Mamdani
Reaches Out to White House to Arrange Meeting With Trump
Mayor-elect
Zohran Mamdani said he hoped to press President Trump to help ease the
affordability crisis. His remarks came a day after Mr. Trump said he wanted to
“see everything work out well for New York.”
Jeffery
C. Mays Dana
Rubinstein
By
Jeffery C. Mays and Dana Rubinstein
Nov. 17,
2025, 4:11 p.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/17/nyregion/mamdani-trump-meeting.html
Zohran
Mamdani, the mayor-elect of New York City, said on Monday that his team had
reached out to White House officials to set up a meeting with President Trump,
one day after Mr. Trump mentioned the possibility to reporters.
The
effort to arrange a meeting represents a change in tone for both men. Mr.
Mamdani ran for office arguing that only he had the necessary backbone and
ethical compass to stand up to Mr. Trump, whom he described as a threat to
democracy.
Mr.
Trump, in turn, has belittled Mr. Mamdani for months, calling him a “100
percent communist lunatic” — Mr. Mamdani is in fact a democratic socialist —
and predicting that he would cause great harm to the city if elected. In the
waning days of the mayoral race, the president endorsed Mr. Mamdani’s main
rival, former Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo.
Mr.
Mamdani and Mr. Trump have not yet spoken, according to his campaign, but Mr.
Mamdani said the outreach was part of his commitment to “address the
affordability crisis” that is forcing New Yorkers to leave the city.
Mr.
Mamdani’s team reached out to White House officials in the last week, according
to a spokeswoman. His remarks came the day after the president told reporters
that Mr. Mamdani had sought him out, and seemed to soften his tone toward the
mayor-elect.
“The
mayor of New York, I will say, would like to meet with us and we’ll work
something out,” Mr. Trump said on Sunday. “We want to see everything work out
well for New York.”
The
meeting would come at a potentially pivotal time for New York City, whose
leaders have been gearing up for a confrontation with the federal government
after the president threatened to send in National Guard troops.
In recent
weeks, the Trump administration has explored whether to use a Coast Guard
facility on Staten Island to hold detained immigrants, as it seeks to conduct
more aggressive immigration roundups in New York.
Mr. Trump
has also already withheld billions of dollars in federal aid to New York City
and has threatened to pull even more.
On
Thursday, Gov. Kathy Hochul’s office convened a meeting of business and civic
leaders to discuss preparing for National Guard troops to be sent to the city —
and to see how they might prevent it from happening. The same day, Ms. Hochul
met directly with Mr. Mamdani.
Mr.
Mamdani, who will take office Jan. 1, said he expected his conversation with
Mr. Trump to revolve around New York’s affordability crisis.
He has
said that if the president were willing to find common ground on the issue, he
would be willing to work with him. But he has also expressed doubt that the
president has any such intentions.
“The
president ran a campaign where he spoke about a promise to deliver cheaper
groceries, a promise to reduce the cost of living,” Mr. Mamdani said at news
conference at a food pantry in the Bronx, where he served meals to visitors.
“We are
seeing his actions and that of his administration in Washington leading to the
exact opposite effect for New Yorkers.”
Mr.
Mamdani has used Mr. Trump as fodder for his campaign, including in a widely
seen video in which he visited Fordham Road in the Bronx and Hillside Avenue in
Queens after Mr. Trump’s second election victory to ask passers-by why they had
voted for him.
Their
answers, many of which focused on the unaffordability of daily life and the war
in Gaza, helped shape Mr. Mamdani’s campaign for mayor.
Trump
voters told him at the time that they were attracted to the president’s message
around issues like the cost of groceries. But Mr. Mamdani noted Monday that
with cuts to food stamps along with aggressive immigration enforcement, many
city residents were still suffering.
“What
they had voted for was a chance at affording the day to day of their own
lives,” Mr. Mamdani said. “And what we are finding is that the administration’s
actions are making that all the more difficult.”
The
mayor-elect was also asked on Monday about Chi Ossé, a left-leaning city
councilman from Brooklyn, running a potential primary challenge to
Representative Hakeem Jeffries, the Democratic minority leader. Mr. Ossé filed
paperwork on Monday establishing his campaign with the Federal Election
Commission.
Mr.
Mamdani had privately tried to discourage Mr. Ossé from running, fearing that a
high-profile challenge from the left might compromise his effort to push the
Democratic establishment to support his affordability agenda.
On
Monday, Mr. Mamdani said that he appreciated the work Mr. Ossé had done on the
Council, especially on behalf of tenants, but there were “many ways right here
in New York City to both deliver on an affordability agenda and take on the
authoritarian administration in the White House.”
Jeffery
C. Mays is a Times reporter covering politics with a focus on New York City
Hall.
Dana
Rubinstein covers New York City politics and government for The Times.


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