Zohran Mamdani has bold promises. Can he make them come true as New York
City mayor?
[December 29, 2025]
By ANTHONY IZAGUIRRE
Zohran Mamdani has promised to transform New York City government when
he becomes mayor. Can he do it?
Mamdani, a 34-year-old democratic socialist, already faces intense
scrutiny, even before taking office in one of the country's most
scrutinized political jobs. Republicans have cast him as a liberal
boogeyman. Some of his fellow Democrats have deemed him too far left.
Progressives are closely watching for any signs of him shifting toward
the center.
On Jan. 1, he will assume control of America’s biggest city under that
harsh spotlight, with the country watching to see if he can pull off the
big promises that vaulted him to office and handle the everyday duties
of the job. All while skeptics call out his every stumble.
For Mamdani, starting off strong is key, said George Arzt, a veteran
Democratic political consultant in New York who worked for former Mayor
Ed Koch.
“He’s got to use the first 100 days of the administration to show people
he can govern,” he said. “You’ve got to set a mindset for people that’s
like, ‘Hey, this guy’s serious.’”

That push should begin with Mamdani’s speech on the day of his
inauguration, where Arzt said it will be important for the new mayor to
establish a clear blueprint of his agenda and tell New Yorkers what he
plans to do and how he plans to do it.
From there, he said Mamdani will have to count on the seasoned hands
he’s hired to help him handle the concrete responsibilities of the job,
while he and his team also pursue his ambitious affordability agenda.
Managing expectations as a movement candidate
Mamdani campaigned on a big idea: shifting the power of government
toward helping working class New Yorkers, rather than the wealthy.
His platform — which includes free child care, free city bus service and
a rent freeze for people living in rent stabilized apartments — excited
voters in one of America’s most expensive cities and made him a leading
face of a Democratic Party searching for bright, new leaders during
President Donald Trump’s second term.
But Mamdani may find himself contending with the relentless
responsibilities of running New York City. That includes making sure the
trash is getting picked up, potholes are filled and snow plows go out on
time. When there’s a subway delay or flooding, or a high-profile crime
or a police officer parks in a bicycle lane, it’s not unusual for the
city’s mayor to catch some heat.
“He had a movement candidacy and that immediately raises expectations
locally and nationally,” said Basil Smikle, a Democratic political
strategist and Columbia University professor, who added that it might be
good for Mamdani to “Just focus on managing expectations and get a
couple of good wins under your belt early on.”
“There’s a lot to keep you busy here,” he said.
A large part of Mamdani’s job will also be to sell his politics to the
New Yorkers who remain skeptical of him, with Smikle saying “the biggest
hurdle” is getting people comfortable with his policies and explaining
how what he’s pushing could help the city.
“It’s difficult to have this all happen on day one,” he said, “or even
day 30 or even day 100.”
Challenges and opportunities
Mamdani's universal free child care proposal — perhaps one of his more
expensive plans — is also one that has attracted some of the strongest
support from New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, a moderate from Buffalo who
endorsed the mayor-elect.
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Hochul is eager to work with Mamdani on the policy and both leaders
consider the program a top priority, although it's not yet clear how
exactly the plan could come to fruition. The governor, who is up for
reelection next year, has repeatedly said she does not want to raise
income taxes — something Mamdani supports for wealthy New Yorkers —
however she has appeared open to raising corporate taxes.
“I think he has allies and supporters for his agenda, but the
question is how far will the governor go," said state Senate Deputy
Leader Michael Gianaris, a Mamdani ally.
“There’s an acknowledgement that the voters have spoken, and there’s
very clear policies that were associated with his successful
campaign,” he said, “so to not make progress on them would be us
thumbing our noses at the voters.”
Mamdani’s pledge to freeze the rent for roughly 1 million rent
stabilized apartments in the city would not require state
cooperation.
But that proposal — perhaps the best known of his campaign — is
already facing headwinds, after the city’s departing mayor, Eric
Adams, made a series of appointments in recent weeks to a local
board that determines annual rent increases for the city’s rent
stabilized units.
The move could potentially complicate the mayor-elect’s ability to
follow through on the plan, at least in his first year, although
Mamdani has said he remains confident in his ability to enact the
freeze.
Other challenges await
His relationship with some of the city’s Jewish community remains in
tatters over his criticisms of Israel's government and support for
Palestinian human rights.
The Anti-Defamation League, a prominent Jewish advocacy
organization, plans to track Mamdani's policies and hires as it
pledged to “protect Jewish residents across the five boroughs during
a period of unprecedented antisemitism in New York City.”
Earlier this month, a Mamdani appointee resigned over social media
posts she made more than a decade ago that featured antisemitic
tropes, after the Anti-Defamation League shared the posts online.

The group has since put out additional findings on others who are
serving in committees that Mamdani set up as he transitions into his
mayoral role. In response, Mamdani said the ADL often “ignores the
distinction” between antisemitism and criticism of the Israeli
government.
The mayor-elect's past call to defund the city's police department
continue to be a vulnerability. His decision to retain Jessica Tisch,
the city's current police commissioner, has eased some concerns
about a radical shakeup at the top of the nation's largest police
force.
And then there’s Trump.
Tensions between Trump and Mamdani have appeared to cool — for now —
after months of rancor led into a surprisingly friendly Oval Office
meeting. Future clashes may emerge given the sharp political
differences between them, particularly on immigration enforcement,
along with anything else that could set off the mercurial president.
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