Zohran Mamdani officially secures nomination for New York City mayor
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Self-described democratic socialist Zohran Mamdani will be the Democratic Party's nominee for New York's November mayoral election.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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- Zohran Mamdani won the Democratic mayoral primary with 56% of ranked-choice votes, defeating Andrew Cuomo.
- Mr Mamdani, a democratic socialist, faces incumbent Eric Adams (independent), Republican Curtis Sliwa, and independent Jim Walden in the general election.
- Republicans and Mr Trump criticised Mr Mamdani's win, setting up a potentially contentious general election focused on his policies.
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NEW YORK - The New York City Election board on July 1 confirmed a stunning victory by mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani in the Democratic primary, clearing the way for the political upstart
The ranked-choice voting results released on July 1 showed Mr Mamdani – who started his campaign as little-known New York State Assembly member – had clinched 56 per cent of the votes in the third round of voting, where over 50 per cent of votes are required for a winner.
As the Democratic nominee, he will face current mayor Eric Adams in the general election.
Mr Adams, who won as a Democrat in his first mayoral race in 2021, is running as an independent candidate following his indictment for corruption charges and the subsequent decision by the Department of Justice to drop the case.
In a new video on social media platform X, Mr Mamdani compared his victory in the primary with the election campaign Mr Adams had in 2021.
“We have always thought our victory would come after multiple rounds of ranked-choice voting. When we got more votes in the first round than Eric Adams got in the seven rounds in the last election, it was astonishing,” he said.
The unexpected victory of 33-year-old Mr Mamdani – a Uganda-born Muslim, who describes himself as a democratic socialist – over veteran politician and moderate Andrew Cuomo caused unease among Democrats, worried that his political views may make them a convenient target for Republican attacks.
The day after Mr Mamdani’s victory, President Donald Trump called him a “100 per cent communist lunatic” while the Republican Party’s congressional campaign arm promised to tie him to every vulnerable Democrat in 2026’s midterm elections.
In the new video, Mr Mamdani said his objective was “to win people back to the Democratic Party” and noted that he prevailed in some New York City neighbourhoods that voted for Mr Trump in the 2024 presidential election.
After the election board confirmed Mr Mamdani’s victory, Mr Trump, when asked how he would deal with Mr Mamdani if he wins the election and tries to block the arrests of immigrants, said: “Well then, we’ll have to arrest him. Look, we don’t need a communist in this country. But if we have one, I’m going to be watching over him very carefully on behalf of the nation.”
Mr Mamdani earlier said the immigrant raids were “terrorising people” and agents who carry them out have no interest in following the law.
Mr Cuomo, who received 44 per cent of the votes in the final tally, called Mr Mamdani to concede the race after early results of the primary were announced on July 24. The former governor could enter the race as an independent candidate, but he has not said publicly whether he will.
Along with Mr Adams, Mr Mamdani will face Republican candidate Curtis Sliwa, a radio host best known as the founder of the Guardian Angels anti-crime patrol, and attorney Jim Walden, who is running as an independent.
The ranked-choice voting system that New York City adopted in 2021 allows voters to rank up to five candidates in the order of preference. Ballots are tabulated in what may best be described as a series of instant run-offs, where the candidates who trail are gradually eliminated, and their votes are re-distributed among front runners until one of them reaches 50 per cent. REUTERS

