
Trump Issues Warning to Zohran Mamdani If He Becomes Mayor
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
President Donald Trump warned Democratic mayoral primary winner and state Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani that if he becomes New York City mayor, he "better behave" or he will have "big problems," after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was asked if he's worried about Mamdani arresting him.
Newsweek reached out to Mamdani's campaign via email Monday for comment.
Why It Matters
Mamdani defeated former Governor Andrew Cuomo in the ranked-choice Democratic contest two weeks ago, sending shock waves throughout the party.
The New York state assemblyman secured his position atop the Democratic ticket by campaigning on affordability and social welfare, outpacing Cuomo, who had based his campaign on experience and combating antisemitism. Following the primary outcome, Cuomo has left open the possibility of an independent run, while incumbent Mayor Eric Adams and Republican Curtis Sliwa prepare for November's general election.
Mamdani's ascent represents a pivotal moment for New York City and the national Democratic Party, as a democratic socialist has defeated a veteran of the centrist establishment. His platform—centered on free public transport, universal child care, rent freezes and publicly owned grocery stores—diverges from mainstream New York Democrats and signals rising influence for progressive and socialist movements within urban politics.
The lawmaker has yet to secure formal backing from prominent New York Democrats like Senator Chuck Schumer, Congressman Hakeem Jeffries and Governor Kathy Hochul.
What To Know
While speaking to reporters alongside Netanyahu and other Cabinet members, the president ripped Mamdani, calling him a "communist," in a video posted to X, formerly Twitter, by conservative commentator Brigitte Gabriel.
Trump also accused the New York assemblyman of saying "some really bad things" about Jewish people.
When asked if he takes Mamdani's comment about arresting him if he entered New York City seriously, Netanyahu said he is "not concerned about that." Trump quickly responded that he would "get him out."
The president later added that New Yorkers don't know who the mayor will be yet, "but this is a communist. He's not a socialist, he's a communist," Trump said.
"I think he's going through a little bit of a honeymoon right now, but he might make it. But you know, it all comes through the White House; he needs the money through the White House, he needs a lot," the president added. "He's going to behave. He'll behave; he better behave; otherwise, he's going to have big problems."
Trump then added that Mamdani's philosophy is something the United States is "not ready for and it never will be."
Mamdani has seemingly defended the phrase "globalize Intifada" as "a desperate desire for equality and equal rights in standing up for Palestinian human rights." He has also called antisemitism a "real issue" in New York City and said Hamas' attack of Israel on October 7 was a "war crime."
Zohran Mamdani, Democratic candidate for New York City mayor, can be seen leaving a news conference celebrating his primary victory with leaders and members of the city's labor unions on July 2 in New York....
Zohran Mamdani, Democratic candidate for New York City mayor, can be seen leaving a news conference celebrating his primary victory with leaders and members of the city's labor unions on July 2 in New York. (Photo by ANGELA WEISS/AFP via Getty Images) More
What People Are Saying
Political science professor at Columbia University, Robert Y. Shapiro, to Newsweek via email Monday night when asked if Trump and Mamdani could find common ground: "I think Trump would continue to use him as a foil and to associate all Democrats and the Democratic party with all of Mamdani's traits and proposed and alleged policies Trump has already been attacking."
Shapiro continued: "The trait and policies that would make Democrats appear too far to the left and out of the mainstream as the 2026 midterm elections approach. It would be a way to continue to distract everyone from the less desirable and effective things Trump has been trying to do. The cynical view would be that Trump is looking for a reason to have federal troops join ICE in rounding up undocumented immigrants that Mamdani tries to protect, and to arrest local officials who get in their way.
"Mamdani would do well not to take the bait and move forward with the policies he has proposed to improve people's lives in New York City, and figure out a way, with the good will he might get in winning the general election, to work with the business and real estate community and other groups who have opposed him. There is little chance that he and Trump could work together," Shapiro concluded.
Independent Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont posted to X on Monday: "Today, a war criminal under indictment from the ICC will be welcomed to the White House. Trump, like Biden before him, has aided and abetted the extremist Netanyahu government as it has systematically killed and starved civilians in Gaza. It is a shameful day in America."
Mamdani, last week on X: "Donald Trump is attacking me because he is desperate to distract from his war on working people. We must and we will fight back."
What Happens Next
The general election for New York City mayor is November 4.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
14 minutes ago
- Yahoo
North Texas mayor joins race for Fort Worth-area state Senate District 9
Another Republican has entered the race for Texas Senate District 9. 'It's official,' Keller Mayor Armin Mizani said in his post on X. 'I'm in.' Mizani will be on the ballot along with fellow Republican Leigh Wambsganss and Democrat Taylor Rehmet. Whoever wins in the special election on Nov. 4 will represent much of Northwest Tarrant County including North Richland Hills, Keller and White Settlement. The race will go into a runoff if a candidate doesn't get more than half of the votes. 'Texas is at a critical juncture in its long and proud history,' Mizani said. 'Now, more than ever, Texans deserve leaders with the experience and resolve necessary to offer solutions to the challenges we face.' The mayor's announcement for candidacy comes within two weeks of Wambsganss's, when Texas Rep. Nate Schatzline withdrew. 'My #1 goal was for SD9 to be represented by a true conservative, & with Leigh Wambsganss, that's exactly what you'll get,' Schatzline said in his June 27 post on X. 'She has my full support.' A day after Wambsganss entered the race, Mizani told his social media following that he was giving prayerful consideration to running. 'Senate District 9 is the Republican lifeblood of Tarrant County—our voters deserve a strong and principled conservative that is only beholden to the interests of the people of SD9 and not the whims and wills of the Austin political machine,' Mizani said in the June 28 post. As Keller's mayor, Mizani said he has been just that. 'Simply put, this campaign will be motivated by my family and yours, guided by our shared conservative values, and focused on offering solutions to the challenges we face as Texans,' Mizani said. As mayor of Keller, Mizani has been an outspoken supporter of Gov. Greg Abbott, the county commissioners redistricting and the near-split of Keller ISD. Mizani has less than a year remaining on his three-year term. He was first elected mayor in 2020 after serving as a city council member from 2014-18.


Politico
17 minutes ago
- Politico
Musk wants to create a third party. It won't be so easy.
Here are five challenges Musk will face in creating the aspirational 'America Party,' according to leaders of third parties and the operatives who have worked for them. Getting on the ballot is, by far, the biggest hurdle that experts identified. Third parties have to navigate a set of complex laws, each of which differ by state, to simply obtain a place on the ballot. Then they have to work to keep it. The process entails amassing a large number of signatures from voters who back your party in a short amount of time — and, to make matters more complicated, some deadlines overlap in different states. 'Stepping in as a third party is difficult and it's not just difficult due to name recognition and everything else. It's mostly due to ballot access,' said Steven Nekhaila, chair of the Libertarian National Committee. 'Ballot access is something that takes decades to accrue because you need the state party infrastructure to facilitate it, you need to get tens of thousands of signatures to meet the thresholds, and oftentimes you only have a few months to do it.' Musk is going to get sued and sued some more. Larry Otter, an election law attorney who advised Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s 2024 campaign, said Musk's party will 'definitely be viewed as a spoiler' by Republicans and that they will work hard to prevent him from winning a line on the ballot. Musk should be prepared to have the signatures his team collects challenged to the hilt, Otter said. Looking at just one state, Pennsylvania, he said, there is typically a '30 percent error rate' there in petitions for ballot access. Recruiting candidates and building party infrastructure takes time. As the richest man in the world, Musk could easily fund a wide-ranging party operation in 50 states. But will he stay interested in his new cause for long enough to see it through? 'The greatest challenge for him is not money but finding petitioners, finding people and fighting lawsuits,' Nekhaila said. 'It's more time that's going to be a precious resource than money.' Musk has floated the possibility of initially zeroing in on 'just 2 or 3 Senate seats' and '8 to 10 House districts' in the 2026 midterm elections. Narrowing his focus would make it a 'totally different strategy,' and more doable, Nekhaila said. Few experts are familiar with starting a new party — and some less-than-professional characters abound in the third-party strategist world. 'One of the things that independents rely on are professional circulators,' said Otter, referring to operatives who are paid to collect signatures. 'I've seen stuff go really bad with those people.' Sometimes, circulating companies bring in inexperienced workers and people from out of state who are unfamiliar with local laws, he said. And then there's Musk. First Musk torched his reputation with Democratic (and Tesla-buying) voters. Now that he's feuding with Trump, he's frustrating many in the GOP. Will candidates want to associate themselves with his party? Will staff — especially those who want to stay involved in the Republican Party? Musk could keep a distance by funding independent candidates through a super PAC, but does he have the discipline to not get personally involved? Like this content? Consider signing up for POLITICO's West Wing Playbook: Remaking Government newsletter.

Wall Street Journal
18 minutes ago
- Wall Street Journal
How Well Do You Know the New Tax Law? Take Our Quiz
The new tax-and-spending law runs 887 pages, changing how everything from estates to car loan interest is taxed. The law does far more than extend the individual tax cuts of President Trump's 2017 tax law, which were set to expire at year-end. The new law makes some provisions of the 2017 version permanent, adds new tax cuts and eliminates others. Some of the changes are effective this year, so they will affect tax returns filed next spring.