Mamdani's secret Trump meeting faces backlash over Iran war

New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani held a secretive meeting with President Donald Trump in the Oval Office to discuss federal aid for affordable housing, but the event drew criticism amid escalating US tensions with Iran. The mayor's theatrical approach, including a viral photo with mock newspaper headlines, backfired as public focus shifted to his response to the conflict. Mamdani condemned the US strikes while intervening in an ICE detention case.

Last Wednesday, New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani traveled incognito to Washington, DC, for a private meeting with President Donald Trump in the Oval Office. His office had issued a brief press release stating, “Mayor Mamdani has no public events,” which was technically accurate but misleading. This followed a cordial introductory meeting shortly after Mamdani's election victory in November, where Trump invited him to return with proposals for collaboration.

At the top of the agenda was a request for federal aid to revive a plan from the de Blasio administration to construct 12,000 affordable apartments over the 180-acre Sunnyside Yard railroad junction in Queens, shelved in 2019 due to concerns about displacement and affordability. To appeal to Trump, Mamdani presented two Daily News front pages: the genuine 1975 headline “Ford to City: Drop Dead” from the city's fiscal crisis and a fabricated one reading “Trump to City: Let’s Build,” praising a “new era of housing.” Trump posed with the pages behind the Resolute Desk, and Mamdani's tweet of the photo received 28.5 million views.

During the meeting, Mamdani also advocated for Columbia University senior Ellie Aghayeva, detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents at her university apartment that morning. She was released by the end of the day following his intervention. However, Trump made no financial commitments, and Queens elected officials reiterated prior concerns about the project.

The episode unfolded on the eve of US military strikes against Iran, announced Saturday morning. Mamdani condemned the actions as “a catastrophic escalation in an illegal war of aggression,” stating that the United States and Israel were “bombing cities. Killing civilians. Opening a new theater of war.” He added, “Americans do not want this. They do not want another war in pursuit of regime change.” Addressing Iranian New Yorkers, he assured them, “You will be safe here.”

Criticism emerged from some Jewish New Yorkers, who noted the lack of comfort offered to Israelis amid Tehran's missile barrages, and from an Iranian exile, who highlighted the omission of the Islamic Republic's repressive nature. Observers also pointed to the absence of any mention of Trump in Mamdani's statement.

By Tuesday, during the rollout of a 2-K free childcare program in four neighborhoods alongside Governor Kathy Hochul, press questions shifted from funding to the Iran conflict. Mamdani acknowledged the Iranian government's “systematic repression” and described it as “a brutal government,” but warned of the “devastating consequences” of pursuing regime change, referencing past US wars in the region. Reporters pressed on support for Jewish New Yorkers, Iranian dissidents, his use of the Signal app, recent Trump contact, security clearance application, and a slur from WABC radio host Sid Rosenberg calling him a “Radical Islam cockroach.” Mamdani called the remark “painfully familiar” and defended his faith, emphasizing a city where “every single New Yorker who lives here can call it his home.”

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