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Zohran Mamdani moves on to an unusual general election for New York City mayor

Zohran Mamdani moves on to an unusual general election for New York City mayor

NBC News11 hours ago
Progressive state Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani has won New York City's Democratic mayoral primary, NBC News projects, marking a stunning rise by the 33-year-old democratic socialist over powerful former Gov. Andrew Cuomo.
The projection comes as the New York City Board of Elections released the initial round of ranked-choice voting results, with Mamdani emerging as the top candidate.
Mamdani won 56% of the vote after the initial ranked-choice tabulation narrowed the race to Mamdani and Cuomo, who won 44%. The initial tabulation includes ballots cast in person and mail ballots received and processed as of last week's primary Election Day. Voters could rank up to five candidates in order of preference, and the candidates with the lowest number of voters are eliminated first. Their votes are then reallocated to their supporters' next choice, and the process continues until two candidates remain.
Mamdani's surprise victory over Cuomo, who had long been viewed as the front-runner, received attention far outside New York City, raising more questions for a Democratic Party establishment that is struggling with its path forward after its 2024 losses.
Mamdani's status as the Democratic nominee will no doubt be a boost in the heavily Democratic city, but he will have to face Mayor Eric Adams, who was elected as a Democrat but decided to run for re-election as an independent after Trump's Justice Department dropped corruption charges against him. Republican nominee Curtis Sliwa will also be on the fall ballot along with other candidates.
It's also unclear whether Mamdani has defeated Cuomo for good. Cuomo will still be on the November ballot after forming his own political party, declining to remove his name by last week's deadline. But it remains to be seen if Cuomo will actively campaign as a third-party candidate.
Cuomo campaign spokesman Rich Azzopardi said Monday that the campaign did not expect the ranked choice results to be 'all that revelatory,' given the results of primary voters' first choices released last week.
'We'll be examining the expected makeup and opinions of general electorate voters while determining next steps,' Azzopardi said in a statement.
Mamdani, though, is confident that he can beat both Adams and Cuomo in November.
'We can beat anyone that's in this race because what we've shown is that this is a campaign that has the support of more than 400,000 New Yorkers,' Mamdani t old NBC News' 'Meet the Press' on Sunday, adding that the race will be a 'referendum' on how Adams 'made this city so unaffordable.'
'For too long, politicians have pretended to simply be bystanders to a cost of living crisis,' Mamdani said. 'They've actually exacerbated it. And our vision is one that will respond to it and make this a city affordable for every New Yorker.'
Primary victory
Running in the highest-profile race of his life, Mamdani took down Cuomo, a former governor who had been one of the most prominent Democrats in the country before his downfall in 2021, when he resigned amid sexual harassment allegations.
Cuomo had asked Democratic voters for a second chance by framing himself as uniquely suited to run the city given his past executive experience and history pushing back on President Donald Trump. Backed by prominent Democrats and wealthy donors, Cuomo and his allies blanketed the city with ads and vastly outspent his rivals.
But in the end, Mamdani emerged victorious, as Democrats signaled they're ready to move on to a fresh face promising a new, progressive direction for the city. Now, he could become the city's first Muslim mayor.
Mamdani won his seat in the New York state Assembly in 2020, representing parts of Queens. Born in Uganda to Indian parents, Mamdani grew up primarily in the city as the son of an academic and a filmmaker, leaving the city to attend Bowdoin College in Maine before returning to Queens to work as a foreclosure prevention counselor. He became an American citizen in 2018 and narrowly defeated an incumbent Democratic legislator in his 2020 run for office, in which he was backed by the Democratic Socialists of America.
Mamdani has embraced that democratic socialist moniker at a time where Democratic Party faces an identity crisis across the country. His campaign has been centered on a call to 'put working people first' and provide a new direction for the city funded by tax increases on the wealthy.
Mamdani has drawn the ire of Republicans, including Trump, who wrote in a Truth Social post that Democrats 'crossed the line' to support Mamdani, who is 'a 100% Communist Lunatic,'
Mamdani told 'Meet the Press' that Trump 'wants to distract from what I'm fighting for. And I'm fighting for the very working people that he ran a campaign to empower, that he has since then betrayed.'
'And when we talk about my politics, I call myself a democratic socialist in many ways inspired by the words of Dr. [Martin Luther] King [Jr.] from decades ago who said, 'Call it democracy or call it democratic socialism. There has to be a better distribution of wealth for all of God's children in this country,'' Mamdani said.
Mamdani did face charges during the primary that he was too radical for the city. He also drew significant blowback from Cuomo and prominent Jewish leaders for not denouncing the slogan 'globalize the intifada' when asked about it during a podcast interview. Mamdani referred to the slogan as 'a desperate desire for equality and equal rights in standing up for Palestinian human rights,' and added that the U.S. Holocaust Museum had used the Arabic word 'intifada' in a translated description of the 1944 Warsaw Uprising against Nazi Germany.
The museum, as well as a handful of Jewish leaders, criticized those comments and accused Mamdani of stoking antisemitism, while Cuomo and his allies pointed to the episode to claim Mamdani shouldn't be elected to lead a city with a sizable Jewish population.
Asked why he would not condemn the slogan, Mamdani told "Meet the Press": 'My concern is to start to walk down the line of language and making clear what language I believe is permissible or impermissible takes me into a place similar to that of the president, who is looking to do those very kinds of things — putting people in jail for writing an op-ed, putting them in jail for protesting.'
'Ultimately, it's not language that I use,' Mamdani said. 'It's language I understand there are concerns about. And what I will do is showcase my vision for this city through my words and my actions.'
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'You'll always be my friend': Trump and Ron DeSantis put aside rivalry at 'Alligator Alcatraz'
'You'll always be my friend': Trump and Ron DeSantis put aside rivalry at 'Alligator Alcatraz'

NBC News

time24 minutes ago

  • NBC News

'You'll always be my friend': Trump and Ron DeSantis put aside rivalry at 'Alligator Alcatraz'

There was no evidence of the onetime rivalry between President Donald Trump and Gov. Ron DeSantis Tuesday as they came together in a common cause: opening an immigrant detention center in the swampy heart of Florida. Trump and his top deputies visited the Everglades, where Florida officials delivered a win for his anti-immigration agenda and positioned the state on the forefront of his crackdown. The facility, which Republican leaders dubbed 'Alligator Alcatraz,' is set to house 3,000 detainees and took just eight days to construct. 'It might be as good as the real Alcatraz,' Trump told reporters Tuesday. 'It's a little controversial, but I couldn't care less.' The push behind 'Alligator Alcatraz' is not only to keep Florida aligned with Trump on immigration but also to reposition some of the state's biggest Republican players politically. DeSantis, for instance, fought vocally with Trump during the 2024 presidential primary; during the visit on Tuesday, however, he and Trump praised each other. "You are my friend, and you'll always be my friend, and we may have some skirmishes, even in the future. I doubt it, but I will always come back, because we have blood that seems to match pretty well," Trump said. 'I think it is a 10,' Trump added of his relationship with the governor. 'Maybe a 9.9… We get along great.' DeSantis, unprompted, quickly chimed in with a reminder that he endorsed Trump as soon as he exited the presidential race in early 2024. 'The thing about it is, I endorsed him,' DeSantis said. 'Raised one of his PACs millions and millions of dollars.' The comments came as Trump and DeSantis, along with Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, toured the facility in a made-for-TV presentation of the opening of what is one of the largest immigrant detention facilities in the country. 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Donald Trump reveals his family member he'd like to see replace Thom Thills
Donald Trump reveals his family member he'd like to see replace Thom Thills

Daily Mail​

time4 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Donald Trump reveals his family member he'd like to see replace Thom Thills

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Gov. Newsom signs housing bill overhauling California's landmark environmental law
Gov. Newsom signs housing bill overhauling California's landmark environmental law

NBC News

time4 hours ago

  • NBC News

Gov. Newsom signs housing bill overhauling California's landmark environmental law

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Gov. Gavin Newsom signed into law an overhaul of California's landmark environmental protection rules that he says is essential to address the state's critical housing shortage and long-running homeless crisis. The Democratic governor widely seen as a potential 2028 presidential candidate called the two-bill package a historic reshaping of environmental rules that, while initially well intentioned, too often resulted in tangles of litigation and costly delays that strangled much-needed development. Newsom said the bills, which he signed Monday night, represent the most consequential housing reform in recent California history. "We have too much demand chasing too little supply," Newsom said at a news conference. "So many of the challenges that ail us can be connected back to this issue." Once known for stratospheric growth, it is possible the nation's most populous state could lose a handful of U.S. House seats in the 2030 census because population has been shifting to states like Texas and Florida, where the cost of living is more affordable. And with about 18 months left in office, the term-limited Newsom is also looking to bolster his legacy by attempting to tackle one of the state's most intractable problems — soaring rents and home prices that are out of reach for many middle-class families. When first seeking the governorship, Newsom said he wanted to end California's housing shortage by building millions of new homes, a goal the state appears unlikely to reach by the time he leaves office in January 2027. It was difficult to predict how much activity would follow. "I think the increase will be incremental rather than a boom," said planning expert Bill Fulton, former mayor in Ventura and director of planning and economic development in San Diego. He noted in an email that many other factors come into play, including financing from lenders, the cost of construction materials and the availability of workers. With the race to succeed him underway, Republicans have faulted Newsom and the Legislature's dominant Democrats for doing little to control costs for everything from utilities to housing. With a dire housing shortage, Newsom said nothing less than trust in government was on the line — the ability to produce results. It's about "the reputation of the state of California," he said. Newsom had threatened to reject the state budget passed last Friday unless lawmakers overhauled the California Environmental Quality Act, or CEQA, a 1970s law that requires strict examination of any new development for its impact on the environment. The governor and housing advocates maintain that CEQA put up bureaucratic roadblocks that have made it increasingly difficult to build housing in the state of 39 million. Lawmakers passed the transformative measure despite opposition from environmental groups. Jakob Evans, a senior policy strategist for Sierra Club California, said in a statement that "these half-baked bills written behind closed doors will have destructive consequences for environmental justice communities and endangered species across California." Newsom called it a step toward solving the state's housing affordability problem. "This was too urgent, too important, to allow the process to unfold as it has for the last generation," he said after signing the bill. Earlier this year, Newsom waived some CEQA rules for victims of wildfires in Southern California, creating an opening for the state to reexamine the law that critics say hampers development and drives up building costs.

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