NEW YORK ā Following hisĀ shocking upset to the Democratic establishment,Ā New York Mayor-elect Zohran MamdaniĀ is reaching out to skeptics before taking office.
After winning on aĀ progressive platform to address affordabilityĀ in the nationās largest city, the democratic socialist has continued to mend fences with powerful figures to his right.
Mamdani, 34, takes office on Jan. 1, and he appears to to be trying to address concerns around his age, lack of experience, and a progressive leading the city, with a transition filled with veterans of past City Halls and a diverse sounding board.
And he’s backing Hakeem Jeffries, Nancy Pelosi’s handpicked successor, against challenge from the left.
He did make one divisive comment, taking a shot at pro-Israel activity, but subsequently condemned phrases ushered by pro-Palestinian protesters.
Mamdani goes to Washington
Mamdani requested a White House meetingĀ with PresidentĀ Donald TrumpĀ to focus on addressing cost of living.
“I will meet with anyone, I will speak to everyone, so long as it can stand to benefit an economic agenda for New Yorkers,” Mamdani saidĀ before the Nov. 21 Oval Office event.
Mamdani has called Trump and a “fascist” and a “despot,” but in person he emphasized his interest in working together on affordability.
The charm offensive seemed to work, at least momentarily. Trump has threatened toĀ cut funding to New York CityĀ if Mamdani was elected. But in person Trump said heād like to see Mamdani succeed in his hometown.
Intervenes on Jeffriesā behalf
Mamdani then opposed a primary challenge to unseat House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-New York.
City Councilman Chi OsseĢ, a left-leaning 27-year-old Democrat from Brooklyn who supported Mamdani’s candidacy, filed on Nov. 17 to form a campaign committee running against Jeffries, who resistedĀ endorsing Mamdani until the last minute.
Democrats on the left have had problems with Jeffries over his support for Israel and hisĀ perceived inability to take on Trump.
TheĀ New York Daily News reportedĀ Mamdani went to the New York City Democratic Socialists of Americaās Nov. 19 endorsement forum to ask the group not to back OsseĢās run.
āThis is not a question of the ballot box, of who would you rather vote for,ā Mamdani later told the leftist podcast, āThe Majority Report with Sam Seder.” āThis is a question of how you want to spend the next year. Do you want to spend the next year fulfilling the agenda at the heart of this movement, or do you want to spend it defending the caricatures of that movement?ā
Instead, he wants activist energy focused on achieving his agenda, including to freeze rents on rent-stabilized units, fast and free buses and universal free child care.
On Nov. 22,Ā NYC-DSA members reportedly votedĀ in a citywide electoral working group not to endorse OsseĢ by a narrow vote. OsseĢ told reporters he wouldnāt challenge Jeffries without DSA’s backing. OsseĢ didnāt respond to a request for comment.
OnĀ NBCās āMeet the Press”Ā a day later, Mamdani said if Democrats takeĀ control of the House in the 2026 midterm elections, he would support Jeffries remaining the party leader, which would make Jeffries speaker of the House.

Mainstream transition
Mamdani’sĀ transition advisorsĀ includes seasoned municipal administrators who served under de Blasio and current Mayor Eric Adams, as well as the anti-trust scholar Lina Khan, who chaired the Federal Trade Commission under former PresidentĀ Joe Biden.
Mamdani also announced over 400 appointments to 17 transition committees that will provide personnel and policy recommendations. While the body has a handful of fellow DSA members and grassroots organizers focused on tenant rights and racial justice, it included established union heads, as well as representatives from the real estate and finance industries.
Members include Kathy Wylde, considered aĀ billionaire whispererĀ who leads the business organization Partnership for New York City, as well as Carlina Rivera, a former city councilwoman who now leads the New York State Association for Affordable Housing, a nonprofit trade group representing developers.
On Nov. 26, the City Councilās speakerās race appeared to be over as Councilwoman Julie Menin, a moderate from Manhattan’s wealthy Upper East Side,Ā said she had enough supportĀ to lead the 51-member body.
Mamdaniās spokesperson Dora Pekec said Mamdani looks forward to working with her and the council to deliver on āour affordability agenda for New Yorkers.ā
Walking back an anti-Israel comment
In another test, Mamdani, an outspoken critic of Israel, had toĀ respond to a Nov. 19 pro-Palestinian protestĀ outside a Manhattan synagogue.
The religious space hosted an event by an organization that promotes Jewish immigration to Israel and the occupied West Bank. News outlets reported chants included ādeath to the IDF,ā referring to the Israel Defense Forces, and āglobalize the intifada,” which many interpret as a call for violence against Jews even outside of Israel. Protesters at one point reportedly blocked the entrance to the temple.
While discouraging language used by the demonstrators and saying New Yorkers should be free to enter houses of worship, Mamdani reportedly said places of worship should not be violating international law, referring to illegal Israeli settlements in the West Bank. His comments drew swift pushback from many Jewish groups, saying he was quick to blame the synagogue instead of condemning demonstrators.
Days later, he issued a new statement in theĀ New York Times. He said he’d protect First Amendment rights while making it clear nothing justifies calling for “death to” anyone. The language was unacceptable, he said.
On the way to his meeting with Trump,Ā Mamdani spokeĀ with the synagogue’s rabbi and his son, also a rabbi and aĀ prominent Mamdani critic.
Eduardo Cuevas is based in New York City. Reach him by email atĀ [email protected]Ā or on Signal at emcuevas.01.