York Police Department reached a then-peak of some 30, 911 officers in 1970, and maintained approximately that strength until 1975. That was the year that the City’s financial crisis hit, and hiring for the Department was completely suspended. By 1978 the number of officers was down to 24, 670, and by the time of the article in late 1981 it was 22, 170. Mayor Ed Koch, who took office in 1978, began a re-hiring program when finances permitted in the early-1980s. By 1990 (when Mayor David Dinkins took office) the number of officers was back up to about 28, 000, and by 1993 (when Rudy Giuliani replaced Dinkins) it was about 37, 000. The all-time high of about 40, 000 was reached in 2000, toward the end of Giuliani’s time. Since then, the number has gradually declined to a current figure of about 33, 000. Outcomes associated with these policies Population Many are currently warning Mayor-elect Mamdani that he risks serious flight of the high-earning taxpayers if he implements significant tax rate increases on the top brackets. For myself, I don’t think that large numbers can or will leave suddenly. Instead, the consequence of such policies is gradual relative decline, as people slowly make decisions to relocate as family and job circumstances permit. Nevertheless, the history of New York’s population in the 1970s and 80s gives a serious indication of how rapid the population consequences of bad tax policy can be. Here is a Wikipedia entry with census data for New York City for the recent decades. In 1960 New York City’s population hit a then-record of 7, 781, 984. In the following decade, the State upped its top rate to 14%, and in 1966 the City instituted its own approximately 4% rate. By 1970, the population had inched up to 7, 894, 862. The late 1960s also saw the beginnings of a surge in crime (see next section). At the end of the 60s, the State pushed its top tax rate up a final point to 15%. And in the 1970s, the population of New York City fell off a cliff. By 1980, the City’s population was down to 7, 071, 639 a loss of more than 10% of the population in that single decade. Hugh Carey had become Governor in the late 1970s, and the start of the decline in top tax rates in the late 1970s and early 1980s was very much a program on his part to correct what he perceived as New York having become completely uncompetitive in its tax rates. The decline in tax rates continued under Governor Mario Cuomo (taking office in 1983), who again perceived that lower taxes were necessary to keep New York competitive. And sure enough, the City’s population began to recover, reaching 7, 322, 564 by 1990, and then 8, 008, 278 by 2000 (as tax rates continued their decline through the 1990s). By 2020 the City’s population had reached 8, 804, 190. Meanwhile, New York State income tax revenues surged during the 1980s even as the top rates declined dramatically. To be fair, the biggest cause was external to the state: when the feds lowered their top rate from 70% to 28% by the 1986 Tax Act, that unleashed a gusher of previously-suppressed capital gains realizations, on which New York State collected its share. Still, it is hard not to see the wildly uncompetitive income tax rates of the 1970s as a prime cause, along with the crime surge, in the major population decline. Crime Here from a source called Vital City is a chart of New York City’s number of murders and murder rate from 1800 to 2023. You can see that the murders began their sharp increase in the mid-1960s, which was before the decline in the number of police. So it is not possible to attribute the initial increase in crime to matters of policing. Other factors likely involved were a lax attitude toward law enforcement beginning in the 1960s (Mayor Lindsay!), a surge in welfare dependency, and a large influx of poor people from the South. You may have other favorite causes to cite. But it is also clear that the sharp decline in crime in the 1990s did not begin and continue until the numbers of police got back to high levels and the City again got serious about enforcing the laws. Note that, to his credit, the peak in manpower and the re-introduction of serious enforcement began under Mayor David Dinkins (beginning 1990), although it intensified under Mayor Giuliani (1994 through 2001) and continued under Mayor Bloomberg (2002-2014). City-developed affordable housing Today, some 40 years after the City’s construction of public housing ground to a halt when the money ran out in the mid-1980s, Mamdani proposes to get back into that business. Meanwhile, NYCHA is in the middle of an ongoing and unfixable crisis. There are probably close to a hundred posts on this website about the unworkable economics of NYCHA. For a relatively recent example, try this one from June 2025. The problem of NYCHA is the fundamental flaw of the socialist model: they have no plan, and never had a plan, to replace and renew the original capital investment when it wears out. Forty to sixty years after construction, the buildings need everything: new roofs, new windows, new plumbing, new electrical, fixing the facade, etc., etc., etc. NYCHA is going around with its cup out demanding something like $78 billion from some combination of State and federal taxpayers. But nobody has any real idea where any substantial part of the money will come from, or if it comes at all. That’s to fix the existing buildings. And Mamdani wants to double the number of units. It couldn’t be crazier. Conclusion From decades of experience, we know exactly where these policies lead. Can anybody really be poorly-informed enough to try again going down the exact same path? Well, I guess, yes. Their fancy educations have taught them exactly nothing. If there is any thinking behind this at all, I suppose that it is, that wasn’t real Socialism. This time we’re going to do it right! (by implementing the exact same policies that have failed in the past and been abandoned due to failure) TOPICS: Society KEYWORDS: communism; islam Click here: to donate by Credit Card Or here: to donate by PayPal Or by mail to: Free Republic, LLC PO Box 9771 Fresno, CA 93794 Thank you very much and God bless you. 1 posted on by MtnClimber To: StAntKnee; texas booster Manhattan Contrarian ping 2 posted on by MtnClimber (For photos of scenery, wildlife and climbing, click on my screen name for my FR home page.) Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. 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Zohran Mamdani serves meals at Islamic center in Puerto Rico
**New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani Visits Puerto Rico for the Somos Conference**
*Published November 7, 2025 | CBS News*
New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani is currently in Puerto Rico attending the annual Somos Conference. During his visit on Friday, Mamdani took time to visit an Islamic center where he participated in serving meals to the local community.
This meaningful engagement highlights Mamdani’s commitment to cultural exchange and community service.
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Socialist Mayor-Elect Zohran Mamdani Declares War on President Trump, Capitalism, and Traditional America in Radical New York City Victory Speech
The radical left’s takeover of America’s largest city is complete, bringing with it open attacks on President Donald Trump, capitalism, and even the very foundations of Western civilization.
Zohran Mamdani, a self-described “democratic socialist” and the first Muslim mayor-elect of New York City, delivered a fiery, Marxist-tinged victory speech. His remarks sounded less like those of an American mayor and more like a disciple of Bernie Sanders, Ilhan Omar, and Eugene Debs rolled into one.
Mamdani not only quoted socialist Eugene Debs but also invoked Jawaharlal Nehru, the Marxist “founding father” of socialist India, controversially claiming that Nehru “crushed Hindus and empowered Jihadis.”
Mamdani declared his intention to “freeze rents,” make “buses fast and free,” and bring “universal childcare” to New York—an agenda straight out of a socialist manifesto.
Calling himself a “Muslim democratic socialist,” Mamdani celebrated toppling what he called “a political dynasty” and said his victory marked the “dawn of a better day for humanity.” He vowed to make New York a city where “the Donald Trumps of our city have grown far too comfortable taking advantage of their tenants.”
Translation: higher taxes, more regulation, and open hostility toward landlords, small businesses, and anyone daring to succeed under the free market.
Mamdani couldn’t finish his remarks without launching a tirade against President Trump, the city’s most famous native son.
“If anyone can show a nation betrayed by Donald Trump how to defeat him,” he boasted, “it is the city that gave rise to him.” He went on to mock Trump and his supporters as “billionaires and bosses who seek to extort workers,” calling his administration “a despot” and promising that “to get to any of us, you’ll have to get through all of us.”
In his own words:
> “If there is any way to terrify a despot, it is by dismantling the very conditions that allowed him to accumulate power. This is not only how we stop Trump; it’s how we stop the next one.
> So, Donald Trump—since I know you’re watching—I have four words for you: turn the volume up.
> We will hold bad landlords to account, because the Donald Trumps of our city have grown far too comfortable taking advantage of their tenants.
> We will put an end to the culture of corruption that has allowed billionaires like Trump to evade taxation and exploit tax breaks.
> We will stand alongside unions and expand labor protections, because we know—just as Donald Trump does—that when working people have ironclad rights, the bosses who seek to extort them become very small indeed.
> New York will remain a city of immigrants, a city built by immigrants, powered by immigrants, and, as of tonight, led by an immigrant.
> Hear me, President Trump: when I say this, to get to any of us, you will have to get through all of us.”
Mamdani’s speech was less a victory address and more a manifesto. He proudly declared himself a Muslim and a “democratic socialist” who refuses to apologize for it.
In his words, New York will “respond to oligarchy and authoritarianism with strength,” but in reality, his plan replaces individual liberty with state control.
This is the new Left, obsessed with tearing down not only Trump but also millions of Americans who believe in faith, freedom, and the rule of law.
https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2025/11/socialist-mayor-elect-zohran-mamdani-declares-war-president/
Zohran Mamdani’s rise: From Queens lawmaker to New York City mayor
NEW YORK (AP) — When he announced his run for mayor last October, Zohran Mamdani was a state lawmaker unknown to most New York City residents. But that changed dramatically after the 34-year-old democratic socialist shocked the national political scene with a stunning upset over former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo in June’s Democratic primary.
On Tuesday, Mamdani completed his political ascension by once again defeating Cuomo, as well as Republican candidate Curtis Sliwa, in the general election. The former foreclosure prevention counselor and one-time rapper becomes New York City’s first Muslim mayor, its first mayor born in Africa, and the first of South Asian heritage—not to mention the youngest mayor in more than a century.
“I will wake up each morning with a singular purpose: To make this city better for you than it was the day before,” Mamdani promised New Yorkers in his victory speech.
### Mamdani’s Progressive Promises for New York City
Mamdani ran on an optimistic vision for New York City, offering a campaign packed with ambitious policies aimed at lowering the cost of living for everyday residents. His proposals included free child care, free bus rides, a rent freeze for tenants in rent-regulated apartments, and new affordable housing—much of it funded by raising taxes on the wealthy.
Additionally, Mamdani proposed launching a pilot program for city-run grocery stores to combat high food prices.
Since his Democratic primary win, Mamdani has moderated some of his more polarizing rhetoric, particularly around law enforcement. He backed off a 2020 social media post calling to “defund” the New York Police Department (NYPD) and publicly apologized to NYPD officers for describing the department as “racist” in another post.
While Mamdani is a member of the Democratic Socialists of America, he insists that he is running on his own distinct platform and does not embrace all of the activist group’s priorities, some of which include ending mandatory jail time for certain crimes and cutting police budgets.
### NYC’s First Muslim Mayor
Mamdani embraced his faith amid the anti-Muslim rhetoric that marked the campaign’s final weeks. Outside a Bronx mosque in late October, he spoke emotionally about the “indignities” long faced by the city’s Muslim population and vowed to fully embrace his identity.
“I will not change who I am, how I eat, or the faith that I’m proud to call my own,” he said. “But there is one thing that I will change. I will no longer look for myself in the shadows. I will find myself in the light.”
### A Famous Filmmaker Mother and Academic Father
Born in Kampala, Uganda, to Indian parents, Mamdani became an American citizen in 2018 shortly after graduating from college. He lived briefly with his family in Cape Town, South Africa, before moving to New York City at age 7.
His mother, Mira Nair, is an award-winning filmmaker known for works including *Monsoon Wedding*, *The Namesake*, and *Mississippi Masala*. His father, Mahmood Mamdani, is an anthropology professor at Columbia University.
Earlier this year, Mamdani married Rama Duwaji, a Syrian American artist. The couple—who met on the dating app Hinge—live in the Astoria neighborhood of Queens.
### Once a Fledgling Rapper
Mamdani attended the Bronx High School of Science, where he co-founded the prestigious public school’s first cricket team, according to his legislative bio. He graduated in 2014 from Bowdoin College in Maine with a degree in Africana studies and co-founded the college’s Students for Justice in Palestine chapter.
After college, he worked as a foreclosure prevention counselor in Queens, helping residents avoid eviction—a job he says inspired his run for public office.
Mamdani also had a notable side hustle in the local hip-hop scene, rapping under the monikers Young Cardamom and later Mr. Cardamom. During his first run for state lawmaker, he humorously described himself as a “B-list rapper.”
### Early Political Career
Mamdani began his political career by working on campaigns for Democratic candidates in Queens and Brooklyn. He was first elected to the New York Assembly in 2020, defeating a longtime Democratic incumbent in a Queens district covering Astoria and surrounding neighborhoods. Since then, he has been re-elected twice with ease.
One of the democratic socialist’s most notable legislative achievements has been pushing through a pilot program that made a handful of city buses free for a year. He has also proposed legislation banning nonprofits from “engaging in unauthorized support of Israeli settlement activity.”
Opponents, particularly Cuomo, dismissed Mamdani as unprepared to manage the complexities of running America’s largest city. But Mamdani framed his relative inexperience as an asset, saying in a mayoral debate that he was “proud” not to have Cuomo’s “experience of corruption, scandal and disgrace.”
### Viral Campaign Videos
Mamdani’s campaign benefited from buzzy videos, many featuring winking references to Bollywood and his Indian heritage, helping him connect with voters beyond his Queens base.
On New Year’s Day, he participated in the annual polar plunge into the chilly waters off Coney Island wearing a full dress suit to present his plan to “freeze” rents. He interviewed food cart vendors about “Halal-flation” and humorously promised to make the city’s beloved chicken over rice lunches “eight bucks again.”
On TikTok, he appealed to voters of color by speaking in Spanish, Bengali, and other languages. His viral clips were complemented by widely viewed television commercials aired during *The Golden Bachelor*, *Survivor*, and the Knicks’ season opener.
### Pro-Palestinian Views
A longtime supporter of Palestinian rights, Mamdani maintained a strong criticism of Israel throughout his campaign—a stance often seen as a political third rail in New York.
He accused the Israeli government of committing genocide against Palestinians in Gaza and said Israel should exist as “a state with equal rights” for all, not solely as a “Jewish state.”
Mamdani faced strong criticism from opponents and many leaders in the Jewish community; Cuomo accused him of “fueling antisemitism.” Early in the race, Mamdani also drew backlash for initially refusing to denounce the phrase “globalize the intifada.” He later pledged to discourage others from using the phrase.
To court Jewish voters, Mamdani met with rabbis and attended a synagogue during the High Holy Days.
In his victory remarks on Tuesday, Mamdani pledged that under his leadership, City Hall will stand firmly against antisemitism.
___
Follow Phil Marcelo on Twitter: @philmarcelo
https://ktar.com/national-news/zohran-mamdanis-rise-from-queens-lawmaker-to-new-york-city-mayor/5770690/
Zohran Mamdani’s Chances Of Becoming NYC Mayor Appear To Hinge On One Thing, Wildly Different Polls Show
Democratic nominee Zohran Mamdani’s chances of beating independent candidate Andrew Cuomo in New York City’s mayoral race appear to be strongly correlated with the level of support for longshot Republican nominee Curtis Sliwa, according to a spate of recent polling.
Two polls released Thursday show that Mamdani, a self-avowed socialist, enjoys wide leads over Cuomo, the former Democratic Governor of New York, and Sliwa in the city’s mayoral race. On the other hand, a Suffolk University poll released on Monday, in which Sliwa polled lower than in the two more recent polls, found that Mamdani’s lead over Cuomo was only 10 points.
An Emerson College Polling/PIX11/The Hill survey released Thursday found that Mamdani secured a 25-point lead over Cuomo, 50% to 25%, while 21% of voters backed Sliwa and 4% were undecided. Compared to a separate Emerson College poll released on September 10, support for Mamdani in the mayoral election rose by seven percentage points, from 43% to 50%.
“Mamdani appears to have built a coalition across key demographics, increasing his margin among Black voters since last month, from 50% to 71%, whereas Cuomo dropped ten points among Black voters since September,” Spencer Kimball, executive director of Emerson College Polling, said in a statement.
“Mamdani continues to have a base of young voters; 69% of voters under 50 support him, whereas 37% of voters over 50 support Mamdani, while 31% support Cuomo and 28% support Sliwa,” Kimball added.
Meanwhile, a Marist University poll published Thursday showed Mamdani leading with 48% support, Cuomo gaining 32% of the vote, Sliwa receiving 16% support, and 3% undecided.
Sliwa has reportedly been facing increasing pressure from some Republicans to drop out of the New York City mayoral race in an effort to improve Cuomo’s chances of beating Mamdani in the election. However, Sliwa has doubled down on his plans to stay in the race until Election Day. In an October 20 interview with Fox Across America, he said he would rather be “impaled” than drop his mayoral bid.
If Sliwa were to drop out of the contest, Mamdani would lead by only six points, receiving the backing of 51% of likely voters compared with 44% for Cuomo, according to the Marist poll. Moreover, 2% of voters said they would vote for someone else, and 3% were undecided.
“My message to your readers is that a vote for Curtis Sliwa is a vote for Zohran Mamdani,” Rich Azzopardi, a spokesperson for Cuomo’s campaign, told the Daily Caller News Foundation (DCNF) in an emailed statement. “For weeks this has been a tightening race with early voting showing a surge of older voters—the exact inverse of the primary—and turnout on track for between 1.9 and 2 million. With those dynamics, every poll out there is essentially meaningless from this point out.”
David Paleologos, director of the Suffolk University Political Research Center, said in a statement on Monday, when Suffolk’s poll was released, that he thinks Sliwa could have “an outsized impact” on the outcome of the Big Apple’s upcoming mayoral election.
“There is one person in New York City whose voters could have an outsized impact on the outcome. That person isn’t Mayor Eric Adams, Representative Hakeem Jeffries, Senator Chuck Schumer, or any New York billionaire. It’s Republican Curtis Sliwa,” Paleologos said.
“And when asked for their second choice, those voters preferred Cuomo over Mamdani 36% to 2%.”
Mamdani previously called for the New York City Police Department to be defunded, referring to the department as “racist, anti-queer and a major threat to public safety.” Though, the Democratic socialist has since downplayed some of his previous anti-police rhetoric.
President Donald Trump notably told reporters on October 22 that if Sliwa dropped out of the Big Apple’s mayoral race, “maybe Cuomo would have a little bit of a chance, but not much.”
“He’s [Sliwa] not going to win and [it’s] not looking too good for Cuomo either,” Trump added during his comments to reporters.
Cuomo claimed on October 17 that Sliwa “cannot win,” adding that if “you vote for Curtis, save yourself the time, and vote for Mamdani,” The New York Times reported.
Additionally, Cuomo suggested to SiriusXM host Stephen A. Smith during a Wednesday interview on “Straight Shooter with Stephen A.” that if Mamdani is victorious in New York City’s November 4 general election, it would be “the death of the Democratic Party.”
The Emerson College poll was conducted October 25 to October 27. The overall sample of NYC very likely voters/those who have already voted (n=640) has a credibility interval, similar to a survey’s margin of error, of plus or minus 3.8 percentage points.
The Marist University survey of 1,134 New York City adults was conducted October 24 to October 28. Results for all adults (n=1,134) are statistically significant within plus or minus 3.5 percentage points.
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https://dailycaller.com/2025/10/30/zohran-mamdani-polling-curtis-sliwa-andrew-cuomo/
‘Chaos’ and ‘disaster’: Nearly half of New Yorkers fear NYC spike in crime under Zohran Mamdani
Nearly half of New Yorkers fear that crime and violence will only worsen if Democratic socialist Zohran Mamdani becomes mayor, according to a grim new poll released Thursday. The survey reveals voters’ growing concerns about a potential “disaster” under Mamdani’s leadership.
Roughly 47% of those polled believe crime levels will spike in the Big Apple if Mamdani is elected, while 45% fear an increase in antisemitism. In contrast, only 32% think the city will be safer with the socialist frontrunner at the helm.
The poll also found that about 39% of respondents expect the risk of terrorism to rise under Mamdani’s administration, compared to just 18% who believe it would decrease.
When asked to describe, in one word, what a Mamdani-run New York City would look like after four years, the most common response was “disaster.” Other frequent descriptors included “s-thole,” “hell,” and “chaos.” The survey was conducted between October 23 and 26 among 500 registered voters.
Despite these negative sentiments, Mamdani continues to hold a commanding lead over former Governor Andrew Cuomo as the mayoral race enters its final stretch, according to multiple polls.
A Quinnipiac University survey released Wednesday showed Mamdani leading Cuomo by 10 percentage points, with 43% support compared to 33%. An Emerson College/Pix11/The Hill poll released Thursday gave Mamdani a substantial 25-point advantage over Cuomo (50% to 25%). Meanwhile, a third poll from the Marist Institute for Public Opinion showed Mamdani with a 16-point lead, standing at 48% to Cuomo’s 32%.
As the mayoral race heats up, voters remain sharply divided on the future direction of New York City under Zohran Mamdani’s potential leadership.
https://nypost.com/2025/10/30/us-news/47-of-new-yorkers-fear-nyc-spike-in-crime-under-zohran-mamdani/
EARLY VOTING: Who’s been participating in the NYC Mayor’s Race so far? Data shows some surprising trends
More than a quarter-million New Yorkers have already cast ballots in the 2025 NYC mayoral general election. According to an amNewYork analysis of unofficial early voting data, most of these voters appear to be Democrats and/or older individuals.
This trend could be good news for former Governor Andrew Cuomo. At 67 years old, Cuomo is a registered Democrat who is now running an independent campaign. He has consistently led among older voters in recent polls.
Meanwhile, the frontrunner in the race, Assembly Member Zohran Mamdani, holds the Democratic party nomination. The 34-year-old candidate has garnered strong support from younger voters in those same surveys.
https://politicsny.com/2025/10/28/early-voting-whos-been-participating-in-the-nyc-mayors-race-so-far-data-shows-some-surprising-trends/
