
Florida lawmaker sparks fury predicting surging Muslim candidate Zohran Mamdani will turn NYC into Tehran
A Florida congressman gave a xenophobic analysis of the New York City mayor's race.
Rep. Randy Fine (R-Fla.) came out on Friday guns-blazing against Democratic New York State Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani.
The lawmaker used the ongoing Israel-Iran conflict to compare Mamdani's potential future leadership style to that of Iran 's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and his predecessor.
Mamdani, a rising star in New York City politics, is Muslim and a pro-Palestinian progressive.
The Queens politician is running to be the next NYC mayor against incumbent Democratic Mayor Eric Adams, former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo as well as other lesser known candidates like the city's Comptroller Brad Lander and New York City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams.
Fine claimed that if the Ugandan-born mayoral candidate wins he would run the largest U.S. city into the ground, and said he would act as a theocratic Muslim leader – like the Ayatollah.
'Zohran Mamdani would do to New York City what Khomeini and Khamenei did to Tehran,' he claimed in a post to X.
He added: 'We cannot let radical Muslims turn America into a Shiite caliphate.'
Social media users slammed Fine for his xenophobic remarks calling the Ugandan-born Muslim a 'radical' who would turn NYC into a 'Shiite caliphate'
Fine faced backlash on X from those claiming his comments were anti-Muslim.
'You're right, everyone needs to submit to Christianity and accept Jesus Christ as their lord and savior,' one social media user sarcastically quipped.
Another sarcastic commenter wrote: 'Agreed. We won't allow any Muslim run any office.'
One said that Mamdani is such a flawless candidate that his critics are resorting to 'Islamaphobic retardness.'
'This is bigoted and wholly detached from reality,' wrote an X account on a more serious note.
Another user suggested that Fine was in the pocket of the pro-Israel lobby and asked X's Artificial Intelligence Grok to detail contributions made to the Florida lawmaker's campaign from such groups.
It revealed that Fine received a combined more than $400,000 from the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), Republican Jewish Coalition (RJC) and NORPAC.
The comments from Fine come amid a rise in anti-Semitic sentiment in the U.S. with the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas terrorists operating as the de facto government in the Palestinian stronghold of Gaza.
And now, Israel is also embroiled in exchanging missile attacks with Iran.
On June 12, Israel launched its first barrage against Iran targeting nuclear facilities and military infrastructure and leaders to prevent Tehran from gaining nuclear weapon capabilities.
President Donald Trump on Thursday gave himself two weeks to decide whether the U.S. would back Israel and also strike against Iran.
Republican lawmakers are split over whether the U.S. should back its ally or stay out of the conflict – with some warning of mutually assured nuclear annihilation.

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