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Can Zohran Mamdani, a Socialist and TikTok Savant, Become NYC Mayor?

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Can Zohran Mamdani, a Socialist and TikTok Savant, Become NYC Mayor?

In the crowded race for mayor of New York City, Zohran Mamdani has become a magnet for attention, ascending in the polls and raising money through a mix of social media savvy and a plain-spoken, everyman approach.

He has paid house visits to some of his thousands of small donors and taken a New Year’s Day plunge into the ocean to dramatize a rent-freeze. He broke a Ramadan fast by eating a burrito on the Q train, then faux apologized for the breach of subway etiquette — all in a breezy style more reminiscent of “Saturday Night Live” than a political ad.

But for Mr. Mamdani, a 33-year-old state assemblyman from Queens, winning the Democratic primary in June still represents a daunting challenge that goes beyond trying to convert social media virality into votes.

While many of his progressive rivals in the race have adopted more centrist positions on certain issues like policing and public safety, Mr. Mamdani, a democratic socialist, continues to embrace left-leaning views that have become less popular with voters in New York.

It has nonetheless proved to be an effective campaign strategy. Mr. Mamdani has become the standard-bearer for progressive Democrats as a fresh-faced alternative to his more veteran rivals, most notably former Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, Mayor Eric Adams and Brad Lander, the city comptroller.

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But winning an election on a hyper-progressive platform will be a challenge. Mr. Mamdani acknowledges this and knows he must get his supporters — many on the far left and outside the city’s traditional power structure — to turn out in droves.

In a primary that rarely sees turnout exceed one-fourth of eligible voters, winning over new voters could offer Mr. Mamdani outsize influence in its outcome.

At a recent campaign visit to the MAS Bronx Muslim Center in the East Bronx’s Little Yemen neighborhood, Mr. Mamdani implored those gathered to more fully use their electoral power. More than 350,000 of New York’s roughly one million Muslims are registered to vote, according to figures from the Council on American-Islamic Relations. But in the last mayoral election, only about 12 percent of them cast a ballot.

“I don’t blame anyone in our community for not voting, because oftentimes it feels like there isn’t much to vote for,” Mr. Mamdani told the group of about 100 people. “But this June 24, in this Democratic primary, we have a chance — an opportunity — to tell the world that Muslims don’t just belong in New York City but that we belong in City Hall.”

He asked congregants whether they had enough money to pay for rent, groceries, child care and their electric bills. Many sat at rapt attention, nodding their heads as he spoke. He recited the teachings of the Prophet Muhammad in arguing that their shared goal should be to make people’s lives better.

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“Spread glad tidings,” Mr. Mamdani said to the group in explaining that his campaign was focused on making the city more affordable, calling it “a campaign to allow New Yorkers to dream once again.”

Mr. Mamdani underlined his campaign’s core staples: free buses, a rent freeze and city-owned grocery stores.

Campaigns typically target so-called triple prime voters who have cast ballots in three consecutive primaries. Mr. Mamdani has turned his attention to those who do not regularly hear from political campaigns. He is betting that his unrelenting focus on the cost of living will resonate with people who feel ignored by the government — a strategy he hopes will appeal to disaffected Trump voters, especially in the working-class neighborhoods outside Manhattan.

Even the conservative Manhattan Institute recognizes Mr. Mamdani’s momentum, citing his appeal to people whom the pollster John Della Volpe from the firm SocialSphere called “discontented strivers” — working-class New Yorkers who are progressive but concerned about public safety and feel that getting ahead is too difficult.

“I want you to entertain the idea that socialist Zohran Mamdani could actually become the next mayor of New York City,” the Manhattan Institute’s newsletter read. “I know it sounds crazy, but we live in strange times.”

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Mr. Mamdani has already raised roughly $7 million since entering the race in October, including public matching funds. In spite of his once-limited name recognition, he now boasts more than 16,000 individual donors. Most polls show him in third place, just behind Mr. Adams and candidates with citywide political pedigrees.

“He is creating excitement within an electorate that doesn’t always see themselves reflected in leadership in New York City,” said Jasmine Gripper, a co-director of the left-leaning Working Families Party. “He is talking to a base of voters who are excited to have a candidate that holds their values, who looks like them, comes from their community, and he’s leaning in to that.”

Younger voters have been turning out with more frequency. Roughly one in five voters under 40 cast a ballot in the 2021 mayoral primary, up from about 13 percent of those voters in 2013, according to findings from the New York City Campaign Finance Board. Overall turnout, at about 27 percent of registered voters, was among the highest in recent election years.

Under the ranked-choice system, which allows voters to choose as many as five candidates in order of preference, an expansion of Mr. Mamdani’s base could help some of his more like-minded rivals. If he finishes third or worse, his votes could go to his supporters’ next-ranked candidate.

Mr. Mamdani has already committed to cross-endorsing at least one yet-unnamed opponent in an effort to stunt the momentum of Mr. Cuomo, who leads polling by a wide margin. The Working Families Party will also endorse a slate of progressive candidates and is encouraging voters to “D.R.E.A.M.” — Don’t Rank Eric or Andrew for Mayor. Several candidates, including Mr. Mamdani, support the idea.

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Mr. Cuomo has already made running against the “far left” a feature of his campaign without mentioning Mr. Mamdani by name. The former governor often calls defund the police the “three dumbest words ever uttered in politics,” even though he signed some police reforms into law. Mr. Mamdani, by contrast, has called for some cuts to police spending in areas like its communications office and strategic response groups.

Trip Yang, a Democratic strategist who is not associated with any mayoral campaign, said Mr. Mamdani’s outreach to young voters in Brooklyn and Queens, and increased interest from Southeast Asian voters and Muslims, could stretch the electorate in a way unseen in recent memory.

“His policy proposals don’t seem radical,” Mr. Yang said, referring to Mr. Mamdani’s affordability platform. “The only thing radical about Zohran is probably his open democratic socialist affiliation.”

The New York City Democratic Socialists of America view that as a positive. The group has added 1,500 new members from more diverse racial and age groups since it endorsed Mr. Mamdani in October, its leaders said. They pointed to Mr. Mamdani’s heated confrontation of Tom Homan, the White House’s top immigration enforcer, at the State Capitol in Albany recently as a moment when he successfully channeled many New Yorkers’ frustrations.

“People want to fight, defend their rights and fight the authoritarian policies of the Trump administration,” said Gustavo Gordillo, the group’s co-chair. “But that’s not enough — we also have a vision for going on offense, and Zohran’s campaign has provided a vehicle for that vision.”

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Some of Mr. Mamdani’s rivals have taken note of his potential, and sought to attack him where he may be vulnerable.

New York City is home to the largest Jewish population outside of Israel, and Mr. Mamdani has been criticized for accusing Israel of committing genocide in the war in Gaza. He has sponsored a bill that would prohibit New York charities from funding certain organizations that he said were tied to “Israeli war crimes.”

Whitney Tilson, a hedge fund manager and mayoral candidate, recently sent out a fund-raising email with the subject line “Stop Mamdani” citing his “far-left platform,” “fiery rhetoric against N.Y.P.D. and Israel” and support from professors at Columbia University, where his father is a professor. The Trump administration has accused the university of not doing enough to quell antisemitism on campus.

But Mr. Mamdani’s opponents also have their own vulnerabilities to deal with.

At some of the mosques where Mr. Mamdani has appeared, members have approached him with stories, and occasionally pictures, of Mr. Adams speaking to them. They recalled how the mayor spoke about growing up in a working-class household and pledged that his administration would be about “delivering the dignity they’d been denied” at City Hall.

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“The reason that we’re in this moment is that he betrayed those voters,” Mr. Mamdani said of the mayor. “We’re trying to keep our promise.”

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How a Choreographer Lives on $55,000 in Kensington, Brooklyn

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How a Choreographer Lives on ,000 in Kensington, Brooklyn

How can people possibly afford to live in one of the most expensive cities on the planet? It’s a question New Yorkers hear a lot, often delivered with a mix of awe, pity and confusion.

We surveyed hundreds of New Yorkers about how they spend, splurge and save. We found that many people — rich, poor or somewhere in between — live life as a series of small calculations that add up to one big question: What makes living in New York worth it?

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It is a perennial question: Can artists still afford to live in New York? For Carrie Ahern, a choreographer and dancer who has lived and worked in the city for 30 years, the answer is yes — but it takes a couple of day jobs, a friendly landlord and a willingness sometimes to tell friends, “I can’t tonight, I’m too broke.”

Ms. Ahern moved to New York from Wisconsin in 1995, at age 19, with a dream to become a professional dancer. She had the drive and some contacts. But just as important, she had a nose for cheap real estate. She scored an apartment in Park Slope, Brooklyn, for $850 a month, split with a roommate. Supporting herself through a series of waitress jobs, she began pursuing her dream.

Now 50, Ms. Ahern runs her own nonprofit dance company, staging performances in private homes or unusual spaces, including a butcher shop, where she butchered a lamb as part of the show, then sold the meat at the end.

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“I kept expanding that dream,” she said of her years in New York. The city, in turn, “continued to let me bring out some skills that I didn’t even know I had.”

Those skills include creativity, resourcefulness and agility — in finance as well as dance.

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A Landlord to Cook and Garden With

The dance company pays Ms. Ahern a stipend of $4,800 a year, which she augments by teaching Pilates and movement therapy — sometimes in clients’ homes, sometimes in a rental studio, for which she pays $30 an hour.

A third income stream comes from a family company that manufactures industrial parts, which she has helped run since her father’s death in 2018. Her income from those three sources came to about $55,000 last year — about 10 percent higher than usual.

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The key to making it work, she said, is her apartment, one floor of a townhouse in the Kensington section of Flatbush, Brooklyn. After 16 years there, her rent is $1,350 a month, about half the median asking price for the neighborhood, according to StreetEasy.

“It’s like a cooperative in a lot of ways,” she said. “My landlord and I are very close, and we help each other out. We cook for each other. Or she was really excited that I love to garden, because she wanted help out there. So she keeps my rent low because she likes that I’m here and that we help each other out.”

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Special Expenses for a Dancer

Because Ms. Ahern’s apartment doubles as her office, she writes off part of the rent and utility bills as business expenses. She also deducts books, tickets to performances and any other expenses related to her work — including fitness and dance clothes, hair and makeup for performances, studio rentals and her Spotify subscription. It helps, she said, to have an accountant who works extensively with performing artists, and who had been one herself.

Those expenses bring Ms. Ahern’s income below $21,600, the threshold for Medicaid eligibility, which spares her from having to pay for health insurance. “It’s actually been the best insurance I’ve ever had,” she said. “You know, there’s no co-pay.”

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Making soup at home. Ms. Ahern says she’s able to be honest with her friends about when she can afford to splurge on dinners out. Bess Adler for The New York Times

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She does, however, still have to pay for routine maintenance on her 50-year-old dancer’s body.

She pays $120 for weekly sessions with a personal trainer, plus $115 for monthly acupuncture treatments and another $160 for monthly massage therapy appointments. “Almost all these people slide their scale for me, because of my career,” she said.

Finding Deals on Apps and Online

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Ms. Ahern gets free tickets to a lot of performances because she knows the people involved. Yet a free ticket can turn into an expensive night out if she isn’t careful. “Like, if someone says, ‘Oh, do you want to meet for dinner before?’” she said. “I feel like we’re good about being honest with each other, like, ‘I’m just really broke right now, and I can’t do it.’”

For meals at home, she uses the app Too Good to Go, where restaurants or stores offer deep discounts on food that would otherwise be thrown away — a new spin, she said, on dumpster diving. “This is a more refined version of that,” she said.

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She does, however, find her way to occasional splurges. If she cannot afford to treat friends to dinner, she treats them to coffee. And she splurged recently on tickets to see LCD Soundsystem at Knockdown Center in Queens and Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds at Barclays Center in Brooklyn. For the latter, she waited until a few days before the concert, then looked on the ticket resale site StubHub for people trying to unload their passes. Bingo: $70 for a quality seat.

For all its financial challenges, she said, New York still offers artists chances to grow. A few years ago, for example, she needed a change, so she took a class in new way vogue, a dance style known for its sharp geometric lines and precision, and it introduced her to a different community with new energy.

“There’s all these little niches here,” she said. “So in another city, could I make the work that I make? Yeah, probably. But I don’t know if it would feed me in the same way.”

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How a Parks Worker Lives on $37,500 in Tompkinsville, Staten Island

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How a Parks Worker Lives on ,500 in Tompkinsville, Staten Island

How can people possibly afford to live in one of the most expensive cities on the planet? It’s a question New Yorkers hear a lot, often delivered with a mix of awe, pity and confusion.

We surveyed hundreds of New Yorkers about how they spend, splurge and save. We found that many people — rich, poor or somewhere in between — live life as a series of small calculations that add up to one big question: What makes living in New York worth it?

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Sara Robinson boarded a Greyhound bus from Oregon to New York City to attend Hunter College in the early 2000s, bright-eyed and eager to pick up odd jobs to fuel her dream of living there.

For a long time, she made it work. But recently, that has been more challenging than ever.

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Right around her 40th birthday, Ms. Robinson began to feel financially squeezed in Brooklyn, where she had lived for years. Ms. Robinson (no relation to this reporter) was also feeling too grown to live with roommates.

“As a child,” she said, “you don’t think you’re going to have a roommate at 40.” She decided to move into a place of her own: a one-bedroom apartment in the Tompkinsville neighborhood of Staten Island.

After she moved, the preschool where she’d worked for over a decade closed. Now, she works two jobs. She is a seasonal employee for the state Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation, working from Tuesday to Saturday. And on Monday nights, she sells concessions at the West Village movie theater Film Forum, which pays $25 an hour plus tips.

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Ms. Robinson, now 45, loves her job as an environmental educator at a state park on Staten Island. Her team runs the park’s social media accounts and comes up with event programming, like a recent project tapping maple trees to make syrup.

But the role is temporary. Her last stint was from June 2024 to January 2025. Then she was unemployed until August 2025. Ms. Robinson’s current contract will be up in April, unless she gets an extension or a different parks job opens up.

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Ms. Robinson’s biweekly pay stubs from the parks department amount to about $1,300 before taxes. She barely felt a difference, she said, while she was out of work and pocketing around $880 every two weeks from her unemployment checks. (Her previous parks gig paid $1,100 a check.)

Living in New York’s Greenest Borough

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“It used to be, ‘There’s no way I’m moving to Staten Island,’” Ms. Robinson said. “But the place is close to the water. I’m three minutes from the ferry. The rest is history.” She lives on the third floor of a multifamily house, above an art studio and another tenant. Her rent is $1,600 a month, plus $125 in utilities, including her phone bill.

“If my situation changes, I don’t know if I could find something similar,” she said. “So much of my New York life has been feeling trapped to an apartment. You get a place for a good price, and you’re like, ‘I can’t leave now.’”

Staten Island is convenient for Ms. Robinson’s parks job, but it’s become harder to justify living in a borough where she knows few people. It takes more than an hour to get to friends in Brooklyn, an especially hard trek during the winter. After four years of living on Staten Island, Ms. Robinson feels somewhat isolated.

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“All my friends on Staten Island are senior citizens,” she said. “It’s great. I love it. But I do want friends closer to my age.”

One of Ms. Robinson’s friends, Ray, took her on nature walks and taught her about tree identification, sparking an interest in mycology, the study of mushrooms. This led to a productive — and free — fungi foraging hobby during unemployment. She has found all sorts of mushrooms, including, after a month of searching, the elusive morel.

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The Budgeting Game

Ms. Robinson doesn’t update her furniture often, but when she does, she shops stoop sales in Park Slope or other parts of Brooklyn.

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“It’s like a treasure hunt,” she said. “You could make a whole apartment off the street, off the stuff that people throw away.”

She also makes a game out of grocery shopping, biking to Sunset Park in Brooklyn or Manhattan’s Chinatown to go to stores where there are better deals. She budgets about $300 for groceries each month.

Ms. Robinson bikes almost everywhere, sometimes traveling a little farther to enter the Staten Island Railway at one of the stations that don’t charge a fare. She spends $80 a month on subway and ferry fares, and $5 a month for a discounted Citi Bike membership she gets through a credit union, though she usually uses her own bike. She is handy and does repairs herself.

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There are certain splurges — Ms. Robinson drops $400 once or twice a year on round-trip airfare to Seattle, where her family lives. She also spent $100 last year to see a concert at Forest Hills Stadium in Queens.

She said she has many financial saving graces. She has no student loans and no car to make payments on. She doesn’t get health insurance from her jobs, but she qualifies for Medicaid.

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She mostly eats at home, though sometimes friends will treat her to dinner. She repays them with tickets to Film Forum movies.

Nothing Beats the Twinkling Lights

Ms. Robinson’s friends often talk about leaving the city — and the country.

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Two friends have their eyes set on Sweden, where they hope to get the affordable child care and social safety net they are struggling to access in New York.

Ms. Robinson can’t see herself moving elsewhere in the United States, but she is entertaining the idea of an international move if she can’t hack it on Staten Island.

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Yet the pull of the city is hard for her to resist.

“I just get a rush when I’m riding the Staten Island Ferry across the bay,” she said. “You see all the little twinkling lights. It’s this feeling of, ‘everything is possible here.’”

That feeling, plus the many friendly faces Ms. Robinson sees every day — the ferry operators, the conductors on the Staten Island Railway, her co-workers at Film Forum — are what tie her to New York.

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“My savings are not increasing, so there’s that,” she said. “But I’ve been OK so far. I think I’m going to figure it out.”

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How the Editor in Chief of Marie Claire Gets Styled for a Trip to Italy

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How the Editor in Chief of Marie Claire Gets Styled for a Trip to Italy

Nikki Ogunnaike, the editor in chief of Marie Claire magazine, did not grow up the scion of an Anna Wintour or a Marc Jacobs.

But, she said, “my mom and dad are both very stylish people.”

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They got dressed up to go to church every week in her hometown Springfield, Va. Her mother managed a Staples; her father, a CVS. “Presentation is important to them,” she said.

Since landing her first internship with Glamour magazine in college, Ms. Ogunnaike, 40, has held editorial roles there and at Elle magazine and GQ. She has been in the top post at Marie Claire since 2023.

She recently spent a Saturday with The New York Times as she prepared for Milan Fashion Week.

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