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Tag: zohran mamdani

  • New York AG Letitia James gets standing ovation at Mamdani rally in 1st appearance since federal indictment

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    Letitia James, New York’s indicted attorney general, spoke at a campaign rally for mayoral frontrunner Zohran Mamdani in her first public appearance since the Justice Department charged her with bank fraud

    James, a longtime foe of President Trump, received a standing ovation from thousands of supporters attending the Democratic nominee’s event Monday night at the United Palace Theater in Manhattan’s Washington Heights neighborhood. 

    James did not mention Mr. Trump by name, but remained defiant in her remarks. 

    “I will not bow, I will not break, I will not bend, I will not capitulate. I will not give in. I will not give up,” James said. “You come for me, you gotta come through all of us.” 

    New York Attorney General Letitia James speaks during an event for New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani, Monday, Oct. 13, 2025, in New York.

    Olga Fedorova / AP


    James was indicted on one count of bank fraud and another count of making a false statement, stemming from a house she bought in Virginia. She dismissed the charges as “baseless” shortly after they were announced last week. 

    At the rally, James wasted no time appearing to take aim at the president. 

    “I won’t give up and I won’t give in. So we have no time to linger and focus on pettiness and revenge. We’ve gotta press on, press forward, continue the journey, claim the victory … and so I fear no man,” she said.

    Mamdani, the Queens assemblyman who won the Democratic primary, has been a champion of James since the beginning. 

    “For years, you have fought the good fight for New Yorkers, and now it’s our chance to fight for you,” Mamdani said. 

    Letitia James Mamdani

    New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani speaks during his election campaign event, Monday, Oct. 13, 2025, in New York.

    Olga Fedorova / AP


    Mamdani maintains a double-digit lead in polling over former Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Republican Curtis Sliwa, who did not appear on the campaign trail Monday. But all three candidates did release statements Monday praising the Israel-Hamas peace plan and release of hostages. 

    A spokesperson for James said her campaign for reelection next year has raised about $1 million since her indictment, mostly from new donors.

    James is scheduled to make her first appearance in a Virginia federal court on Oct. 24. 

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  • Assault on Columbus statues sparked Italian-American groups to band together and fight back: community leader

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    Five years after statues of storied Italian explorer Christopher Columbus were toppled, beheaded and otherwise vandalized across America in the name of “social justice,” the issue has once again been raised before the Columbus Day holiday. 

    Socialist New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani has been battling through many extreme viewpoints he’s shared in the past — including about the Italian man who discovered America. 

    A resurfaced photo from his X account from June 2020 showed the candidate’s hand in the foreground flipping off a statue of Columbus, which stood in the background. 

    Zohran Mamdani flipped off a statue of Christopher Columbus in 2020. (AP Newsroom)

    CABINET SPONTANEOUSLY APPLAUDS AS TRUMP SIGNS COLUMBUS DAY PROCLAMATION: ‘WE’RE BACK, ITALIANS’

    “Take it down,” the post’s caption said. 

    However, one group isn’t standing for it, and has been working to further the interests of Italian Americans in the years following the assault on Columbus statues. 

    “First, I think Mamdani should be ashamed of himself because the position he’s assuming is very hurtful and detrimental to the Italian-American community,” Basil Russo told Fox News Digital. 

    Russo is the president of the Conference of Presidents of Major Italian American Organizations, a conglomerate established to unify Italian American groups to stand up for their own interests. The group has grown from 35 member organizations to 75 in the 4 ½ years since statue-toppling gripped America. 

    “He should show our community the same degree of respect that he purports to show all of the other groups that he claims that he’ll be representing if he wins,” said Russo. “You know, sometimes people have to be big enough to acknowledge that they made a mistake or that they didn’t know enough about a particular issue at a given point in time, and now they’ve educated themselves, they understand the issue more clearly, and they’ve adopted a more respectful position. He needs to do that.”

    People ride a float with a Columbus bust

    In this Oct. 8, 2012 file photo, people ride on a float with a large bust of Christopher Columbus during the Columbus Day parade in New York. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig, File)

    NYC MAYORAL CANDIDATE ZOHRAN MAMDANI DEFENDS PAST TWEETS, SAYS CUOMO ATTACKING ‘MYTHICAL VERSION’ OF HIM

    New York City Mayor Eric Adams, who has dropped his bid for re-election, is seeking to designate the explorer’s statues in Columbus Circle and Astoria’s Columbus Square as historical landmarks to prevent Mamdani from removing them should he be elected. 

    “The beauty of New York City is that we celebrate and respect all our diverse communities and cultural heritage,” Adams said, according to the New York Post. “As mayor of the city with one of the largest Italian populations in the world, I am proud that we celebrate Italian-American heritage, today and every day.”

    Fox News Digital reached out to Adams and Mamdani for comment.

    Emboldened during the 2020 “summer of love” where troublemakers rioted against racism and torched urban areas in the name of George Floyd, wrath later turned toward Columbus, whom detractors have accused of genocide.

    During a riot on June 10 of that year in St. Paul, Minnesota, a mob tied a chain to the Columbus statue on the grounds of the Minnesota State Capitol and hitched it to the back of a truck, dragging the statue to the ground while officials stood idly by. 

    Columbus statue defaced

    Protesters surround a statue of Christopher Columbus before marching, eventually returning and pulling it down in Richmond, Virginia, June 9, 2020. (Parker Michels-Boyce/AFP via Getty Images)

    MAMDANI POINTS TO BRONX POPULATION LOSS AS PROOF NYC’S AFFORDABILITY CRISIS DURING HIS ANTI-TRUMP TOUR

    Around the same time, a statue of Columbus in a park bearing his name in Boston was beheaded in the dead of night.

    But Russo set straight some of the falsehoods that have led some Americans to their anti-Columbus sentiments. 

    He said that Columbus Day was born and Italian-American pride in Columbus himself stems from the largest mass lynching ever, when 11 Italian immigrants were killed in 1891. 

    “Most people, especially people outside the Italian-American community, are unaware that Columbus Day came about as a result of the largest mass lynching in American history,” he said. “In 1891, 11 Italian immigrants were beaten, shot and lynched in New Orleans by a mob of over 5,000 people.”

    “This situation got so bad that Italy broke off formal relations with the United States after these immigrants were lynched,” he said. 

    President Benjamin Harrison stepped in at the time to turn down the temperature. 

    “He was one of the few people that was genuinely appalled by the lynchings. So Harrison was very upset about it. So the following year, 1892, he declares a national celebration of Columbus Day,” said Russo. “First time in our country, 1892, here’s a president saying, we’re gonna have a national celebration in honor of Christopher Columbus. Why? Because Columbus was associated with Italy, having come from Genoa. Italians were very proud of the fact that he discovered America. And this was his way. To encourage Americans to be more accepting of Italian immigrants.”

    A defaced statue

    The pedestal where a statue of Christopher Columbus stood is pictured on June 11, 2020, in Richmond, Virginia. (Zach Gibson/Getty Images)

    ‘GET OUT OF TOWN!’: STATEN ISLAND CROWD CONFRONTS ZOHRAN MAMDANI AT ANTI-TRUMP RALLY

    Russo noted the irony that many of those preaching a message of acceptance for immigrants were among the crowds ripping statues of Columbus to the ground. 

    Every group has made important contributions to this country for which that group can be justly proud,” said Russo. “And of course, our community has made many such contributions. Columbus discovered America.”

    “When you look at cities such as New York City, the infrastructure of that city was literally built by Italian immigrants,” he added.

    Russo added that Italian Americans have a storied history of battling for America, too, noting that more Italian Americans fought in World War II than any other ethnic group. 

    Still, through the summer of 2020, stories of statue destruction emerged from all corners of the country. 

    In Miami, a Columbus statue was spray-painted with “George Floyd” and “BLM,” along with the communist hammer and sickle, and in Richmond, another statue of the Renaissance-era explorer was torn down and disposed of in a river, and its base left graffitied with “Columbus represents genocide.”

    In Central Park, Columbus was spray-painted red, as was a monument to him in Tarrytown. 

    Some city governments gave up on Columbus statues after multiple rounds of vandalization and decided to remove them, like in New Haven, Connecticut. 

    That monument, erected in 1892, finally found a new home earlier this year in the Lost in New Haven Museum, NBC Connecticut reported.

    A Christopher Columbus statue was vandalized

    A sign reading “stop celebrating genocide” sits at the base of a statue of Christopher Columbus on Monday in Providence, R.I., after it was vandalized with red paint on the day named to honor him as one of the first Europeans to reach the New World. The statue has been the target of vandals on Columbus Day in the past. (Michelle R. Smith/Associated Press)

    MAMDANI TAKES AIM AT TRUMP’S IMMIGRATION POLICIES IN FIERY STATEN ISLAND SPEECH: ‘WE ARE FIGHTING TO KEEP NYC A SANCTUARY CITY’

    In 2021, then-President Joe Biden proclaimed that Indigenous Peoples Day would be celebrated on the second Monday in October, though the holiday was never officially changed. 

    On Thursday, President Donald Trump signed a proclamation recognizing Monday’s holiday as Columbus Day

    “In other words, we’re calling it Columbus Day,” Trump said while a White House staffer read the proclamation. 

    The press in the room surprised Trump by applauding the move. 

    “That was the press that broke out in applause,” Trump joked. “I’ve never seen that happen. The press actually broke out in applause. Good. Columbus Day. We’re back. Columbus Day. We’re back, Italians. We love the Italians.” 

    Russo praised Trump’s effort. 

    Trump in Cabinet meeting

    President Donald Trump signed a proclamation on Thursday ahead of a Cabinet meeting honoring Italian explorer Christopher Columbus.  (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

    “You now see a bit of a change going on in the climate because President Trump isn’t mincing any words about his support for Columbus, and that kind of changes the environment throughout the country,” he said. 

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    “What the president is doing is saying that he understands the contributions that Christopher Columbus made to this country, and that he appreciates the historical relevance of Columbus to the Italian-American community, and he supports Columbus being treated as a bona fide American hero. And that is extremely important to the Italian-American community because it helps us to preserve and perpetuate our heritage that we hope to pass on to other generations.”

    Fox News Digital’s Emma Colton and Andrew Mark Miller contributed to this report. 

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  • A Republican Grows in Brooklyn

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    Photo: Spencer Platt/Getty Images

    Curtis Sliwa, the Republican candidate making his second run for mayor, is closing out the campaign the way he does everything: with restless energy, a bull-headed refusal to back down, and an endless string of wisecracks and wild, well-told anecdotes and observations accumulated during a lifetime spent roaming the streets of New York. But behind Sliwa’s constant patter is a plan.

    “Look, I start with 28 percent from the last election. I don’t think most of them are going to leave me. The Republicans will come home, and I have even more independents than Republicans,” he told me recently. “And now, with the Protect Animals ballot line, first time ever in electoral politics, I figure I’ll get another four or five percent. It’s mostly women. But then I’m a contender.”

    At first glance, the political math checks out: The last two Republican candidates for mayor before Sliwa, Representative Nicole Malliotakis and hospital executive Joe Lhota, finished with 28 percent and 24 percent, respectively, against Democrat Bill de Blasio in 2017 and 2013. Assuming a baseline GOP vote of 28 percent or so, there’s good reason for Sliwa to think that hard work and a bit of luck could move him within striking range of the Democratic leader in the race, Zohran Mamdani, who is polling around 46 percent in most surveys.

    But Andrew Cuomo, the former governor running as an independent, has complicated matters by making steady, stealthy overtures to Republican voters, and picking up significant support after Mayor Eric Adams quit the race. And Sliwa’s efforts to consolidate Republican support took a hit last month when President Donald Trump made dismissive remarks about him on Fox and Friends.

    “Look, I’m a Republican, but Curtis is not exactly prime time,” Trump said. “He wants cats to be in Gracie Mansion … We don’t need thousands of cats.”

    Sliwa, who is married to an animal-rescue activist, shrugs off the mockery.

    “Please, Mr. President, don’t say any nice things about me. Be Switzerland, be neutral, stay out of this race,” he said. “You can’t help, you can only hurt. New York City is not Trumpland. Everywhere I go, and I’ve been in all 350 neighborhoods, he has pockets of support, but I’m gonna win them anyway.”

    Sliwa’s efforts have been further impaired by pro-Cuomo independent political committees that are spending millions on ads warning voters that electing Mamdani, a democratic socialist, would be an existential threat to life in New York. Pressure on Sliwa to drop out of the race and support Cuomo has been intense, and recently led to threats sufficiently credible that Sliwa has hired armed security to guard him and his wife.

    “You gotta understand, I’m a guy who was targeted by the Gottis and Gambinos and shot five times with hollow point bullets. I never had armed-security,” he told me. “Obviously, the rhetoric is way too high; Zohran Mandami is getting all these threats. We need to lower it. Let the people decide the election.”

    Sliwa’s goal is to create an urban Republican movement that is not socially conservative or pro-Trump, but pro-business, tough on crime and welcoming to communities of color. He made the point by opening a campaign office in Brownsville, Brooklyn, a low-income neighborhood that has been a Democratic stronghold for generations. Walking a single block with Sliwa took 10 minutes, as Black and Latino residents stopped him for selfies, chitchat, and promises to vote for him. One bus driver even stopped in traffic, honked and waved Sliwa on board so he could make a quick pitch to passengers.

    Setting up shop in Brownsville was a homecoming of sorts for Sliwa, who lived near the corner of Hegeman Avenue and Osborn Street from 1974 to 1976 after getting expelled from Brooklyn Prep, a Catholic high school for boys. Sliwa, the class president, had organized protests against the school’s jacket-and-tie dress code; the Jesuit priests who ran the school were not amused.

    “Boy, that was an experience, the only white guy there, married to Koren Drayton at the time. I couldn’t go back to Canarsie because I was married to a Black woman, and the brothers were like, why are you coming into our community, snacking on our women. I was damned if you do, damned if you didn’t. And then I moved to the Bronx. I figured, hey, the Bronx will accept me. And they did, because the Bronx was burning and I ended up becoming a night manager at Mickey D’s.“

    It was at McDonald’s, besieged by crime, that Sliwa organized his overnight shift workers into a safety patrol called the Magnificent 13, later renamed the Guardian Angels, that adopted uniforms and began doing literal hand-to-hand combat against muggers and gang members on streets and subways. Decades later, says Sliwa, “I can go into neighborhoods where the only Republican they’ve ever seen is Abraham Lincoln on a five-dollar bill and be accepted because of the work I’ve done with the Guardian Angels.”

    The street-patrol veteran says that, if elected, he would hire 7,000 additional cops, hike their pay, and revive the NYPD’s Homeless Outreach Unit. “When Bill de Blasio and the city council pulled a billion dollars out of the budget for the police in the summer of 2020, they disbanded this great unit. They knew the clients,” he told me. “They would go into the homeless shelters. They’d speak with the directors, the security, speak with community leaders. Once they disbanded that, they left it to the local precinct, men and women who are not trained to deal with that. It takes a very strong skill level.”

    On the subways, says Sliwa, “I cannot comprehend why they are not putting police officers on the moving trains,” roaming from car to car rather than standing on the platform. He would also implement crackdowns on shoplifting and public weed smoking.

    And far from focusing exclusively on public safety and quality of life, Sliwa wants to encourage homeownership as a way to build wealth and stability in low-income neighborhoods, including by refashioning public housing developments as resident-owned co-ops. On education, economic development and other topics, he said he’d consult with experts and frontline city workers to find strategies to build the middle class.

    “I would have a totally transparent administration. The good but also the bad and the ugly,” he told me. “The other thing I would elevate are the civil servants, many of them who have served for Democrats and Republicans. They’re the silent number of people who keep the government going, because elected officials, I don’t care if they’re Republicans or Democrats, they’re too busy dialing for dollars. The staff does all the work. They never get put on a pedestal. They’re never given an opportunity of exposing great ideas.”

    It’s the kind of practicality you’d expect from a man who dropped out of high school but now wants to run the nation’s largest education system. “As mayor, I would sit back, I’d analyze, I have to sign off on it,” he told me. “I’d say, ‘You, George, you’re the one who was the architect of this. You’ve been a correctional officer for 32 years, you know the system inside out. I want you to give the press conference and explain how this works.’ Wouldn’t that be a novel idea?”

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    Errol Louis

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  • Zohran Mamdani reveals what Letitia James told him after getting indicted

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    Zohran Mamdani, Democratic nominee for mayor of New York City, shared what New York Attorney General Letitia James told him after she was indicted on Thursday.

    Why It Matters

    The federal indictment of James has thrust the topic of prosecutorial independence into the national spotlight and reignited debate over concerns of possible politicization of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ). James, who earned national attention for her successful civil fraud case against President Donald Trump in 2023, now finds herself facing allegations of bank fraud and making false statements, brought by a newly appointed Trump prosecutor.

    Lawmakers and legal experts say the case highlights growing concerns about the use of federal power for perceived political retribution amid a broader erosion of longstanding judicial norms. Some Republicans, meanwhile, argue the case brings long overdue accountability to a high-ranking official. The high-profile indictment comes as both major parties accuse each other of weaponizing the justice system, compounding doubts surrounding its integrity among Americans.

    What To Know

    While speaking with CNN’s Kaitlan Collins on Friday, Mamdani was asked about his conversation with the state’s attorney general. Mamdani said, “She told me, ‘Don’t worry about me.’ And I think that’s just indicative of what she means to so many New Yorkers.”

    “She is somebody who has put the city, the state, the people of it first, and frankly that’s why Donald Trump is persecuting her. It’s because of the fact that she looks at everyone in the state, everyone in this country as being held to the same standards of the law. And she held Donald Trump to that same law,” Mamdani continued.

    “And he couldn’t take the audacity, that he would have that applied to him,” Mamdani added. “And so, what we’re seeing is the weaponization of justice and it’s one that’s looking to make an example of the attorney general, but it’s one where we will have her back through every step of the way.”

    On Thursday, Lindsey Halligan, recently appointed by Trump as interim U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia, secured a federal grand jury indictment against James. The indictment alleges that James misrepresented the use of a Virginia property on a 2020 mortgage application, claiming it was a secondary residence to obtain more favorable terms, when it was allegedly used as a rental.

    Newsweek reached out to the press office for the Eastern District of Virginia via email Friday night for comment.

    What People Are Saying

    Mamdani, on X Thursday: “New Yorkers know Attorney General James for who she is: a champion for justice who fights relentlessly for the people. Donald Trump knows her only as an obstacle to his corruption. No one should be surprised that Donald Trump is employing fascist tactics—prosecuting his opponents, weaponizing the federal government, and attacking the very fabric of our democracy. And Trump should not be surprised when millions of Americans stand up to his authoritarianism and his greed. If Trump wants to leverage baseless charges to visit political retribution on New York’s Attorney General, he’ll have to go through New Yorkers first. Tish James has had our back, time and again. We have hers.”

    Abbe Lowell, attorney for James, in a statement Thursday: “We are deeply concerned that this case is driven by President Trump’s desire for revenge,” adding, “When a President can publicly direct charges to be filed against someone—when it was reported that career attorneys concluded none were warranted—it marks a serious attack on the rule of law. We will fight these charges in every process allowed in the law.”

    Scott Jennings, former adviser to President George W. Bush, on X Thursday: “Allow me to quote Letitia James directly: ‘When powerful people cheat to get better loans, it comes at the expense of hard-working people.’ There was no outrage from Dems about Tish’s political prosecution of Trump — but now that the shoe is on the other foot, it’s a crisis.”

    What Happens Next

    James is set to appear for arraignment in Virginia on October 24.

    If convicted of bank fraud or making false statements, the penalties could include up to 30 years in prison and $1 million in fines for each count, the DOJ says.

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  • Zohran Mamdani’s odds of winning NYC mayoral race hit new high

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    Democratic candidate Zohran Mamdani’s chances of becoming New York City’s mayor have hit a new high this week over former Governor Andrew Cuomo and Republican candidate Curtis Sliwa.

    Why It Matters

    The 2025 New York City mayoral election is shaping up as one of the most closely watched political contests in the United States, with significant implications for national politics, the future of progressive policy and representation in America’s most populous city. Mamdani, if elected, would become New York City’s first Muslim mayor, marking a moment of historic significance amid a backdrop of religious and political polarization.

    His candidacy has reverberated nationally, drawing attacks from prominent conservatives and support from influential Democratic leaders. The election is also seen as a bellwether for shifts in urban policy priorities and party alignments, with issues like affordability, crime and the city’s response to President Donald Trump’s administration at the forefront.

    What To Know

    With the general election scheduled for November 4, Mamdani leads the field with a whopping 89.6 percent chance of victory, according to prediction market Polymarket at 9:47 p.m. ET Friday. His main rival, Cuomo, holds a 9.5 percent probability, while Sliwa has less than 1 percent.

    Mamdani’s odds hit a high at 1 p.m. ET Thursday, at 90.3 percent.

    Polling data reinforces Mamdani’s front-runner status. A Suffolk University poll released in late September placed Mamdani with 45 percent of likely voters, 20 points ahead of Cuomo, who captured 25 percent. Other contenders at the time, including Sliwa and incumbent Mayor Eric Adams, trailed with single digits.

    The dynamics of the race shifted after Adams ended his reelection campaign. Some analyses indicate Adams’ departure could help consolidate opposition votes behind Cuomo.

    What People Are Saying

    Columbia University professor Robert Y. Shapiro, to Newsweek via email on Friday when asked if Sliwa potentially dropping out would help Cuomo: “Yes, if Sliwa drops out, his voters are likely to want to vote against Mamdani, who has been amply demonized as a too far extreme Marxist/communist/socialist and who has supported defunding the police, a policy totally at odds with the gung-ho law and order support of Sliwa’s Republican and anti-crime followers. The only way to defeat Mamdani is to support his closest rival Cuomo. It is simple arithmetic. Mamdani’s lead over Cuomo would significantly tighten.” 

    Mamdani, on X Wednesday: “Every day, Donald Trump issues a new threat against an American city — very often his own hometown. But we can stand up to his bullying and win. As Mayor, I’ll work every single day with our state and federal partners to protect New York City.”

    Trump, on Truth Social Thursday: “Best thing that could happen to the Republican Party? A Communist Mayor in NYC. The Dems have gone stone cold CRAZY! President DJT foxbusiness.com/video/63805351”

    What Happens Next

    The race concludes with the general election on November 4. While Mamdani commands a sizable lead, questions remain about whether his opponents can consolidate enough support to close the gap.

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  • Mamdani Ridicules Andrew Cuomo’s New AI-Generated Campaign Ad

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    Andrew Cuomo, the former New York governor who resigned in disgrace in 2021, launched a new political ad on Wednesday filled with AI-generated depictions of himself doing various jobs.

    Cuomo is running for mayor of New York as an independent in a long-shot bid against Zohran Mamdani, who instantly pounced on the ad. Mamdani ridiculed the video but suggested that maybe an AI Cuomo would be better than the real thing.

    “I’m Andrew Cuomo and I could pretend to do a lot of jobs. But I know what I know and I know what I don’t know. And I do know how to make government work,” Cuomo says in the new ad.

    AI-generated video in the ad shows Cuomo driving a subway train, standing on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, and holding a curtain open on Broadway, before the real Cuomo, who’s talking directly to the camera, gets into what he promises to do as mayor.

    “I’ll hire 5,000 new cops to partner with local community groups and keep our families safe. And we’ll get the homeless off the streets and into the help they desperately need,” Cuomo continues.

    “There are a lot of jobs I can’t do. But I’m ready to be your mayor on day one,” the real Cuomo says as viewers see an AI-generated video of him washing windows.

    The suggestion seems to be that Mamdani is only pretending to know how to be mayor and that New York needs a guy like Cuomo who’s held a high-level position. Mamdani has served as a member of the New York State Assembly since 2021, representing a district that includes Queens.

    The new Cuomo ad has received about 600 views on YouTube despite being up for over 4 hours at the time of this writing. The ad has just 28,000 views on X and 15,000 on Instagram. Oddly, it doesn’t appear to have been posted on Facebook, presumably the social network that his aging target audience is spending the most time on.

    Mamdani, who’s leading Cuomo in the polls, mocked the former governor on Bluesky, first invoking the fears over AI’s role in taking jobs away from artists and video production staff.

    “In a city of world-class artists and production crew hunting for the next gig, Andrew Cuomo made a TV ad the same way he wrote his housing policy: with AI,” Mamdani wrote on Bluesky.

    “Then again, maybe a fake Cuomo is better than the real one?” the Democratic candidate continued.

    Cuomo resigned as governor in Oct. 2021 after an investigation by the state Attorney General found that he sexually harassed at least 11 women, including state employees. Mamdani won the Democrats’ New York mayoral primary and is polling at 47%, according to the latest available poll conducted by Fox News from Sept. 18-22. That same poll shows Cuomo at 29% and Curtis Sliwa at 11%. Eric Adams was at 7% in that poll, though he’s since dropped out.

    AI video has swamped social media platforms like X, Facebook, and Instagram in recent years, but it’s still relatively rare to see it used in official campaign ads. Neither President Donald Trump nor Democratic challenger Kamala Harris deployed AI campaign ads in any serious way during the 2024 presidential election.

    One of the most bizarre recent examples of an AI video used outside of an official campaign comes from President Donald Trump who, posted a video over the weekend about a conspiracy theory known as “med beds.”

    Adherents to the QAnon worldview believe that med beds can magically restore anyone to perfect health and even regenerate lost limbs. And Trump posted a video of himself to Truth Social as an AI figure promoting med beds as something that was coming soon. Trump’s account later deleted the absolutely wild video.

    Cuomo’s new ad includes a text disclaimer at the bottom reading, “This political communication was created with the assistance of artificial intelligence.” And it seems like Cuomo isn’t trying to trick anyone with his use of AI video in this instance. But it’s still an interesting choice in the current environment. Countless cultural commentators have written about how AI has emerged as the aesthetic of Trumpism and the far-right. But that might make sense, given the allies Cuomo has assembled. Trump has clearly shown a preference for Cuomo over Mamdani.

    The New York mayoral election is Nov. 4, 2025.

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    Matt Novak

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  • Federal agents grab and shove journalists outside NYC immigration court, sending one to hospital

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    Federal agents grabbed and shoved journalists in a hallway outside a New York City immigration court on Tuesday, sending one to the hospital in the latest clash between authorities enforcing President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown and members of the public seeking to observe and document their actions.A visual journalist identified as L. Vural Elibol of the Turkish news agency Anadolu hit his head on the floor at 26 Federal Plaza in Manhattan after U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents pushed one journalist off a public elevator and shoved another journalist to the floor, according to video and witnesses.A bystander held Elibol’s head and a nurse treated him until an ambulance arrived, witnesses said. Video showed him in a neck brace as paramedics wheeled him out of the building on a stretcher. The other journalists, amNewYork police bureau chief Dean Moses and Olga Fedorova, a freelance photographer whose clients include The Associated Press, were not seriously injured.Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin defended the agents’ actions, saying they were being “swarmed by agitators and members of the press, which obstructed operations.””Officers repeatedly told the crowd of agitators and journalists to get back, move, and get out of the elevator,” McLaughlin said in a statement. “Rioters and sanctuary politicians who encourage individuals to interfere with arrests are actively creating hostile environments that put officers, detainees and the public in harm’s way.”A message seeking comment was left for the Anadolu news agency.Moses said the situation escalated when masked agents grabbed him and shoved him from an elevator on the 12th floor as he was attempting to photograph them arresting a woman who had just left immigration court.”I walked into the elevator behind them, and they started screaming at me,” Moses told amNewYork. “Then they pushed me, grabbed me by my arms, and started pulling me out of the elevator. I tried to hold on, but I got shoved out.”Video taken by photographer Stephanie Keith showed that during the struggle, another agent shoved Fedorova, who fell backward toward where Elibol lay on the floor.Fedorova said photographers had worked in the hallway outside immigration court for months without incident. The agents making arrests Tuesday, she said, didn’t announce any limits where journalists could go, and they hadn’t made it clear they were making an arrest when they got on the elevator.”If they tell us to get out, to not cross a certain line, we follow their orders,” Fedorova said. “In this case, it was not clear to anyone that this was a detention at all.”The episode happened just days after a federal agent at the Manhattan immigration court was captured on video shoving an Ecuadorian woman into a wall and onto the floor after her husband was arrested.Both confrontations took place in a part of the federal building that is open to the public, and is routinely filled with immigrants on their way to and from court hearings, agents waiting to make arrests, activists there to protest the arrests, and journalists documenting the confrontations.Elected Democrats, including New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, denounced the agents’ use of force and the Republican administration’s aggressive immigration enforcement.”This abuse of law-abiding immigrants and the reporters telling their stories must end,” Hochul wrote in a social media post. “What the hell are we doing here?”State Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani, a candidate for New York City mayor, said: “We cannot accept or normalize what has now become routine violence at 26 Federal Plaza. It has no place in our city.”

    Federal agents grabbed and shoved journalists in a hallway outside a New York City immigration court on Tuesday, sending one to the hospital in the latest clash between authorities enforcing President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown and members of the public seeking to observe and document their actions.

    A visual journalist identified as L. Vural Elibol of the Turkish news agency Anadolu hit his head on the floor at 26 Federal Plaza in Manhattan after U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents pushed one journalist off a public elevator and shoved another journalist to the floor, according to video and witnesses.

    A bystander held Elibol’s head and a nurse treated him until an ambulance arrived, witnesses said. Video showed him in a neck brace as paramedics wheeled him out of the building on a stretcher. The other journalists, amNewYork police bureau chief Dean Moses and Olga Fedorova, a freelance photographer whose clients include The Associated Press, were not seriously injured.

    Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin defended the agents’ actions, saying they were being “swarmed by agitators and members of the press, which obstructed operations.”

    “Officers repeatedly told the crowd of agitators and journalists to get back, move, and get out of the elevator,” McLaughlin said in a statement. “Rioters and sanctuary politicians who encourage individuals to interfere with arrests are actively creating hostile environments that put officers, detainees and the public in harm’s way.”

    A message seeking comment was left for the Anadolu news agency.

    Moses said the situation escalated when masked agents grabbed him and shoved him from an elevator on the 12th floor as he was attempting to photograph them arresting a woman who had just left immigration court.

    “I walked into the elevator behind them, and they started screaming at me,” Moses told amNewYork. “Then they pushed me, grabbed me by my arms, and started pulling me out of the elevator. I tried to hold on, but I got shoved out.”

    Video taken by photographer Stephanie Keith showed that during the struggle, another agent shoved Fedorova, who fell backward toward where Elibol lay on the floor.

    Fedorova said photographers had worked in the hallway outside immigration court for months without incident. The agents making arrests Tuesday, she said, didn’t announce any limits where journalists could go, and they hadn’t made it clear they were making an arrest when they got on the elevator.

    “If they tell us to get out, to not cross a certain line, we follow their orders,” Fedorova said. “In this case, it was not clear to anyone that this was a detention at all.”

    The episode happened just days after a federal agent at the Manhattan immigration court was captured on video shoving an Ecuadorian woman into a wall and onto the floor after her husband was arrested.

    Both confrontations took place in a part of the federal building that is open to the public, and is routinely filled with immigrants on their way to and from court hearings, agents waiting to make arrests, activists there to protest the arrests, and journalists documenting the confrontations.

    Elected Democrats, including New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, denounced the agents’ use of force and the Republican administration’s aggressive immigration enforcement.

    “This abuse of law-abiding immigrants and the reporters telling their stories must end,” Hochul wrote in a social media post. “What the hell are we doing here?”

    State Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani, a candidate for New York City mayor, said: “We cannot accept or normalize what has now become routine violence at 26 Federal Plaza. It has no place in our city.”

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  • What to know after New York City Mayor Eric Adams ends his reelection bid

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    What to know after New York City Mayor Eric Adams ends his reelection bid – CBS News










































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    New York City Mayor Eric Adams announced Sunday he’s ending his campaign for reelection. Riley Rogerson from NOTUS and Matt Brown from the Associated Press joined “The Takeout” to discuss the race and some of the day’s other top political headlines.

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  • ‘New York deserves better:’ Mamdani reacts to Eric Adams exit from mayoral race

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    With New York City Mayor Eric Adams abruptly ending his reelection campaign on Sunday, rivals of front-runner Zohran Mamdani scrambled to capitalize.

    Adams announced his decision in a nearly nine-minute video posted on X. He offered no clues about his plans after leaving office and did not endorse any of the remaining mayoral candidates.

    ERIC ADAMS DROPS OUT OF NYC MAYORAL RACE AS MAMDANI GAINS GROUND

    Mamdani, a democratic socialist, cast the moment as a turning point, vowing that on November 4, “New Yorkers will turn the page on the politics of big money and small ideas.”

    “Donald Trump and his billionaire donors might be able to determine Eric Adams and Andrew Cuomo’s actions but they will not dictate the results of this election,” Mamdani wrote in a statement. 

    New York City Mayoral Candidate Zohran Mamdani (L) and New York City Mayor Eric Adams attend the annual 9/11 Commemoration Ceremony on September 11, 2025 in New York City. (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

    “New York deserves better than trading in one disgraced, corrupt politician for another. On November 4th, we are going to turn the page on the politics of big money and small ideas and deliver a government every New Yorker can be proud of,” he added.

    Meanwhile, Republican candidate Curtis Sliwa’s campaign framed him as the strongest challenger to Mamdani.

    NEW POLL REVEALS MAMDANI STILL HOLDS COMMANDING DOUBLE-DIGIT LEAD OVER RIVALS IN NYC MAYORAL RACE

    “Curtis Sliwa is the only candidate who can defeat Mamdani. Our team, our resources, and our funding are unmatched,” campaign spokesperson Daniel Kurzyna wrote in a statement. 

    “Most importantly, we have the best solutions to help working people afford to stay in New York City and feel safe,” Kurzyna added.

    Former Gov. Andrew Cuomo said he believed Adams’ decision was “sincere in putting the well-being of New York City ahead of personal ambition.”

    CLICK HERE FOR THE LATEST FOX NEWS COVERAGE OF THE NYC MAYORAL RACE

    “Mayor Adams has much to be proud of in his accomplishments. Whatever differences we may have, Eric Adams’ story is undeniably one of resilience, a testament to the spirit of this city,” Cuomo added.

    Andrew Cuomo at Medgar Evers College

    Mayoral candidate Andrew Cuomo sits on stage after protestors interrupted his speech during a Democratic mayoral forum at Medgar Evers College in New York City, April 23, 2025.  (David ‘Dee’ Delgado/Reuters)

    House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., thanked Adams for his service but held off endorsing a successor, saying he will share his views before early voting begins.

    “During his time in office, violent crime is down, the building of affordable housing units is up and New York City has recovered from the COVID-19 pandemic,” Jeffries wrote in a statement.

    Rep. Hakeem Jeffries at a press conference

    House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries speaks during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington. (Nathan Posner/Anadolu/Getty Images)

    “Over the next few days, my entire focus will be on addressing the Republican healthcare crisis and funding the government,” Jeffries said, adding that he will “publicly weigh in” on the remaining mayoral candidates before the start of early voting.

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    New York Gov. Kathy Hochul said that she has been proud to work alongside Adams to “make New York City safer, stronger, and more affordable,” she wrote in a post on X. 

    “He leaves New York City better than he inherited it and it will always be central to his legacy as mayor,” she added.

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  • Eric Adams drops out of New York City mayor’s race, ending his bid for reelection

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    New York City Mayor Eric Adams is dropping his bid for reelection, setting up a three-way race between Queens Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani, former Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Guardian Angels founder Curtis Sliwa to lead America’s largest city.

    Adams, who took office in January 2022, announced he was dropping out of the mayor’s race in a video posted to his social media Sunday afternoon.

    “Despite all we’ve achieved, I cannot continue my reelection campaign. The constant media speculation about my future and the Campaign Finance Board’s decision to withhold millions of dollars have undermined my ability to raise the funds needed for a serious campaign,” the city’s 110th mayor said. 

    There has been intense questioning about the future of Adams’ campaign over the past few months. Most polls showed him with single digit support, well behind Mamdani, the Democratic nominee; Cuomo, an independent; and Sliwa, the Republican candidate.

    The mayor previously blasted speculation that he would drop his reelection bid. In a Sept. 5 news conference, he said he was “the only one that can beat [Zohran] Mamdani,” insisted he was remaining in the race, and referred to the Democratic frontrunner and former governor as “two spoiled brats.”   

    It has been a tumultuous year overall for Adams, who took office in January 2022. He has faced a federal corruption scandal and criticism over his relationship with the Trump administration.  

    “I was wrongfully charged because I fought for this city, and if I had to do it again, I would fight for New York again,” he said in his video message. 

    New York leaders react to Adams suspending campaign

    Adams’ name will still appear on the general election ballot in November, even though he suspended his campaign. He was running as an independent after sitting out the Democratic primary. 

    Mamdani, who defeated Cuomo in the primary, said in a statement on Adams’ departure from the race, “Donald Trump and his billionaire donors might be able to determine Eric Adams and Andrew Cuomo’s actions but they will not dictate the results of this election. New York deserves better than trading in one disgraced, corrupt politician for another. On November 4th, we are going to turn the page on the politics of big money and small ideas and deliver a government every New Yorker can be proud of.”

    New York Gov. Kathy Hochul released a statement saying she was proud to work with Adams since he took office. 

    “During that time we have delivered much needed housing for New Yorkers, including the passage of the mayor’s visionary City of Yes plan. We have connected more New Yorkers to mental health services and supportive housing. We’ve driven down crime in our subways and gotten illegal guns off the streets. I have been grateful for his partnership. He leaves New York City better than he inherited it and that will always be central to his legacy as mayor.” 

    White House floated new job for NYC Mayor Adams

    Prior to the mayor dropping out, sources told CBS News New York that the White House was looking into possible government positions to persuade him to exit the race.

    Sources told CBS News New York’s political reporter Marcia Kramer that during a trip to Florida, Adams met with Steve Witkoff, a New York real estate investor and close adviser to the president.

    “While I will always listen if called to serve our country, no formal offers have been made. I am still running for reelection, and my full focus is on the safety and quality of life of every New Yorker,” Adams said in early September, as speculation about his potential departure swirled. 

    The mayor called the reports just rumors. 

    New York Mayor Eric Adams arrives at New York Presbyterian Weil Cornell Medical Center where a police officer was brought after being shot at a Manhattan office building, Monday, July 28, 2025, in New York.

    Angelina Katsanis / AP


    “To say, would you take a job in the administration or would I take it somewhere else, that’s hypothetical,” Adams said on Sept. 3. “I’m running for office and I’m going to finish doing that. I got work to do.”

    President Trump said he wanted to see a one-on-one race against Mamdani, adding two of the candidates should leave the race to make that happen, in hopes of uniting independent and Republican voters against the democratic socialist. 

    Both Adams and Sliwa previously dismissed the suggestion and vowed to stay in the running. Cuomo had said he would drop out if he wasn’t leading in the polls among the potential challengers to Mamdani heading into Election Day. Independent candidate Jim Walden already left the race, although a court decided his name will remain on the final ballot despite his dropping out. 

    Mamdani responded to what he called Mr. Trump’s “meddling” in the race, calling it “an affront to our democracy.” He later challenged the president to face him in a debate, saying, “let’s cut out the middleman.”

    Trump administration squashed Adams’ corruption case

    It was not the first time Mr. Trump put presidential pressure on New York City politics. Upon taking office earlier this year, the U.S. Department of Justice directed federal prosecutors in New York to dismiss their federal bribery case against Adams.

    The directive led acting U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York Danielle Sassoon to resign, along with other members of her office

    Eric Adams Sworn In As Mayor Of New York City In Times Square After Ball Drop

    Eric Adams is sworn in as the 110th mayor of the city of New York on January 01, 2022 in New York, NY. Due to a surge in COVID-19 cases, the official inauguration has been postponed, and Adams chose to be sworn into office in Times Square following the annual New Years Eve ball drop.

    Arturo Holmes / Getty Images


    The charges were ultimately dropped with prejudice, meaning they cannot be filed again in the future

    Adams’ political opponents repeatedly called on him to resign, claiming he would be under the president’s influence. The mayor remained defiant, insisting there was no quid-pro-quo and launching his reelection campaign

    Adams administration dogged by corruption allegations

    Adams was accused of soliciting illegal campaign donations from wealthy and corporate donors and using them to tap into matching election funds in the 2021 race. 

    As part of the investigation, he was accused of accepting lavish bribes, like flight upgrades and luxury hotel rooms, in exchange for his political influence once he got into office. He pleaded not guilty and denied any wrongdoing.

    The FBI raided several members of Adams’ inner circle last fall, leading to a flurry of resignations. More of his administration stepped down this February, and his longtime adviser Ingrid Lewis-Martin was indicted on new bribery charges as recently as this August. 

    His former campaign fundraiser, Winnie Greco, was also recently accused of handing a journalist an envelope of cash inside a bag of potato chips. The mayor denied involvement with either incident

    This is breaking news. Please stay with CBS News New York for updates. 

    contributed to this report.

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  • De Blasio Thinks ‘It’s Time’ for Schumer to Back Mamdani

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    Photo-Illustration: Intelligencer; Photo: Reuters

    Bill de Blasio knows firsthand what the closing weeks of a mayoral race feel like. He is less familiar with a dramatic finish; in 2013 (after a hard-fought Democratic primary) and in 2017, de Blasio trounced his Republican opponents. This year’s front-runner, the democratic socialist Zohran Mamdani, can’t breathe as easy, even if he does enjoy a hefty lead in the polls against Andrew Cuomo, Curtis Sliwa, and scandal-plagued incumbent Eric Adams — not when the Trump administration is throwing its weight around to push Adams and Sliwa out and force a two-man race.

    De Blasio endorsed Mamdani earlier this month, and the two have plenty of political common ground, such as a focus on affordability. But de Blasio’s admiration clearly runs deeper than any policy platform. I spoke with him about why he thinks Mamdani is a uniquely talented politician, how the end of the race might play out, and whether it matters that Chuck Schumer still won’t endorse.

    The polls have been telling a very consistent story, with Mamdani getting support in the mid-40s, Cuomo in the mid-20s, and Curtis Sliwa and Eric Adams well behind those two. What do you think would have to happen for Mamdani to lose at this point?
    Well, I’m certainly not here to give you doomsday scenarios, but I think I’d flip the equation and say the best way for him to guarantee his victory is to break 50 percent. I think about his trajectory from the primary until now, because the primary is always a measure of just Democratic voters, so it’s a smaller universe, and he ended up low mid-40s there. And then, of course, with the fuller distribution, even higher. But to convert that now to, give or take 45 percent of the overall city electorate — independents, Republicans, minor parties, everybody — that’s a major achievement, to basically take his primary performance and superimpose it on the general-election electorate. That’s a lot of movement.

    So the first thing I’d say is that the trend line is extremely impressive and encouraging. And then the second piece is the turnout question, which has become more and more central in the last ten years. And I think we’ve seen here a shocking disparity between a candidate and a campaigner who has a truly well-defined, massive turnout operation, versus three other campaigns that show no evidence of that, and certainly no evidence of a grassroots organic turnout operation.

    Yeah, Mamdani’s volunteers are everywhere. 
    Right, and that really counts, considering so much of voting is emotional, spontaneous, last minute. Human contact in the final days is just immensely powerful in terms of actually motivating someone to vote. So I really do believe his current 45 percent or so in polling probably translates to 50 percent or more in actual vote terms, because of that turnout differential. But obviously he has to execute that. Whether he’s up against one opponent or three opponents, it’s academic if he breaks 50 percent.

    We still don’t know the final candidate lineup. There are all sorts of possibilities — six weeks is forever. One or more candidates might drop out, and of course that will change things. But what that doesn’t change is the way people are running their campaigns. There’s really no such thing as six weeks out a candidate having a conversion experience and suddenly turning into a different or better candidate. If you have not produced a compelling campaign by now, it’s locked in, basically. That’s a reason why Zohran’s team should feel some confidence, but not overconfidence.

    And there’s also just external events. Inevitably, things happen, and they do frame how people think. There’s been a lot of history of that in New York City. It doesn’t change anything about strategy. Something might happen in the world that affects people’s thinking, and you can’t plan for it. So what you do is continue the steady growth and continue to build a turnout operation. And then if something really fundamental happens in the world, or in the city, it’s a question of how each candidate quickly and agilely responds to it. And in that kind of scenario, I would give Zohran a much greater likelihood of knowing how to do that, doing it in a way that people felt was real.

    One other thing I’d say is that I still expect a huge amount of money to be thrown against him toward the end, and attempts to misrepresent him, which we saw in the last weeks before the primary. I assume it’ll happen again. It wasn’t effective in the primary, but I don’t think that will stop folks with a lot of money from trying. And you just don’t know how that plays out.

    I was struck by something you said recently about Mamdani, that “he is more talented in many ways” than you were. This was in the context of him reaching out to skeptical business leaders, which you said he did in a smart way. What in particular impresses you about Mamdani?
    I would say on the broader talent level, he’s just a natural, organic communicator. He has a really great ability to keep his message short and clear without dumbing it down. And I’ve noticed even in more spontaneous settings, his brain takes a question and breaks it down to something clear and understandable, but still emotionally meaningful. It’s just who he is. I would dare say I’d give some extra credit to his mom, because if you have a mother who explains the world to people in very emotional and visual terms, I’m sure that is a great influence. We’ve all been to movies where a single line or a brief scene can speak volumes. I think he’s organically learned that, and that’s a massive talent. His human ability to connect with people very fluidly — I have some of that, but I think he has more.

    “Democratic socialism with a human face,” as you’ve put it.
    Yes, exactly. Look, you can drop me into any community in New York City and I can relate to anyone, but he has a way of doing it that’s particularly engaging. Talent is such an interesting thing. I think of this through a sport, particularly my beloved baseball. Some players show up and they just can do things other people can’t do. It’s just in their DNA, in their bloodstream, in their influences, whatever. This guy can do things most other politicians can’t do.

    He’s also clearly moderating as he approaches the general election. He has backed off on the phrase “globalize the intifada,” for instance, and has said he would apologize to the NYPD for calling them racist in the past, although he hasn’t yet. The relationship between you and the police force was fraught for a time. What do you think of the way he’s handling this?
    I think it’s a good start. I always tell people from my own rich experience that the notion of referring to “the police” as a totality politically is an inaccurate frame. I always say there are three pieces. There’s the rank and file, who are, in broad strokes, about half from the city, half from the suburbs, half people of color, half white. They’re very diverse in every sense. They are not politically monolithic. And then you have the leadership, including the leadership that a mayor brings in and elevates, and folks who rise up the ranks, who are often also diverse in their worldview. They’re often very intelligent, subtle people who don’t just see the world in black-and-white terms.

    And then you have the unions, and there are five of them. All five are different, and their leaders are different. The newer leaders at the PBA and SBA are different than their predecessors. There’s a common history with the PBA in particular of stirring the pot and often practicing a kind of right-wing populism, but it’s not monolithic.

    So there’s no simple way of describing the police worldview. But I think, generally speaking, anybody would want to hear that you care about them, you respect them, that if you had some negative assumptions, you’ve reevaluated those and you want to make sure that they know that you’re listening to them, that you’re thinking objectively. He’s doing those things in his own way. I think those are the right things to do. It’ll take more, and also it will never be perfect. If an officer happens to have a more reform-minded worldview, they’ll give him more of the benefit of the doubt. If an officer happens to be a MAGA person, they’ll give him less benefit of the doubt. That’s just human reality.

    But also it’s which leadership he chooses, how he relates to them, and then how he relates to the union leaders. And I had good days and bad days with that. I go back and look at the first months of my administration — we actually had a chance of having a more productive relationship with the police unions. And the death of Eric Garner, obviously, threw everything into a painful, conflictual dynamic. But again, each union is different. There are new leaders. He has a chance to establish his own cadence and connection. And none of this stuff is preordained.

    You endorsed Mamdani in early September. Governor Hochul did a few days ago, but a bunch of prominent leaders, like Chuck Schumer and Hakeem Jeffries, haven’t yet.
    Well, I don’t know if I’d say a bunch anymore. It’s a pretty small number. Hochul came through; Yvette Clarke came through the other day. I think Schumer and Jeffries should endorse him for sure, but they’re in a very unusual position as the two leaders of the party in each chamber nationally, from one borough. When does that happen? But if you put them aside — the DNC is supporting him. So you’ve got Jay Jacobs, you’ve got Jeffries, you’ve got Schumer.

    And Tom Suozzi.
    That’s four people. The vast majority of other Democrats, that I know of, are supporting him. So it’s almost like the ones who are not are such outliers at this point.

    But the problem is that the ones who are not are two of the most powerful Democrats.
    But with deepest respect for them, in terms of moving a vote in New York City, I’m not sure I would say that.

    I was going to ask if you had some sympathy for their position, and it sounds like you do.
    I understand they are representing a national worldview and a variety of constituencies, and I get that there’s some complexities. That said, he is the Democratic nominee. He won overwhelmingly, and they should support him, period. It’s time. It’s really not a good reason. I can see the complexity of their lives. I don’t think it changes anything. They should support it. But the real question is, at this point, when we’re talking about votes on the ground, is the absence of that handful of endorsements changing the reality of the ground? Not really.

    Lastly, your feelings on Andrew Cuomo are well documented. The race isn’t over, but do you feel any sense of solace, or even triumph, watching him struggle to win this race?
    No, because it’s not over. I think the public has seen through him once and for all. I think the emperor has no clothes and his old tricks aren’t working, but that’s all academic until the votes are counted.

    This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

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  • New Poll Shows Zohran Mamdani’s Chances of Winning NYC Ma…

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    A new poll from Suffolk University shows Democratic mayoral nominee and New York State Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani up 20 points over former Governor Andrew Cuomo.

    Why It Matters

    With just weeks until New York City’s mayoral election on November 4, several reputable polls show Mamdani, a Democratic socialist and first-time citywide candidate, holding a sizable lead over his rivals.

    His commanding position could mark a significant shift in city politics, especially considering the primary defeat of Cuomo and the presence of high-profile opponents such as incumbent Mayor Eric Adams and Republican candidate Curtis Sliwa.

    The race’s outcome will likely influence policy priorities on critical issues for New Yorkers, from affordability and crime to the city’s relationship with President Donald Trump and the national Democratic Party.

    What To Know

    In the poll, Mamdani has 45 percent of the vote compared to Cuomo’s 25 percent, Sliwa’s 9 percent and Adams’ 8 percent.

    The University’s CityView poll surveyed 500 likely election voters in The Big Apple and was taken from September 16 to September 18. The poll has a margin of error of 4.4. percent.

    The survey shows that the top issue for New Yorkers is affordability at 21 percent, followed by crime at 20 percent, economy and jobs at 14 percent and housing at 9 percent.

    Similar margins appear in other recent surveys, such as a Quinnipiac University Poll showing Mamdani at 45 percent, Cuomo at 23 percent, Sliwa at 15 percent and Adams at 12 percent among likely voters.

    Polls suggest Mamdani has built on his unexpected victory over Cuomo in June’s Democratic primary, and recent market-based odds put his chance of winning as high as 88 percent, according to Polymarket. However, when major rivals are removed from hypothetical matchups, Mamdani’s lead narrows, especially against Cuomo, indicating anti-Mamdani voters could consolidate if the race dynamics shift.

    What People Are Saying

    Columbia University professor Robert Y. Shapiro, to Newsweek via email Wednesday: “Mamdani has a solid lead and Cuomo has only two hopes. One is that Mamdani will perform badly in the debates in October — something close to a disaster. The other is that barring a poor performance by Cuomo in the debates, he will have a chance of winning if both Sliwa and Adams drop out. There is nothing Cuomo can do himself alone.”

    What Happens Next

    The New York City mayoral election is set for November 4. While Mamdani leads by double digits in most major polls, potential shifts could arise if key foes withdraw or endorsements change the election’s landscape.

    Mamdani has still yet to receive endorsements from key Democratic leaders like U.S. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries and U.S. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, but did land New York Governor Kathy Hochul’s backing.

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  • Kamala Harris Directly Asked if She Supports Zohran Mamda…

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    Former Vice President Kamala Harris has endorsed New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani during a Monday night interview with MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow, potentially further boosting the democratic socialist assemblyman’s campaign.

    The endorsement comes as Mamdani’s chances have surged to 85 percent on prediction markets as of last week, as recent polling shows commanding leads over his opponents ahead of the November 4 general election.

    Newsweek reached out to Mamdani’s office via email on Monday for comment.

    Why It Matters

    Harris’ endorsement represents a potential lift for Mamdani’s campaign amid ongoing divisions within the Democratic Party over his candidacy.

    The former vice president’s support contrasts with the reluctance of key Democratic leaders, including Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, both of New York, who have remained neutral.

    What To Know

    On Maddow’s eponymous The Rachel Maddow Show on MSNBC, the host directly asked Harris if she endorsed Mamdani’s candidacy. Harris responded: “Look, as far as I’m concerned, he’s the Democratic nominee, and he should be supported.”

    The former vice president went on to pivot the discussion to lesser-known Democratic leaders running in other mayoral campaigns, including state Representative Barbara Drummond of Alabama and Helena Moreno of New Orleans.

    Mamdani’s campaign has gained significant momentum following Mayor Eric Adams’ decision to remain in the race, which paradoxically boosted the assemblyman’s chances from 79.7 percent to 85 percent on Polymarket prediction markets. Polling data reveals Mamdani’s dominance across multiple surveys conducted in early September, consistently showing double-digit leads over his closest rival, former Governor Andrew Cuomo.

    Five major polls demonstrate Mamdani’s commanding position. A CBS News/YouGov poll showed him leading 43 percent to Cuomo’s 28 percent, while a Marist survey recorded a 45 percent to 24 percent advantage. Quinnipiac University’s poll gave Mamdani a 22-point lead at 45 percent to 23 percent and an Emerson College poll showed 43 percent to 28 percent. The New York Times/Siena poll recorded Mamdani at 46 percent versus Cuomo’s 24 percent.

    However, when hypothetical head-to-head matchups remove Adams from the equation, Mamdani’s lead narrows significantly in some scenarios. While maintaining substantial advantages in most polls, the gap tightens to as little as 4 points in the Times/Siena survey, suggesting Cuomo could absorb anti-Mamdani votes in a more consolidated field.

    New York State Democratic Chairman Jay Jacobs announced he would not endorse Mamdani, citing fundamental disagreements over policy approaches and specifically opposing his views on Israel. Jacobs said he “strongly disagree[s] with his views on the State of Israel” and rejects “the platform of the so-called ‘Democratic Socialists of America.'”

    Despite calls from President Donald Trump for candidates to consolidate against Mamdani, both Adams and Republican Curtis Sliwa have refused to exit the race. Adams spokesperson Todd Shapiro emphatically denied rumors earlier this month of the mayor’s withdrawal, saying Adams “is in this race to win it,” with more than 20 events scheduled and multiple fundraisers planned.

    What People Are Saying

    Maddow, during the interview: “Arguably the fastest rising star right now in Democratic politics is Zohran Mamdani who is going to be elected mayor of New York City, and, um, probably in a landslide, if the polls are anything to go by. Lots of mainline Democrats have been very shy about his candidacy.”

    Jacobs: “Mr. Mamdani and I are in agreement that America’s greatest problem is the continued growth in income disparity in our nation. On how to address it–we fundamentally disagree.”

    Trump, on Truth Social: “Governor Kathy Hochul of New York has Endorsed the ‘Liddle’ Communist,’ Zohran Mamdani, running for Mayor of New York. This is a rather shocking development, and a very bad one for New York City.”

    Independent U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont: “The oligarchs are panicking. They will spend as much as it takes to try to defeat Zohran Mamdani. They’ve got the money. We’ve got the people.”

    What Happens Next?

    With less than six weeks until the general election, the focus shifts to whether Harris’ endorsement will encourage Democratic leaders to follow suit and publicly support Mamdani.

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  • Charter school supporters rally for ‘equal treatment’, more funding as mayoral election nears • Brooklyn Paper

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    A coalition of over 200 New York City public charter schools marched across the Brooklyn Bridge last week in what school networks are calling a show of support for a “child’s right to learn” and opponents have labeled as forced advocacy.

    Eva Moskowitz, founder and CEO of Success Academy — after hosting organizer webinars, sending SOS emails to supporters, family and faculty, and allegedly admonishing employees for failing to lobby elected officials to her — rallied on Sept. 18 with some 15,000 students, parents and staff, then “marched for excellence” from Brooklyn to Printing House Square, just outside New York’s City Hall.

    The rally was described by organizers as an opportunity for advocates to “raise their voices in unity” and send a message demanding “excellence as a civil right,” as well as “equal treatment and access to excellent schools.”

    Supporters said the rally was an opportunity to demand equal treatment of and access to charter schools. Photo by Jonathan Portee

    “This rally is about equity, justice and opportunity,” said Samantha Robin, a parent at Dream Charter School. “Parents deserve the freedom to choose schools that honor their children’s genius, their culture, and their potential.”

    With mere weeks before the New York City mayoral election, charter schools, facing the prospect of a new mayor opposed to their expansion in Democratic mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani, are framing the “March for Excellence” rally as part of a yearslong larger fight for the equal treatment of charter school students.

    The rally comes at a delicate moment for the charter sector. Charters, which are publicly funded and privately run, serve 15% of city students but have experienced slowed growth in enrollment since the pandemic, according to research from the New York City Charter School Center.

    Mamdani, the only major mayoral candidate running in November, has been critical of charters. He centered his education platform on universal child care and has been vocal about his intention to review charter school funding as mayor.

    rally
    Thousands of people attended the rally and march.Photo courtesy of March for Excellence
    success academy CEO eva moskowitz
    Success Ccademy CEO Eva Moskowitz, who organized the rally and allegedly demanded that Success students and teachers attend. Photo by Jonathan Portee

    Supporters in attendance included Rafiq Kalam Id-Din, Chair of the Black, Latinx, and Asian Charter Collaborative; Leslie-Bernard Joseph, CEO of KIPP NYC public schools; and many charter school families and faculty, who were instructed on organizing and staying on message throughout the event.

    Rumors circulated online that faculty attendance at the rally was compulsory.

    In the r/survivingsuccess group on Reddit, one user’s simple question concerning the veracity of the claim sent members of the small but sprawling community of current and former charter school teachers into a frenzy.

    Reporting that details internal emails and other documents about the event suggest a coordinated effort to pressure employees into participating and coerce students into demonstrating what the charters are calling targeted advocacy.

    Will Doyle, 21, grew up attending public schools in the Bay Ridge area. Now a first-year teacher with Success Academy in Sheepshead Bay, Doyle explained the reason for the rally.

    charter school students at rally
    A number of charter schools canceled classes for the day and brought students to the rally instead. Photo by Jonathan Portee

    “We’re here advocating for charter schools, but I do know that with the mayoral elections coming up, some candidates oppose the expansion of charter schools,” Doyle said. “From what I’ve heard, mayoral candidate Mamdani seeks to oppose the expansion of charter schools. I don’t have a source for that, but I have done some personal research. I don’t know if he’s the only one.”

    Doyle said he was happy to attend the rally because he works for a charter school and all employees are required to attend these events as part of their job.

    An operations associate with Success, who asked not to remain anonymous, echoed that the event was planned due to a general concern about “certain candidates” in the upcoming election. The associate noted that Success Academy is trying to show a presence for the cause of charter schools.

    “I think that [charters] definitely would advocate that they need more money and space. But I think the big thing is just accounting for future challenges,” he said.

    students march across brooklyn bridge
    Rallygoers marched across the Brooklyn Bridge to Manhattan after the Cadman Plaza event. Photo by Jonathan Portee

    While the repercussions for skipping the rally may not seem swift or severe, staff at the charters have said they worry about the condition of their working environments should they opt not to attend the rally.

    “I think that there is pressure. I know that it might not reflect directly on your employment, but it’ll reflect on your experience in the school building if you weren’t going to be here,” the associate said.

    CUNY law professor David Bloomfield told Gothamist that under laws governing nonprofits, charters can require staff to participate in demonstrations if they are advocating for the schools, rather than speaking in support or opposition to a political candidate.

    Documents obtained by a reporter for Labor New York showed that Zeta Charter elementary and middle schoolers had classroom instruction canceled for the day and instead were scheduled to participate in a “school-on-a-bus” civics lesson, suggesting the event was part of the school’s curriculum for the 2025-2026 academic year.

    charter school rally
    Some lawmakers are calling for an investigation of the event, which they said was a “misuse” of public funds. Photo by Jonathan Portee

    Pop-up tents for rally “marshals” to hand out water, snacks, and protest signs were scattered around Cadman Plaza Park. First-year parents and teachers showed little hesitation in sharing their excitement about the event, while members of the charter system with more than a year under their belt were often skittish about sharing their reasons for attending. 

    A day after the rally, two lawmakers — state Sens. John Liu and Shelley Mayer, who chair the senate’s education committee — called for an investigation of the event, which they said had been an “egregious misuse of instructional time and state funds.” 

    The pair said in a letter that the state provides public funding to charter schools “to educate students, not for political activism or for influencing elections.” If violations are uncovered, they said, the state should take back a portion of the funding it had provided to the participating charter schools. 

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  • Andrew Cuomo’s Plan to Win

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    Photo: Angelina Katsanis/The New York Times/Redux

    Election day is rapidly approaching, and Andrew Cuomo is losing. But the Cuomo camp still has a long-shot plan to defeat Democrat Zohran Mamdani in November. It requires several things to come together: The field must shrink, then shrink further. Then deep-pocketed donors must make a last-minute pivot to Cuomo, who will use their money to peel off part of the Democratic voter base from the front-runner.

    “I am not going to blow smoke. It is a narrow path,” said Cornell Belcher, a pollster for Barack Obama’s 2008 and 2012 campaigns who recently joined Cuomo’s campaign. “But I haven’t worked for a candidate in the past decade who didn’t have a narrow path to victory.”

    The polls, to be sure, are bad, showing Cuomo trailing Mamdani by an average of 19 points. The labor unions and elected officials who endorsed the former governor in the Democratic primary have almost entirely abandoned him. Cuomo is losing the money race, and the national media has all but anointed the 33-year-old democratic socialist as the Next Big Thing.

    Longtime aides and allies concede it’s a daunting challenge, especially given that Cuoma will be running on a third-party line in a city where almost two-thirds of registered voters are Democrats.

    It doesn’t help that the Cuomo campaign’s multipronged approach rests on something happening that keeps not happening, despite constant rumors that it might. “There is very much a path here for us,” said one Cuomo official. “But the first step is that Eric Adams has to get the fuck out of this race.” But Adams, running a distant fourth, insists that he is not dropping out and that Cuomo is at fault for suggesting he will.

    As a result, members of the Cuomo camp have been treating Adams cautiously, fearful not just that he will attack them more but also that any efforts to nudge him out will backfire. When billionaire hedge-funder and onetime Adams supporter Bill Ackman tweeted, “It is time for Mayor Adams to step aside,” some close to Cuomo cringed, knowing the mayor would be less likely to leave if he felt pushed.

    Adams’s exit wouldn’t have a major impact on the polls. But, for Team Cuomo, consolidating the race from four candidates to three would unlock the second part of the plan: resetting the political chessboard in the race’s final weeks and getting anti-Mamdani donors to start shelling out money again. “If Eric gets out, there is going to be a gush of money coming Andrew’s way, $20 million to $30 million in a matter of weeks,” said one supporter of Cuomo’s.

    Once that happens, Cuomo’s advisers see part three playing out: the sidelining of Curtis Sliwa. The Republican, now running third, has been even more adamant than Adams about staying in the race. But a sample of what could be in store for Sliwa came recently, when Trump made an appearance on the Fox & Friends couch and proceeded to belittle the perpetually bereted Guardian Angels founder and radio host.

    “I’m a Republican, but Curtis is not exactly prime time,” Trump said. “He wants cats to be in Gracie Mansion. That’s the magnificent home of the mayor. It’s beautiful. We don’t need to have thousands of cats there.”

    Sure, Sliwa is a Republican, Trump transmitted to the MAGA faithful. But he’s also something of a weirdo — more a character than a mayor.

    Cuomo’s people were thrilled by Trump’s remarks, hoping they give other Republicans permission to dismiss Sliwa too. One adviser to Cuomo told me they believe as much as half of Sliwa’s vote — currently hovering around 15 percent — would be gettable for Cuomo. Add that to the share of the Adams vote Cuomo would be likely to receive and it could put him within five points of Mamdani.

    “I think this is going to come down to a two-person race at the end of the day, and I don’t think people are going to waste their vote,” Cuomo said when asked about the possibility of Adams (or even Sliwa) staying in the contest. “That would be the natural resolution, as it was in the primary. And in the primary, there were candidates who had 14 points, and they wound up with three. Why? People see who’s viable and who’s not, and there are only going to be two viable candidates in my opinion.”

    Getting over the top would involve reclaiming some working-class Democratic voters who supported Cuomo in the primary while trying to dampen enthusiasm for Mamdani among his most fervent fans: young voters on the left (who historically have not turned out en masse).

    For his part, Mamdani is engaged in a similar, if reversed, two-step: trying to keep his left-wing base energized while also expanding his tent to include Democratic moderates. In one day, Mamdani both doubled down on his pledge to arrest Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and expressed regret for his 2020 tweet that called the NYPD “racist, anti-queer and a major threat to public safety.” (Social-media posts from voices on the left angry over Mamdani’s backpedaling on some progressive rhetoric have been gleefully passed around on pro-Cuomo group chats.)

    Cuomo needs around 30 percent of Democrats to support him in the general. There is a belief in his camp that the Democratic primary, even in this heavily Democratic city, is not reflective of the general electorate. One person involved in a potential outside spending effort on Cuomo’s behalf said that according to their metrics, more than half of Democratic voters in November won’t have voted in the primary and that they tilt far more moderate than the primary electorate.

    “If you narrow this down to a two-person race and you look at the voters that are the most fluid on everything from crime to affordability to who can do the job, Cuomo has a significant lead with those voters,” said Belcher.

    Current polls show that in a four-person field, Cuomo is trailing in nearly every demographic subgroup. But the campaign believes he can win loyal Democratic constituencies like Black, Hispanic, and Jewish voters, who tend to vote straight down the ticket for the Democratic nominee but may be persuadable that Mamdani is too much of a risk.

    Many Cuomo advisers have discussed Rudy Giuliani’s 1993 victory, when half of the city’s electorate turned out to defeat David Dinkins. “You have to frighten people to give them a reason to go to the polls,” said one close Cuomo ally. “There is just a lot there,” said another. “There is public safety, there is the whole communist thing, there is the fact that if we elect this 33-year-old, then the city is going to go to shit. It will be de Blasio 2.0, and who wants that?”

    With Mamdani nationalizing the race, bringing in figures like Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren on his behalf, the Cuomo camp thinks it can do a version of the same. “What is a Mayor Mamdani going to mean for our efforts to take back the House? What is a Mayor Mamdani going to mean for Kathy Hochul’s reelection or for the 2028 race?” said one person close to Cuomo. The race, in this vision, would be a battle for the soul of the Democratic Party — one in which democratic socialists are preparingto mount a takeover and Cuomo, who has been dogged by his close association with Trump throughout this race, manages to flip the narrative and become the person who is going save the city from the Trumpian menace.

    “They are going to have to go scorched earth,” said Adam Carlson, a pollster not involved in the race. “It will have to be different from the primary — something like, ‘I am the only thing standing between New York City and a complete Trump authoritarian takeover.’ And Cuomo then becomes the ‘Don’t rock the boat’ guy.”

    Still, much of this hangs on Adams getting out of the race.

    “The next two weeks are crunch time,” said Democratic operative Chris Coffey, who advised Cuomo in the primary. “Because if you don’t see movement from Eric Adams and Curtis Sliwa, it just gets harder for Cuomo to put something together.”


    See All



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    David Freedlander

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  • Andrew Cuomo’s Plan to Win

    [ad_1]

    Photo: Angelina Katsanis/The New York Times/Redux

    Election day is rapidly approaching, and Andrew Cuomo is losing. But the Cuomo camp still has a long-shot plan to defeat Democrat Zohran Mamdani in November. It requires several things to come together: The field must shrink, then shrink further. Then deep-pocketed donors must make a last-minute pivot to Cuomo, who will use their money to peel off part of the Democratic voter base from the front-runner.

    “I am not going to blow smoke. It is a narrow path,” said Cornell Belcher, a pollster for Barack Obama’s 2008 and 2012 campaigns who recently joined Cuomo’s campaign. “But I haven’t worked for a candidate in the past decade who didn’t have a narrow path to victory.”

    The polls, to be sure, are bad, showing Cuomo trailing Mamdani by an average of 19 points. The labor unions and elected officials who endorsed the former governor in the Democratic primary have almost entirely abandoned him. Cuomo is losing the money race, and the national media has all but anointed the 33-year-old democratic socialist as the Next Big Thing.

    Longtime aides and allies concede it’s a daunting challenge, especially given that Cuoma will be running on a third-party line in a city where almost two-thirds of registered voters are Democrats.

    It doesn’t help that the Cuomo campaign’s multipronged approach rests on something happening that keeps not happening, despite constant rumors that it might. “There is very much a path here for us,” said one Cuomo official. “But the first step is that Eric Adams has to get the fuck out of this race.” But Adams, running a distant fourth, insists that he is not dropping out and that Cuomo is at fault for suggesting he will.

    As a result, members of the Cuomo camp have been treating Adams cautiously, fearful not just that he will attack them more but also that any efforts to nudge him out will backfire. When billionaire hedge-funder and onetime Adams supporter Bill Ackman tweeted, “It is time for Mayor Adams to step aside,” some close to Cuomo cringed, knowing the mayor would be less likely to leave if he felt pushed.

    Adams’s exit wouldn’t have a major impact on the polls. But, for Team Cuomo, consolidating the race from four candidates to three would unlock the second part of the plan: resetting the political chessboard in the race’s final weeks and getting anti-Mamdani donors to start shelling out money again. “If Eric gets out, there is going to be a gush of money coming Andrew’s way, $20 million to $30 million in a matter of weeks,” said one supporter of Cuomo’s.

    Once that happens, Cuomo’s advisers see part three playing out: the sidelining of Curtis Sliwa. The Republican, now running third, has been even more adamant than Adams about staying in the race. But a sample of what could be in store for Sliwa came recently, when Trump made an appearance on the Fox & Friends couch and proceeded to belittle the perpetually bereted Guardian Angels founder and radio host.

    “I’m a Republican, but Curtis is not exactly prime time,” Trump said. “He wants cats to be in Gracie Mansion. That’s the magnificent home of the mayor. It’s beautiful. We don’t need to have thousands of cats there.”

    Sure, Sliwa is a Republican, Trump transmitted to the MAGA faithful. But he’s also something of a weirdo — more a character than a mayor.

    Cuomo’s people were thrilled by Trump’s remarks, hoping they give other Republicans permission to dismiss Sliwa too. One adviser to Cuomo told me they believe as much as half of Sliwa’s vote — currently hovering around 15 percent — would be gettable for Cuomo. Add that to the share of the Adams vote Cuomo would be likely to receive and it could put him within five points of Mamdani.

    “I think this is going to come down to a two-person race at the end of the day, and I don’t think people are going to waste their vote,” Cuomo said when asked about the possibility of Adams (or even Sliwa) staying in the contest. “That would be the natural resolution, as it was in the primary. And in the primary, there were candidates who had 14 points, and they wound up with three. Why? People see who’s viable and who’s not, and there are only going to be two viable candidates in my opinion.”

    Getting over the top would involve reclaiming some working-class Democratic voters who supported Cuomo in the primary while trying to dampen enthusiasm for Mamdani among his most fervent fans: young voters on the left (who historically have not turned out en masse).

    For his part, Mamdani is engaged in a similar, if reversed, two-step: trying to keep his left-wing base energized while also expanding his tent to include Democratic moderates. In one day, Mamdani both doubled down on his pledge to arrest Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and expressed regret for his 2020 tweet that called the NYPD “racist, anti-queer and a major threat to public safety.” (Social-media posts from voices on the left angry over Mamdani’s backpedaling on some progressive rhetoric have been gleefully passed around on pro-Cuomo group chats.)

    Cuomo needs around 30 percent of Democrats to support him in the general. There is a belief in his camp that the Democratic primary, even in this heavily Democratic city, is not reflective of the general electorate. One person involved in a potential outside spending effort on Cuomo’s behalf said that according to their metrics, more than half of Democratic voters in November won’t have voted in the primary and that they tilt far more moderate than the primary electorate.

    “If you narrow this down to a two-person race and you look at the voters that are the most fluid on everything from crime to affordability to who can do the job, Cuomo has a significant lead with those voters,” said Belcher.

    Current polls show that in a four-person field, Cuomo is trailing in nearly every demographic subgroup. But the campaign believes he can win loyal Democratic constituencies like Black, Hispanic, and Jewish voters, who tend to vote straight down the ticket for the Democratic nominee but may be persuadable that Mamdani is too much of a risk.

    Many Cuomo advisers have discussed Rudy Giuliani’s 1993 victory, when half of the city’s electorate turned out to defeat David Dinkins. “You have to frighten people to give them a reason to go to the polls,” said one close Cuomo ally. “There is just a lot there,” said another. “There is public safety, there is the whole communist thing, there is the fact that if we elect this 33-year-old, then the city is going to go to shit. It will be de Blasio 2.0, and who wants that?”

    With Mamdani nationalizing the race, bringing in figures like Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren on his behalf, the Cuomo camp thinks it can do a version of the same. “What is a Mayor Mamdani going to mean for our efforts to take back the House? What is a Mayor Mamdani going to mean for Kathy Hochul’s reelection or for the 2028 race?” said one person close to Cuomo. The race, in this vision, would be a battle for the soul of the Democratic Party — one in which democratic socialists are preparingto mount a takeover and Cuomo, who has been dogged by his close association with Trump throughout this race, manages to flip the narrative and become the person who is going save the city from the Trumpian menace.

    “They are going to have to go scorched earth,” said Adam Carlson, a pollster not involved in the race. “It will have to be different from the primary — something like, ‘I am the only thing standing between New York City and a complete Trump authoritarian takeover.’ And Cuomo then becomes the ‘Don’t rock the boat’ guy.”

    Still, much of this hangs on Adams getting out of the race.

    “The next two weeks are crunch time,” said Democratic operative Chris Coffey, who advised Cuomo in the primary. “Because if you don’t see movement from Eric Adams and Curtis Sliwa, it just gets harder for Cuomo to put something together.”


    See All



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  • NY state Dem boss refuses to endorse Mamdani, causing huge rift in party

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    Democratic New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani lost the endorsement of a longtime state party leader despite having the backing of New York Gov. Kathy Hochul.

    New York State Democratic Committee (NYSDC) Chairman Jay Jacobs announced this week that he will not back Mamdani for mayor despite Democratic voters selecting the Democratic socialist as the party’s nominee. 

    “Mr. Mamdani and I are in agreement that America’s greatest problem is the continued growth of income disparity in our nation,” Jacobs said in a statement to The Hill. “On how to address it — we fundamentally disagree.” 

    EX-MAYOR DE BLASIO TOUTS SOCIALIST MAMDANI AS NEW YORK CITY’S ANSWER TO TRUMP POLICIES

    New York State Democratic Committee (NYSDC) Chairman Jay Jacobs, left, refused to endorse Zohran Mamdani, center, for mayor despite New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, right, already doing so. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images; Barry Williams/New York Daily News/Tribune News Service via Getty Images;)

    The Hill reported that the NYSDC leader said that he disagreed with Mamdani’s stance on Israel. 

    Mamdani has been a vocal critic of Israel’s actions throughout the war against Hamas terrorists in Gaza. His stance on the issue has become a major topic of the campaign cycle, particularly when he refused to condemn the phrase “globalize the intifada,” which some view as a call for violence against Jews. Mamdani has since distanced himself from the phrase, saying he would discourage his supporters from using it. 

    While he would not back Mamdani for mayor, Jacobs dismissed “fearmongering” surrounding the self-described Democratic socialist’s campaign as “a gross over-reaction.”

    Zohran Mamdani speaks September 2025

    New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani attends a news conference in the Bronx, where he was endorsed by Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie on Sept. 17, 2025. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

    MAMDANI APPEALS TO NON-DEMOCRATS WITH GENERAL ELECTION PUSH, VOWS GOVERNMENT CAN MEET VOTERS’ ‘MATERIAL NEEDS’

    It remains unclear how the loss of Jacobs’ endorsement will affect Mamdani’s campaign.

    However, it could have an impact on Jacobs’ position as a leader of the party. According to Politico, Jacobs said he would resign from his post if Hochul were to request it.

    “If the governor should ever ask any state chair to resign, they should resign,” Jacobs told Politico.

    New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani

    Democratic socialist Zohran Mamdani, the Democratic Party’s mayoral nominee in New York City, speaks to reporters on Aug. 7, 2025.  (AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura)

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    Hochul announced her endorsement of Mamdani in an opinion piece in The New York Times on Sept. 14. 

    She shared the article on X and captioned the post, “New York City deserves a mayor who will stand up to Donald Trump and make life more affordable for New Yorkers. That’s [Zohran Mamdani].”

    A recent Quinnipiac University survey showed Mamdani garnering 45% support among likely New York City voters. He was followed by former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo at 23%, Guardian Angels co-founder Curtis Sliwa at 15%, and New York City Mayor Eric Adams at 12%. Cuomo and Adams are running as independents, while Sliwa is running as a Republican.

    Fox News Digital reached out to Jacobs, Mamdani and Hochul but did not immediately hear back.

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  • Trump slams Hochul’s ‘shocking’ endorsement of Mamdani

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    President Donald Trump slammed New York Gov. Kathy Hochul on Monday for her endorsement of progressive Zohran Mamdani in his bid for mayor of New York City.

    In a post on Truth Social, the president appeared to warn of withholding federal funds from the state as punishment for Hochul’s endorsement.

    “Governor Kathy Hochul of New York has endorsed the ‘Liddle’ Communist,’ Zohran Mamdani, running for Mayor of New York,” Trump said in a post on Truth Social. “This is a rather shocking development, and a very bad one for New York City. How can such a thing happen? Washington will be watching this situation very closely. No reason to be sending good money after bad!”

    Hochul’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    Hochul, who is running for a second term as New York’s governor, endorsed the Queens state assemblymember on Sunday after months of pressure from progressive Democrats — and after Trump became publicly involved in the mayoral race.

    Apparently eager to coalesce the anti-Mamdani vote behind former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, the White House has offered Adams a job in the Trump administration and has considered nominating him to be U.S. ambassador to Saudi Arabia in exchange for his withdrawal from the mayoral race. But Adams has thus far refused to step aside while Cuomo trails Mamdani by double digits in recent polls.

    In her endorsement in a New York Times op-ed, Hochul praised Mamdani’s affordability platform, though she indicated she does not agree with all of Mamdani’s goals.

    Despite his apparent push for Cuomo’s election, Trump last week said he expects Mamdani to win the race.

    “I’m not looking at the polls too carefully, but it would look like he’s going to win,” Trump said on Fox and Friends. “And that’s a rebellion.”

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  • Relative of 9/11 firefighter appears to call out Mamdani for not condemning ‘globalize the intifada’ slogan

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    The cousin of a firefighter who died on 9/11 took a veiled jab at New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani during an anniversary ceremony on Thursday in Manhattan for his refusal to condemn the slogan “globalize the intifada.”

    Mike Weinstein, 61, was honoring his cousin, Stephen Belson, a veteran firefighter who lost his life while working to save stranded people in the World Trade Center’s South Tower.

    Weinstein called on all politicians to renounce terror and violence, and said they are “inviting another 9/11” if they refuse to do so and choose not to condemn phrases like “globalize the intifada.”

    ZOHRAN MAMDANI SAYS HE WILL DISCOURAGE ‘GLOBALIZE THE INTIFADA’ PHRASE

    The cousin of a firefighter who died on 9/11 took a veiled jab at New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani. (Deirdre Heavey/Fox News Digital)

    “I know my cousin Steve and many, many others would agree with me when I say, let’s continue to press all politicians, including those who went home already, to firmly renounce terror and violence,” he said. “When political candidates and public officials refuse to condemn global terror and phrases such as ‘globalize the intifada,’ they are inviting another 9/11, God forbid, and they continue to bring daily fear for all New Yorkers.”

    “Enough. Enough is enough,” he continued. “Twenty-four years later, we need all political candidates, including every single potential future mayor — and you know who I’m talking about — of this great city to speak out against terror and unite as freedom-loving New Yorkers. God bless America, land of the free and home of the brave.”

    “Globalize the intifada” is an anti-Zionist slogan calling for international support for Palestinian resistance against Israel that has been criticized as a call for violence against Israelis and Jews.

    Zohran Mamdani

    “Globalize the intifada” is an anti-Zionist slogan calling for international support for Palestinian resistance against Israel that has been criticized as a call for violence against Israelis and Jews. (Deirdre Heavey/Fox News Digital)

    Mamdani refused to condemn the phrase throughout his campaign for the Democratic Party’s mayoral nomination, which he secured in June, although he reaffirmed earlier this week he would “discourage” that language.

    He suggested his position had shifted after speaking with Jewish leaders and learning about the gap between the slogan’s intention and its harmful impact on many Jewish New Yorkers.

    NEW YORKERS SKEPTICAL AFTER ZOHRAN MAMDANI DISTANCES HIMSELF FROM PHRASE ‘GLOBALIZE THE INTIFADA’

    New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani

    New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani refused to condemn the phrase throughout his campaign for the Democratic Party’s nomination. ( Lev Radin/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images)

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    Mamdani said earlier this summer that the phrase shows “a desperate desire for equality and equal rights in standing up for Palestinian human rights” but later clarified amid backlash that it is “not language that I use.”

    “The language that I use and the language that I will continue to use to lead this city is that which speaks clearly to my intent, which is an intent grounded in a belief in universal human rights,” Mamdani said during an appearance on NBC.

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  • Mamdani’s New Ideas on Crime Show Make His Opponents Look Old

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    Photo: Angelina Katsanis/The New York Times/Redux

    A win by Zohran Mamdani on November 4 would make the 33-year-old New York’s youngest mayor in a century. But even in a contest against men twice his age, Mamdani has begun to sound like the adult in the room on issues of public safety, offering detailed, thoughtful policy proposals while his opponents — Mayor Eric Adams, former governor Andrew Cuomo, and Guardian Angels founder Curtis Sliwa — continue to campaign on the traditional idea that channeling more money, manpower and technology to the NYPD is the only way to keep the city safe.

    By contrast, Mamdani backs a slate of criminal-justice reforms and innovations from around the country that can be replicated or expanded in New York to deal with issues like gang violence and disorder in the subways involving homeless people. We talked about it in an hourlong conversation co-sponsored by Vital City and Columbia University’s School of Journalism.

    “A lot of times for New Yorkers, what is experienced or understood as an example of social disorder is then tasked to the police as if it’s their responsibility,” he told me. “What we have ended up with is police officers responding to 200,000 mental-health calls a year, and that cannot be separated from the fact that response times have increased by 20 percent over the last few years, where now the average time is closer to 16 minutes.”

    Mamdani wants to create a billion-dollar Department of Community Safety that would handle non-emergency calls. “Evidence and outcomes have to be the North Star of our administration and frankly of any administration,” he said. “What’s frustrating is that we have evidence of approaches that work, but they are not operating at the scale that they could be.” The new agency would become the home of the city’s violence-interrupter and crisis-management programs, along with an expanded version of the B-HEARD program, which dispatches counselors along with cops to emergency calls that have a low risk of violence.

    “Thirty-five percent of calls that B-HEARD was eligible for, it did not respond to and the police responded to. And part of that is because it has been underfunded, part of it is because it has completely been deprioritized,” Mamdani explained. “The vision of B-HEARD has to be one where we have it present in every single neighborhood, and where in the 20 neighborhoods of the highest need we have two or three teams. And where we increase funding for it by about 150 percent.”

    That is a world away from what the other candidates are saying. Cuomo promises to hire 5,000 new cops, while Sliwa says he’ll bring 7,000 onboard, and Adams recently launched quality-of-life policing that will send officers and other resources to high-crime neighborhoods. All three insist that crime is the top issue facing the city and frequently attack Mamdani for past social-media posts in support of reducing the NYPD’s budget. (He now disavows talk about defunding the police.)

    But voters appear to be warming up to Mamdani’s approach: the most recent New York Times/Siena College poll shows Mamdani leading all candidates on the question of who would do the best job on tackling crime (Adams, the ex-NYPD captain, finished last). The openness to new approaches is a sign of New York’s long-overdue need for a substantive debate about crime and disorder. We’ve learned the hard way that medical and social-service professionals should be leading the response to more of the thousands of mental-health distress calls that routinely end up with the NYPD by default.

    Every year, the headlines report at least one tragic situation — or more likely, half a dozen — in which a person in urgent need of medical help is instead shot to death by cops. The long, sad roll call includes names like Eleanor Bumpurs, Gidone Busch, Deborah Danner, Saheed Vassell, Kawasaki Trawick, Win Rozario, Khiel Coppin, Ariel Galarza, and others.

    Mamdani deserves credit for educating himself about proven innovations like CAHOOTS (Crisis Assistance Helping Out On The Streets) a successful program in Eugene, Oregon, that has nonviolently resolved tens of thousands of cases without police intervention and inspired similar efforts around the nation. But he’s fighting an uphill battle against cynical voices of the status quo, including the New York Post editorial board, which recently dismissed the idea of shifting mental-health calls away from the NYPD as “barely even voodoo.”

    “What has been so frustrating is that we’ve seen the complete lack of will from this executive means that so many of these kinds of programs have been prejudged to failure from the very beginning because they’ve never been given what they needed,” Mamdani told me, rattling off programs around the country that might work in New York.

    “In Denver, they had a STAR program. This is a program that focuses on low-level crime. In the neighborhoods where they focused, crime went down by 34 percent. Over the period of a number of years, they had 12,000 clinical interactions. Of those, only 3 percent required a medical hold,” he said. On the subject of helping homeless New Yorkers in the subways, he name-checked a program in Philadelphia’s SEPTA mass-transit system that might work here.

    While both men would surely object to the comparison, Mamdani’s willingness to bring new programs and a new mind-set reminds me of the long-ago 1993 campaign of Rudy Giuliani, an eager student of early theories of how focusing cops on low-level disorder could lead to major reductions in street violence. Notwithstanding later abuses of stop-and-frisk, in the early 1990s it was a smart and reasonable approach that saved lives and helped him win an election.

    History may be about to repeat itself. “None of this is simple. None of it is going to be easy. But what has been so frustrating is it has seemed for many years as if there are many who are not even trying,” Mamdani told me. “They are simply at peace with a status quo that we know is broken for so many. And I am confident in our ability to actually deliver a new chapter.”


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