Just days before Zohran Mamdani claimed victory, Donald Trump boasted that he was “much better looking” than the new mayor of New York City. But the 34-year-old Democrat didn’t take the bait – his icy, hilarious response echoed far beyond City Hall and froze the president in his tracks.
The moment came just as Zohran Mamdani, a 34-year-old Democratic Socialist and state assemblymember, made history by becoming the first Muslim mayor of New York City in a decisive upset that left two high-profile opponents in the dust.
Born in Uganda to Indian-Muslim parents and raised in Queens, Mamdani – the city’s youngest mayor since 1982 – was an unfamiliar name to most outside progressive circles just one year ago.
Champion of working class
Now, he’s become the face of a transformative moment in New York politics – his campaign focused on skyrocketing housing costs, struggling working-class communities, and the urgent need for systemic change.
His platform championed free bus service, universal childcare, and a rent freeze on stabilized apartments – ideas that critics dismissed as radical, but which resonated with voters fed up with the city’s affordability crisis.
In a commanding win, Mamdani defeated Independent Andrew Cuomo – the former governor – and Republican Curtis Sliwa, securing a mandate that stunned the city’s political establishment and energized a new generation of voters.
