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Zohran Mamdani Elected as NYC’s First Muslim and Youngest Mayor in a Century

In a thunderclap that still echoes through the marble corridors of City Hall, 34-year-old Zohran Kwame Mamdani—a democratic socialist from Queens—has been elected the 110th mayor of New York City, shattering a century of precedent in a single night.

This is a historic hat trick: New York’s first Muslim mayor, first South Asian mayor, and youngest since 1913 when John Purroy Mitchel took office at 34 on a fusion reform ticket. At his side stood his mother, Dr. Priscilla Mamdani, a pediatrician who immigrated with $400 and a stethoscope, laughing to reporters, “He used to fall asleep on clinic chairs; now the city will fall asleep knowing someone is finally awake for them.”

When the final precincts reported just after 3:17 a.m., the numbers told a story no pollster had dared predict: Mamdani 52.4%, Eric Adams 29.1%, Andrew Yang 11.3%, scattering 7.2%—a margin of nearly 400,000 votes that wasn’t close, it was a coronation.

Born in Kampala to Indian parents who fled Idi Amin’s regime, Mamdani first burst onto the scene in 2020 at age 28, unseating a 16-year incumbent in the State Assembly with a platform as simple as it was bold: free buses, public child care, rent freezes—ideas critics dismissed as fantasy but supporters lived out every Tuesday.

Last night, that vision scaled the five boroughs, fueled by a youth surge that saw 18-to-29-year-olds turn out at levels not seen since Bloomberg’s post-9/11 spike, 73% of them casting ballots for Mamdani, alongside 58% of Latino voters and 64% of Asian-Americans.

His campaign, running on a shoestring $1.2 million compared to Adams’ $18 million war chest, turned TikTok into a precinct, with viral clips of Mamdani riding the F train at 2 a.m. debating housing policy racking up 42 million views, one stitched and remixed into a campaign anthem under the caption “Your rent is a tax on existing.”

At a roaring victory party in a Flushing high-school gym, voice hoarse from three days of subway-station stump speeches, Mamdani declared, “We didn’t win because we had the most money; we won because we had the most mornings—knocking doors at 6 a.m., talking to night-shift nurses, to bodega owners, to kids who’ve never seen a mayor who looks like them.”

His “Five for the Five” pledges—one for each borough—were printed on palm cards the size of MetroCards: universal public housing repair to clear a million-unit backlog in four years, free MTA for under-18s and seniors, community safety boards to replace NYPD precinct councils, city-owned grocery stores in food deserts, and “baby bonds” of $1,000 savings accounts for every NYC newborn. Skeptics eye the $104 billion city budget and whisper math, but Mamdani counters with a vacant-property tax, a pied-à-terre mansion surcharge, and a public bank seeded by cannabis revenue.

Swearing-in comes January 1, with transition teams already meeting in a donated WeWork in Long Island City, NYPD brass requesting urgent sit-downs on policing reform, and Wall Street trembling as JPMorgan’s CEO calls it “a stress test for municipal bonds.”

Yet on the 7 train gliding over Roosevelt Avenue at sunrise, straphangers weren’t debating spreadsheets; a teenage girl in a Mamdani hoodie turned to her friend and said, loud enough for the whole car to hear, “For the first time, the mayor rides my train.” In a city that prides itself on reinvention, Zohran Mamdani just rewrote the script—and the opening scene begins now.

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