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Zohran Mamdani visiting Uganda during NYC mayoral campaign

Zohran Mamdani visiting Uganda during NYC mayoral campaign

Independent5 hours ago
New York City Democratic mayoral nominee Zohran Mamdani is visiting his native country of Uganda to celebrate his recent marriage, taking a short break from the campaign trail ahead of the November election.
Mamdani announced the visit in a video posted to social media on Sunday and said he would return to the city by the end of July.
The trip comes as Mamdani, a 33-year-old member of the state Assembly, is facing a crowded field of opponents in the city's general election, including former Gov. Andrew Cuomo and incumbent Mayor Eric Adams, who are both running as independent candidates.
In his video, Mamdani joked that he had decided to heed the 'consistent advice' of some of his critics online who have told him to return to Africa, showing a screen full of posts that called for him to leave the U.S.
'I hear you, and I agree: I'm going back to Uganda,' he said. 'I'm headed there in a personal capacity to celebrate Rama and I's marriage with our family and friends.'
"But I do want to apologize to the haters, because I will be coming back," Mamdani added.
Mamdani announced his marriage to Rama Duwaji, an animator and illustrator, earlier this year. He was born in Kampala, Uganda to Indian parents and moved to New York when he was 7, becoming naturalized as an American citizen in 2018.
Mamdani defeated Cuomo in the city's Democratic primary election but Cuomo later relaunched his campaign to run as an independent candidate. Adams is a Democrat but skipped this primary to instead run as an independent because of the political fallout over his now-dismissed federal corruption case.
Jim Walden, a former prosecutor, is also running as an independent. Curtis Sliwa, the founder of the anti-crime Guardian Angels patrol group, is running on the Republican line.
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I know talent when I see it. Zohran Mamdani has it. He is handsome, charismatic and a smooth talker. He's got the perfect 'I've got your back' smile. But behind it? Reckless economic plans that will destroy working-class jobs and crush small businesses. Massive tax hikes that will drive enterprise businesses out. He wants to defund the police, which will no doubt increase crime in New York City, the capital of the world and the largest home to Jews outside Israel. Mamdani is slick — but not that slick. He foolishly thinks that by rubbing elbows with Jewish elected officials and business leaders last week, the rest of us are going to forget what he stands for. Not a chance. Beneath the charm and the polished exterior, Mamdani's lack of experience and radical socialist policies will be devastating for every New Yorker — and especially for the Jewish community. His entire identity is built on hatred of Israel and the movement to 'free Palestine … by any means necessary'. His record speaks for itself. He refuses to recognise Israel as a Jewish state; he falsely claims Israel is committing genocide, while he's quiet about countries like Syria that actually are. He vows to arrest Binyamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, for war crimes if he sets foot in New York City. • Meet Zohran Mamdani, the Bernie Sanders-inspired socialist who wants to run NYC He defends the use of the slogan 'globalise the intifada', which he must know is a blatant call for violence against Jews. He sponsored a bill that would fine New York synagogues and Jewish businesses $1 million or risk legal action for raising money for Zaka and Hatzalah, Israeli emergency response organisations helping people in disputed territories. In a resurfaced music video, he rapped 'My love to the Holy Land Five', referring to a group of convicted terrorists in the largest terror financing case in US history. One of the terrorists he praised, Mufid Abdulqader, sang at an Al Sakhra production in Oklahoma City in 1992: 'We won't fear a Jew. Oh, Hamas, respond to them with force. Death is right for Jews.' I could go on. Does he really think meeting a rabbi and congregants at a synagogue on the Upper West Side will erase all of that? It's as if he's saying, 'Look, Ma! I'm not an antisemite!' Not only is it meaningless, it's also pure performance. Here is who Mamdani truly is. He chants alongside Jew-haters at rallies for Within Our Lifetime, the antisemitic group led by Nerdeen Kiswani. Meanwhile, his mayoral campaign has been quietly funded by CAIR, an organisation with alleged ties to Hamas and an unindicted co-conspirator in the 2007 Holy Land Foundation Trial and a US specially designated global terrorist. Then there is his radical father, Mahmood Mamdani, who joined Columbia University in 1999 as a Herbert Lehman professor of government. 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Zohran Mamdani visiting Uganda during NYC mayoral campaign
Zohran Mamdani visiting Uganda during NYC mayoral campaign

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time5 hours ago

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Zohran Mamdani visiting Uganda during NYC mayoral campaign

New York City Democratic mayoral nominee Zohran Mamdani is visiting his native country of Uganda to celebrate his recent marriage, taking a short break from the campaign trail ahead of the November election. Mamdani announced the visit in a video posted to social media on Sunday and said he would return to the city by the end of July. The trip comes as Mamdani, a 33-year-old member of the state Assembly, is facing a crowded field of opponents in the city's general election, including former Gov. Andrew Cuomo and incumbent Mayor Eric Adams, who are both running as independent candidates. In his video, Mamdani joked that he had decided to heed the 'consistent advice' of some of his critics online who have told him to return to Africa, showing a screen full of posts that called for him to leave the U.S. 'I hear you, and I agree: I'm going back to Uganda,' he said. 'I'm headed there in a personal capacity to celebrate Rama and I's marriage with our family and friends.' "But I do want to apologize to the haters, because I will be coming back," Mamdani added. Mamdani announced his marriage to Rama Duwaji, an animator and illustrator, earlier this year. He was born in Kampala, Uganda to Indian parents and moved to New York when he was 7, becoming naturalized as an American citizen in 2018. Mamdani defeated Cuomo in the city's Democratic primary election but Cuomo later relaunched his campaign to run as an independent candidate. Adams is a Democrat but skipped this primary to instead run as an independent because of the political fallout over his now-dismissed federal corruption case. Jim Walden, a former prosecutor, is also running as an independent. Curtis Sliwa, the founder of the anti-crime Guardian Angels patrol group, is running on the Republican line.

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