Zohran Mamdani, Democrats
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‘Big Mistake’: Zohran Mamdani Faces Growing Backlash
New York City Democratic mayoral nominee Zohran Mamdani has faced heavy criticism for his foreign policy views, which many see as beyond the role of a mayor. He led the Democratic primary, gaining strong support from younger progressive voters.
It’s no longer easy for Zohran Mamdani, the son of Oscar-nominated filmmaker Mira Nair, to walk the streets of New York City. As Time Magazine reports, when the 33-year-old Democratic nominee for mayor leaves his Manhattan campaign office,
Donovan Richards, a Democrat who has been serving the borough for over 13 years, urged the party to fall in line behind the 33-year-old mayoral nominee, as top New York Dems continue to drag their
Mayoral candidate Andrew M. Cuomo is criticizing front-runner Zohran Mamdani for living in a one-bedroom rent-stabilized apartment for $2,300 a month, calling on him "to move out immediately and give your affordable housing back to an unhoused family."
Mamdani was pelted with xenophobic attacks and called a "Jew-hating piece of s***" while visiting a New York restaurant.
Mamdani's one-bedroom is at the center of a debate about the cost of living, and whether his focus on affordability rings hollow.
Mamdani has scored nearly $10 million in public matching funds for his campaign, despite having serious discrepancies in his mandatory financial disclosure filings, The Post has learned.
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Intelligencer on MSNZohran Mamdani Is Pivoting. So Are Cuomo and Adams and Sliwa.
Think you know where the candidates for New York mayor are coming from? Think again. With less than 90 days to go before Election Day, the candidates are all migrating toward the political center, dropping old positions and adopting new ones, freely copying one another’s policies and style along the way.
Speaking with reporters at a canvass launch event in Prospect Park, Brooklyn, NYC Democratic mayoral candidate, Zohran Mamdani, called the shooting "another example of the scourge of gun violence" in New York City.
Mamdani's odds of winning the upcoming New York mayoral election increased by 10 percentage points from 72 percent in July to 82 percent on Thursday, according to Covers.com. Over the same period, the odds of Cuomo remained flat at 9 percent while incumbent Mayor Eric Adams saw his odds tumble from 21 percent to 6 percent.