5 Things
to Know About Zohran Mamdani
Not so long
ago, Mr. Mamdani was a little-known state assemblyman. But his personality and
platform captivated an unlikely coalition of New York City primary voters.
Benjamin
Oreskes
By Benjamin
Oreskes
June 25,
2025, 2:11 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/25/nyregion/who-is-zohran-mamdani.html
When he
first declared his candidacy for mayor last fall, Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani
was a state legislator with a thin résumé who was unknown to most New Yorkers.
Months
later, he appears poised to become the Democratic Party’s nominee for mayor,
having bested a far better known and more experienced cast of candidates who
had deep relationships with voters across New York City.
Mr.
Mamdani’s campaign focused intensely on the plight of working-class New Yorkers
who were struggling with New York City’s affordability crisis, most notably the
skyrocketing costs of housing and child care.
Here is a
look at his record and some important things to know about New York City’s
Democratic mayoral nominee:
A Fresh
Voice, a Short Track Record
Mr. Mamdani
beat a four-term incumbent in a close State Assembly primary in 2020. He joined
a small group of lawmakers in Albany who were part of the Democratic Socialists
of America’s New York chapter. His agenda in Albany mirrored his campaign
priorities, but of the 20-odd bills Mr. Mamdani has introduced in more than
four years in Albany, just three relatively minor items have become law.
During the
campaign, he talked extensively about a program to begin making city buses free
that he had helped start. The pilot program lasted one year and was not
renewed. Still, colleagues said his ideas had helped to move the ideological
center of the Assembly to the left.
In Albany,
he was one of the Legislature’s youngest members. If elected mayor, he would
be, at 34, the city’s youngest leader since 1917, when John Purroy Mitchel, a
reformer known as the “Boy Mayor,” was elected and served one term. Mr.
Mamdani’s youth and fresh vision attracted a broad swath of progressive voters,
even as his opponents focused on his relative lack of experience.
Views On
Israel and Gaza
Mr. Mamdani
has long been a vocal critic of the Israeli government and its treatment of
Palestinians. In 2023, he introduced a bill to end the tax-exempt status of New
York charities with ties to Israeli settlements that violate international
human rights law. The bill was deemed a “non-starter” by Assembly leadership
and went nowhere.
He has
sharply criticized Israel’s actions in Gaza and has voiced support for the
Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement. He has also said he believes that
the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, should be arrested.
But Mr.
Mamdani has also stated that there is no room for antisemitism in New York
City, adding that if he were elected, he would increase funding to combat hate
crimes. He has consistently drawn a distinction between anti-Zionism and
antisemitism.
The subject
became a wedge issue in the race, and the tension was exacerbated in its final
days when, on a podcast, Mr. Mamdani refused to condemn the phrase “globalize
the intifada” or say it made him uncomfortable. Palestinians and their
supporters have called the phrase a rallying cry for liberation, but many Jews
consider it a call to violence invoking resistance movements of the 1980s and
2000s.
New York’s
First Muslim Mayor?
If elected
in the fall, Mr. Mamdani would be New York’s first Muslim mayor, and his
campaign excited the city’s roughly one million Muslims. The candidate
regularly visited mosques and made his faith a centerpiece of his campaign.
He used one
of his first campaign videos to talk about the city’s affordability crisis by
breaking down the rising cost of a meal from a halal food cart, and later
filmed himself breaking the Ramadan fast on the subway by devouring a giant
burrito. The focus on his background also became a way for Mr. Mamdani to
highlight the multicultural nature of his coalition and of the city he hoped to
run.
“We know
that to stand in public as a Muslim is also to sacrifice the safety that we can
sometimes find in the shadows,” Mr. Mamdani said this spring.
A Candidate
for the Social Media Era
There was
the video of him jumping into a frigid Atlantic Ocean to highlight his
proposals about freezing the rent for millions of New Yorkers. And there were
his dozens of appearances on podcasts of all kinds.
Mr.
Mamdani’s campaign grew its profile and fund-raising base through a
sophisticated use of social media. His videos were accessible, raw and
connected with millions of people in New York and beyond. The posts helped
highlight the stark generational divide between Mr. Mamdani and his main
opponent, former Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, 67, who ran a campaign that appeared
largely devoid of authentic moments of him connecting with everyday New
Yorkers.
Days before
the primary, Mr. Mamdani walked the length of Manhattan on a hot summer
evening, taking selfies with New Yorkers along the way.
Frozen Rent
and Free Buses
Part of Mr.
Mamdani’s success stemmed from his ability to distill the complexities of
voters’ economic struggles into pithy policy solutions. He did not shy away
from big ideas and unapologetically defined himself as a democratic socialist,
even as national Democrats sought to adopt more moderate stances on a variety
of issues.
And rather
than miring himself in wonky policy concepts, Mr. Mamdani presented
easy-to-understand ideas, even if his opponents derided them as pie-in-the-sky:
Rents for stabilized apartments would be frozen. Buses would be free. Taxes on
the wealthy would rise and the cost of child care would fall — to zero.
The
simplicity of these ideas belies the difficulty of realizing them. Even so,
they resonated with New Yorkers craving a politician who actually understood
what it was like to live in cramped apartments and make long commutes to work
on the subway.
Benjamin
Oreskes is a reporter covering New York State politics and government for The
Times.
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