Merz heads to China to boost dialogue on global challenges
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz is heading to Beijing on for his first official visit as chancellor, aiming to strengthen political and economic dial...
Zohran Mamdani made history on 4 November, 2025, when he won New York City's mayoral election, becoming the city's first Muslim mayor, first South Asian mayor, and youngest mayor in over a century.
The 34-year-old Democratic Socialist defeated former governor Andrew Cuomo in a stunning political upset, signalling a potential shift in the Democratic Party’s future direction.

Early life and global background
Born in Kampala, Uganda, in 1991, Mamdani grew up in an extraordinary household shaped by global activism and intellectual engagement. His mother, Mira Nair, is an Oscar-nominated Indian filmmaker known for films such as 'Salaam Bombay!' and 'Monsoon Wedding'. His father, Mahmood Mamdani, is a distinguished Columbia University professor specialising in African history, colonialism and human rights.
The family lived in Kampala until Mamdani was five, then moved to Cape Town, South Africa, before settling in New York when he was seven. This multicultural upbringing exposed him to different political systems and social structures that informed his later political philosophy.
Education and political development
Mamdani attended the Bronx High School of Science before enrolling at Bowdoin College in Maine, where he studied Africana studies. At Bowdoin, he was deeply influenced by anti-colonial thinkers such as Frantz Fanon and co-founded the college’s first chapter of Students for Justice in Palestine.
During his university years Mamdani wrote for the student newspaper and organised campus activism around racial justice and Palestinian rights. Professors remembered him as a dedicated intellectual with a genuine curiosity about power structures and inequality.
The rapper years
After graduating in 2014, Mamdani pursued an unexpected creative career as a rapper. Performing under the names 'Young Cardamom' and 'Mr Cardamom', he released music with childhood friend Abdul Karim Hussein. His song '#1 Spice' was featured in Disney’s 'Queen of Katwe', a film directed by his mother. Another notable track, 'Nani', a tribute to his grandmother that featured acclaimed actress Madhur Jaffrey, has garnered hundreds of thousands of views online.
Although he stepped away from music when entering politics, Mamdani still lists himself as a self-employed rapper in his financial disclosures.
Path to political office
Mamdani’s entry into politics came through his work as a foreclosure-prevention housing counsellor in Queens, where he helped low-income families fight eviction during the housing crisis. This experience convinced him that affordable housing was not an inevitable problem but a political choice.
In 2020, Mamdani ran for the New York State Assembly representing Queens’ 36th district with the endorsement of the Democratic Socialists. In a major upset, he defeated five-term incumbent Aravella Simotas in the primary. He won the general election and was subsequently re-elected without opposition in 2022 and 2024.
The taxi-driver hunger strike
One of Mamdani’s defining moments came in October 2021, when he joined New York City taxi drivers in a 15-day hunger strike demanding debt relief. The strike targeted a predatory lending scheme that had trapped thousands of taxi medallion owners in crushing debt, with some drivers taking their own lives.
For 15 days Mamdani maintained the hunger strike through rain and snow, even participating in acts of civil disobedience that led to his arrest. By the strike’s final days, older drivers with health conditions were visibly struggling, yet they persisted. On day 15 Mayor Bill de Blasio agreed to cap taxi-medallion debt at $170,000 with reduced monthly payments, providing more than $450 million in relief.
This moment of solidarity became pivotal to Mamdani’s mayoral campaign, with many taxi drivers becoming passionate supporters who credited him with showing genuine empathy for their struggle.
The mayoral campaign
Mamdani announced his mayoral candidacy in October 2024, initially polling at just 1%. His campaign centred on a powerful message of affordability, proposing four major initiatives: freezing rent on rent-stabilised apartments; making city buses fast and fare-free; establishing city-owned grocery stores to lower food costs; and providing universal childcare for all children under five.

To fund these programmes, estimated at nearly $7 billion annually, Mamdani proposed a 2% tax on residents earning more than $1 million and an increase in the corporate tax rate to 11.5%.
His grassroots campaign mobilised thousands of young volunteers who knocked on more than two million doors and made three million phone calls across the city. In June 2025 Mamdani achieved a stunning upset in the Democratic primary, defeating former governor Andrew Cuomo 43% to 36% — one of the biggest electoral achievements for the Democratic Socialists of America.
General election victory
On 4 November Mamdani won the general election, with major networks including NBC, CBS, CNN and the Associated Press calling the race in his favour. His victory represents an historic moment for New York City and has energised progressive movements nationwide.
The triumph also sparked debate within the Democratic Party: progressives celebrated it as validation of democratic-socialist ideas, while moderate Democrats expressed concern about how his platform might be used against other Democratic candidates in competitive races.
Personal life
Mamdani met Rama Duwaji, a Syrian-American illustrator and animator, on the dating app Hinge in 2021. The couple became engaged in October 2024 and married in February 2025, later celebrating with a larger wedding in Uganda. They reside in a rent-stabilised apartment in Astoria, Queens.
Governing challenges ahead
As mayor from 1 January 2026, Mamdani faces significant implementation challenges. Many of his proposals require approval from the state-controlled Metropolitan Transportation Authority or from lawmakers in Albany. His most ambitious initiatives — universal childcare and city-owned groceries — remain largely untested at the scale he proposes.
However, supporters credit his grassroots organising skills, honed through the taxi-driver strike and the mayoral campaign, as key assets for building the political coalitions necessary to advance his agenda. How Mamdani navigates these challenges will likely influence progressive politics nationally and the Democratic Party’s future direction.
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