Last month, a few days after New York’s Democratic mayoral primary, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., sat for an interview with ABC News. Asked whether he would endorse state Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani in the general election after Mamdani had effectively won the primary in a shocking upset, Jeffries declined. “We don’t really know each other well,” the congressman said. But he added he was looking forward to a “sit-down” with Mamdani to clarify his vision and his positions on various issues.
Jeffries and Mamdani had that sit-down Friday, but afterward, the Democratic leader still declined to endorse the Democratic nominee for mayor of New York, which includes the congressional district Jeffries represents. Politico reported that Mamdani left the meeting Friday “about an hour later with only the promise of another meeting.”
Mamdani clearly already knows how to exploit Cuomo’s weaknesses.
Jeffries and some other top New York Democrats, including Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and Gov. Kathy Hochul, continue to withhold formal endorsements from their party’s candidate for mayor, even though Mamdani won more votes than any candidate in any primary in New York’s history. It’s effectively a pressure tactic on Mamdani to moderate his positions after running as a proud democratic socialist and refusing to back off of his past criticisms of Israel.
As the assemblyman prepares for the general election, more endorsements from Democratic leaders certainly wouldn’t hurt in a contest that includes two prominent Democrats — former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo and New York Mayor Eric Adams — running as independents.
But Mamdani probably doesn’t need Jeffries and company’s endorsements to win the race. The absence of their endorsements could, theoretically, even give him a slight boost by riling up his devoted base.








