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Zohran Mamdani
delivered 4 November 2025
[AUTHENTICITY CERTIFIED: Text version below transcribed directly from audio] Thank you, my friends!
The sun may have set over our city this evening,
but as
Eugene Debs once
said: “I can see the dawn of a better day for humanity.”
I wish
Andrew Cuomo only the best in private life. But let tonight be the final
time I utter his name, as we turn the page on a politics that abandons the many
and answers only to the few. New York, tonight you have delivered a mandate for
change, a mandate for a new kind of politics, mandate for a city we can
afford, and a mandate for a government that delivers exactly that. This campaign is about people like Wesley, an 1199 organizer I met outside of Elmhurst hospital on Thursday night, a New Yorker who lives elsewhere, who commutes two hours each way from Pennsylvania because rent is too expensive in this city. It’s about people like the woman I met on the Bx33 [bus route] years ago who said to me: “I used to love New York, but now it’s just where I live.” And it’s about people like Richard, the taxi driver I went on a 15-day hunger strike with outside of City Hall, who still has to drive his cab seven days a week. My brother, we are in City Hall, now.
This victory is for all of them. And it’s for all of you, the more than 100,000
volunteers who built this campaign into an unstoppable force. Because of you, we
will make this city one that working people can love and live in again. With
every door knocked, every petition signature earned, and every hard-earned
conversation, you eroded the cynicism that has come to define our politics.
To my campaign team, who believed when no one else did and who took an electoral
project and turned it into so much more: I will never be able to express the
depth of my gratitude. You can sleep now.
And to my incredible wife, Rama, hayati (my
life): There is no one I
would rather have by my side in this moment, and in every moment. And while we cast our ballots alone, we chose hope together; hope over tyranny; hope over big money and small ideas; ;ope over despair. We won because New Yorkers allowed themselves to hope that the impossible could be made possible. And we won because we insisted that no longer would politics be something that is done to us. Now, it is something that we do. Standing before you, I think of the words of Jawaharlal Nehru:
Tonight, we have stepped out from the old into the new. So let us speak now, with clarity and conviction that cannot be misunderstood, about what this new age will deliver, and for whom. This will be an age where New Yorkers expect from their leaders a bold vision of what we will achieve rather than a list of excuses for what we are too timid to attempt. Central to that vision will be the most ambitious agenda to tackle the cost-of-living crisis that this city has seen since the days of Fiorello La Guardia, an agenda that will freeze the rents for more than two million rent-stabilized tenants, make buses fast and free, and deliver universal childcare across our city.
Years from now, may our only regret be that this day took so long to come. This
new age will be one of relentless improvement. We will hire thousands more
teachers. We will cut waste from a bloated bureaucracy. We will work tirelessly
to make lights shine again in the hallways of NYCHA [New York City Housing
Authority] developments where they have
long flickered.
In this moment of political darkness, New York will be the light. Here, we
believe in standing up for those we love, whether you are an immigrant, a member
of the trans community, one of the many Black women that Donald Trump has fired
from a federal job, a single mom still waiting for the cost of groceries to go
down, or anyone else with their back against the wall. Your struggle is ours,
too.
No more will New York be a city where you can traffic in Islamophobia and win an
election. This new age will be defined by a competence and a compassion that
have too long been placed at odds with one another. We will prove that there is
no problem too large for government to solve, and no concern too small for it to
care about.
For years, those in City Hall have only helped those who can help them. But on
January 1st, we will usher in a city government that helps everyone.
We will hold bad landlords to account because the Donald Trumps of our city have
grown far too comfortable taking advantage of their tenants. We will put an end
to the culture of corruption that has allowed billionaires like Trump to evade
taxation and exploit tax breaks. We will stand alongside unions and expand labor
protections because we know, just as Donald Trump does, that when working people
have ironclad rights, the bosses who seek to extort them become very small
indeed. When we enter City Hall in 58 days, expectations will be high. We will meet them. A great New Yorker once said that while you campaign in poetry, you govern in prose. If that must be true, let the prose we write still rhyme, and let us build a shining city for all. And we must chart a new path, as bold as the one we have already traveled. After all, the conventional wisdom would tell you that I am far from the perfect candidate. I am young, despite my best efforts to grow older. I am Muslim. I am a democratic socialist. And most damning of all, I refuse to apologize for any of this.
And yet, if tonight teaches us anything, it is that convention has held us back.
We have bowed at the altar of caution, and we have paid a mighty price. Too many
working people cannot recognize themselves in our party, and too many among us
have turned to the right for answers to why they’ve been left behind. Our greatness will be anything but abstract. It will be felt by every rent-stabilized tenant who wakes up on the first of every month knowing the amount they’re going to pay hasn’t soared since the month before.
It will be
felt by each grandparent who can afford to stay in the home they have worked
for, and whose grandchildren live nearby because the cost of childcare didn’t
send them to Long Island.
And it will be felt when New Yorkers open their newspapers in the
morning and read headlines of success, not scandal. Audience in unison: Rent! Mayor Mamdani: Together, New York, we’re going to make buses fast and? Audience in unison: Free! Mayor Mamdani: Together, New York, we’re going to deliver universal?!
Audience in unison:
Childcare! Thank you. Page Updated: 11/6/25 U.S. Copyright Status: Text = Uncertain. |
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