Democratic Muslim Socialist Zohran Mamdani Sworn In As NYC’s 112th Mayor
[Video below.] As the secular calendar turned to a new year, Zohran Mamdani officially assumed office as New York City’s mayor, marking the start of a new and uncertain chapter for the nation’s largest city under a self-described Muslim socialist leader.
Just after midnight Thursday, the 34-year-old Queens assemblyman was sworn in beneath City Hall Park at the long-abandoned Old City Hall subway station. State Attorney General Letitia James administered the oath, with Mamdani’s wife, artist Rama Duwaji, standing beside him as he became the city’s 112th mayor and its second-youngest ever.
“This is truly the honor and the privilege of a lifetime,” Mamdani said after completing the oath and submitting the $9 filing fee in cash.
He went on to extend New Year’s wishes to those attending the unusual ceremony. Mamdani told New Yorkers “both inside this tunnel and above” to have a happy New Year.
Looking ahead to the start of his administration, he added, “I cannot wait to see everyone tomorrow as we begin our term.”
Soon after the swearing-in, Mamdani announced his first major appointment, naming Mike Flynn as commissioner of the city Department of Transportation. Flynn previously served as a director at the agency.
“I can think of no better person,” Mamdani said of his DOT selection.
Flynn began his career at the department in 2005 as a project manager overseeing pedestrian and bicycle initiatives. He later advanced to director of capital planning and project initiation before departing the agency in 2014, according to his LinkedIn profile.
Speaking after his appointment, Flynn praised the new mayor’s team, saying Mamdani and his advisers “fundamentally understand the role that transportation plays in the day to day lives in New Yorkers.” He pledged that the department would “think big and deliver big on our ambitious agenda.”
“I’m grateful, Mr. Mayor, for entrusting me with this critical role, which I consider the job of a lifetime, and I’m ready, I’m excited, to hit the ground running and deliver real results for New Yorkers,” Flynn said.
Mamdani’s mother, acclaimed filmmaker Mira Nair, watched the proceedings at the old station and admitted she never expected her son to reach City Hall. When asked whether she would be offering him guidance, she replied: “Of course, I’m going to be the mother of New York City.”
The choice of venue was deliberate, Mamdani explained, tying the shuttered subway stop to his broader vision for the city.
“When Old City Hall Station first opened in 1904 — one of New York’s 28 original subway stations — it was a physical monument to a city that dared to be both beautiful and build great things that would transform working peoples’ lives,” he said.
He added, “That ambition need not be a memory confined only to our past, nor must it be isolated only to the tunnels beneath City Hall: it will be the purpose of the administration fortunate enough to serve New Yorkers from the building above.”
The intimate underground ceremony, attended by only a small group and limited media, was set to be followed later Thursday by a large outdoor celebration. Thousands were expected to gather outside City Hall for a block party, where Sen. Bernie Sanders was slated to swear Mamdani in once again.
Festivities aside, the new mayor now faces the reality of governing a city often described as holding the second-hardest job in America.
Mamdani, a member of the Democratic Socialists of America, succeeds Mayor Eric Adams, a conservative Democrat and former police officer whose single term was clouded by alleged corruption, even as the city made progress on crime reduction and housing issues.
Born in Uganda, Mamdani takes charge of a city still struggling with a severe housing shortage, a school system grappling with declining enrollment, and staffing gaps across multiple agencies, including the NYPD, FDNY, and EMS.
Throughout his campaign, Mamdani promised sweeping changes aimed at lowering the cost of living, including universal childcare, city-operated grocery stores, free bus service, and a rent freeze. Those proposals, which he has described as priorities for his first year in office, are projected to exceed $10 billion in cost.
The ambitious agenda comes as New York City confronts a projected budget shortfall of nearly $400 million this fiscal year and an additional $6.5 billion gap next year, with the possibility of further reductions in federal funding.
How Mamdani responds to those financial pressures may become clear early in his tenure, as his administration is expected to present a preliminary budget for fiscal year 2027 within his first 100 days.
That process could test his relationships with Gov. Kathy Hochul, his former colleagues in the state Legislature, and the City Council. Attention will also focus on his dynamic with presumptive Council Speaker Julie Menin, who is widely viewed as a more moderate figure.
Among Mamdani’s immediate responsibilities will be filling remaining cabinet vacancies, including the post of sanitation commissioner.
On public safety, the new mayor inherits a city where shootings and shoplifting — two crime trends that spiked during the COVID era — have fallen to record lows. Still, overall major felony rates remain more than 20% higher than before the pandemic, a rise Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch, who will remain in her role, has attributed to the 2019 criminal justice reforms.
Mamdani’s rise to City Hall followed a contentious election cycle. He defeated former Gov. Andrew Cuomo in the Democratic primary and went on to win the general election in November, which saw historically high voter turnout.
Cuomo, running on a little-known third-party line, still captured 43% of the vote, leaving questions about the breadth of Mamdani’s mandate after he secured just over half of the more than 2 million ballots cast.
{Matzav.com}
