Zohran Mamdani officially became the mayor of New York City just after midnight on Thursday, taking the oath of office at the historic, decommissioned City Hall subway station in Manhattan. Mamdani, a Democrat, is the city’s first Muslim mayor, its first of South Asian descent, the first born in Africa, and at 34, its youngest mayor in generations.
The oath was administered by New York Attorney General Letitia James, a close political ally, with Mamdani placing his hand on a Quran during the ceremony. “It is really the honor and the privilege of a lifetime,” he expressed. The amazing arched ceilings of the historic subway station, which is a landmark, offered a distinctive and metaphorical setting for the event.
Mamdani is going to repeat his oath in a ceremonial public event at City Hall at 1 p.m., conducted by U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders, who is one of the mayor’s political idols. The celebration will continue with a public block party on the “Canyon of Heroes,” a Broadway stretch famous for ticker-tape parades.
Political Background and Vision
Mamdani’s birthplace is Kampala, Uganda, but at the age of seven, he moved to New York City. In 2018 he was granted U.S. citizenship, and in the same year, he won the elections for the New York State Assembly, representing a part of Queens until 2020. The main campaign topics were the living cost that was too high and the bad living quality of the city, which could be improved by a number of measures like free child care, a free public transportation system, a rent freeze for around 1 million households, and city-sponsored grocery stores tested for a limited time.
Mamdani is taking over the mayor’s office of a city, which is coming out of the pandemic slowly—the property crime rate in the city has significantly decreased, tourists are beginning to return, and the jobless rate has become normal again—but he also has to deal with the aftermath of the pandemic in terms of high rents and living costs, as well as the daily challenges of the city, like garbage collection, snow removal, and subway delays.
Political Landscape and Challenges
Mamdani’s governance will handle the relations with Republican President Donald Trump, who had previously warned about the federal funds being cut and suggested the National Guard’s engagement but could later still meet Mamdani in a friendly manner at the White House. He also faces scrutiny from some members of New York’s Jewish community over his criticisms of the Israeli government.
In preparation for governance, Mamdani has retained key officials, including Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch, reassuring the business community and signaling stability within the new administration.
Mayor Zohran Mamdani and his wife, Rama Duwaji, are set to move from their rent-stabilized outer-borough apartment into the official mayoral residence in Manhattan, marking the start of a historic tenure in one of the world’s most influential cities.