President Donald Trump has declared it would be “hard” to send federal funding to New York City if Zohran Mamdani, the left-wing front-runner, is elected mayor, escalating a political war with his hometown ahead of Tuesday’s vote.
In a televised interview, Trump labeled the self-described democratic socialist a “Communist” and stated, “if you have a Communist running New York, all you’re doing is wasting the money you’re sending there.” The threat puts at risk the $7.4 billion in federal funding the city received this fiscal year.
The president effectively endorsed Mamdani’s main rival, former Governor Andrew Cuomo, by stating that while he is “not a fan,” he would “pick the bad Democrat” over a “Communist” every time.

Mamdani, who has rejected the communist label, fired back, calling Cuomo a “puppet and parrot of Trump.” He presented himself as the antidote to Trump’s presidency, arguing that the answer is “not to create its mirror image here in City Hall,” but to build a city that believes in “the dignity of everyone.”
Cuomo has sought to leverage the confrontation, positioning himself as the only candidate with the experience to effectively “fight Donald Trump” and protect the city’s interests.
Why It Matters
Trump’s threat is less a substantive policy position and more a deliberate political gambit designed to nationalize a local election. By branding a democratic socialist a “Communist,” he is dragging the race into the culture wars, forcing voters to choose sides in a proxy battle between his vision of America and the progressive left. For Mamdani, the attack is a political gift, solidifying his base and allowing him to frame the election as a rebellion against a hostile federal government.
For Cuomo, it’s a precarious tightrope walk—he must appeal to Democrats who despise Trump while presenting himself as a pragmatic bulwark against the president’s retaliation. Ultimately, this isn’t about city management; it’s a high-stakes power struggle over who gets to define the soul of New York.
















