*LONG READ*

Published in: * The New York Times*
Date: January 1, 2026

*T**he following is a transcript of **Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s remarks at his
inauguration**, as recorded by The New York Times.*


*New York’s new mayor challenged his supporters and his opponents to make
the city better, and to hold him to account.*

My fellow New Yorkers: Today begins a new era.

I stand before you moved by the privilege of taking this sacred oath,
humbled by the faith that you have placed in me, and honored to serve as
either your 111th or 112th Mayor of New York City. But I do not stand alone.

I stand alongside you, the tens of thousands gathered here in Lower
Manhattan, warmed against the January chill by the resurgent flame of hope.

I stand alongside countless more New Yorkers watching from cramped kitchens
in Flushing and barbershops in East New York, from cellphones propped
against the dashboards of parked taxi cabs at LaGuardia, from hospitals in
Mott Haven and libraries in El Barrio that have too long known only neglect.

I stand alongside construction workers in steel-toed boots and halal cart
vendors whose knees ache from working all day.

I stand alongside neighbors who carry a plate of food to the elderly couple
down the hall, those in a rush who still lift strangers’ strollers up
subway stairs, and every person who makes the choice day after day, even
when it feels impossible, to call our city home.

I stand alongside over one million New Yorkers who voted for this day
nearly two months ago — and I stand just as resolutely alongside those who
did not. I know there are some who view this administration with distrust
or disdain, or who see politics as permanently broken.

And while only action can change minds, I promise you this: If you are a
New Yorker, I am your mayor. Regardless of whether we agree, I will protect
you, celebrate with you, mourn alongside you, and never, not for a second,
hide from you.

I thank the labor and movement leaders here today, the activists and
elected officials who will return to fighting for New Yorkers the second
this ceremony concludes, and the performers who have gifted us with their
talent.

Governor Hochul for joining us. And thank you to Mayor Adams— Dorothy’s
son, a son of Brownsville who rose from washing dishes to the highest
position in our city — for being here as well. He and I have had our share
of disagreements, but I will always be touched that he chose me as the
mayoral candidate that he would most want to be trapped with on an elevator.

Thank you to the two titans who, as an Assembly member, I’ve had the
privilege of being represented by in Congress: Nydia Velázquez and our
incredible opening speaker, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. You have paved the
way for this moment.

Thank you to the man whose leadership I seek most to emulate, who I am so
grateful to be sworn in by today, Senator Bernie Sanders.

Thank you to my teams: from the Assembly, to the campaign, to the
transition and, now, the team I am so excited to lead from City Hall.

Thank you to my parents, Mama and Baba, for raising me, for teaching me how
to be in this world, and for having brought me to this city. Thank you to
my family, from Kampala to Delhi. And thank you to my wife, Rama, for being
my best friend, and for always showing me the beauty in everyday things.

Most of all, thank you to the people of New York.

A moment like this comes rarely. Seldom do we hold such an opportunity to
transform and reinvent. Rarer still is it the people themselves whose hands
are the ones upon the levers of change.

And yet we know that too often in our past, moments of great possibility
have been promptly surrendered to small imagination and smaller ambition.
What was promised was never pursued, what could have changed remained the
same. For the New Yorkers most eager to see our city remade, the weight has
only grown heavier, the wait has only grown longer.

In writing this address, I have been told that this is the occasion to
reset expectations, that I should use this opportunity to encourage the
people of New York to ask for little and expect even less. I will do no
such thing. The only expectation I seek to reset is that of small
expectations.

Beginning today, we will govern expansively and audaciously. We may not
always succeed. But never will we be accused of lacking the courage to try.

To those who insist that the era of big government is over, hear me when I
say this: No longer will City Hall hesitate to use its power to improve New
Yorkers’ lives.

For too long, we have turned to the private sector for greatness, while
accepting mediocrity from those who serve the public. I cannot blame anyone
who has come to question the role of government, whose faith in democracy
has been eroded by decades of apathy. We will restore that trust by walking
a different path: one where government is no longer solely the final
recourse for those struggling, one where excellence is no longer the
exception.

We expect greatness from the cooks wielding a thousand spices, from those
who stride out onto Broadway stages, from our starting point guard at
Madison Square Garden. Let us demand the same from those who work in
government. In a city where the mere names of our streets are associated
with the innovation of the industries that call them home, we will make the
words “City Hall” synonymous with both resolve and results.

As we embark upon this work, let us advance a new answer to the question
asked of every generation: Who does New York belong to?

For much of our history, the response from City Hall has been simple: It
belongs only to the wealthy and well-connected, those who never strain to
capture the attention of those in power.

Working people have reckoned with the consequences. Crowded classrooms and
public housing developments where the elevators sit out of order. Roads
littered with potholes and buses that arrive half an hour late, if at all.
Wages that do not rise and corporations that rip off consumers and
employees alike.

And still, there have been brief, fleeting moments where the equation
changed.

Twelve years ago, Bill de Blasio stood where I stand now as he promised to
“put an end to economic and social inequalities” that divided our city into
two.

In 1990, David Dinkins swore the same oath I swore today, vowing to
celebrate the “gorgeous mosaic” that is New York, where every one of us is
deserving of a decent life.

And nearly six decades before him, Fiorello La Guardia took office with the
goal of building a city that was “far greater and more beautiful” for the
hungry and the poor.

Some of these Mayors achieved more success than others. But they were
unified by a shared belief that New York could belong to more than just a
privileged few. It could belong to those who operate our subways and rake
our parks, those who feed us biryani and beef patties, picanha and pastrami
on rye. And they knew that this belief could be made true if only government
dared to work hardest for those who work hardest.

Over the years to come, my administration will resurrect that legacy. City
Hall will deliver an agenda of safety, affordability, and abundance, where
government looks and lives like the people it represents, never flinches in
the fight against corporate greed, and refuses to cower before challenges
that others have deemed too complicated.

In so doing, we will provide our own answer to that age-old question — who
does New York belong to? Well, my friends, we can look to Madiba and the
South African Freedom Charter: New York “belongs to all who live in it.”

Together, we will tell a new story of our city.

This will not be a tale of one city, governed only by the one percent. Nor
will it be a tale of two cities, the rich versus the poor.

It will be a tale of eight and a half million cities, each of them a New
Yorker with hopes and fears, each a universe, each of them woven together.

The authors of this story will speak Pashto and Mandarin, Yiddish and
Creole. They will pray in mosques, at shul, at church, at Gurdwaras and
Mandirs and temples. And many will not pray at all.

They will be Russian Jewish immigrants in Brighton Beach, Italians in
Rossville, and Irish families in Woodhaven — many of whom came here with
nothing but a dream of a better life, a dream which has withered away. They
will be young people in cramped Marble Hill apartments where the walls
shake when the subway passes. They will be Black homeowners in St. Albans
whose homes represent a physical testament to triumph over decades of
lesser-paid labor and redlining. They will be Palestinian New Yorkers in
Bay Ridge, who will no longer have to contend with a politics that speaks
of universalism and then makes them the exception.

Few of these eight and a half million will fit into neat and easy boxes.
Some will be voters from Hillside Avenue or Fordham Road who supported
President Trump a year before they voted for me, tired of being failed by
their party’s establishment. The majority will not use the language that we
often expect from those who wield influence. I welcome the change. For too
long, those fluent in the good grammar of civility have deployed decorum to
mask agendas of cruelty.

Many of these people have been betrayed by the established order. But in
our administration, their needs will be met. Their hopes and dreams and
interests will be reflected transparently in government. They will shape
our future.

And if for too long these communities have existed as distinct from one
another, we will draw this city closer together. We will replace the
frigidity of rugged individualism with the warmth of collectivism. If our
campaign demonstrated that the people of New York yearn for solidarity,
then let this government foster it. Because no matter what you eat, what
language you speak, how you pray, or where you come from, the words that
most define us are the two we all share: New Yorkers.

And it will be New Yorkers who reform a long-broken property tax system.
New Yorkers who will create a new Department of Community Safety that will
tackle the mental health crisis and let the police focus on the job they
signed up to do. New Yorkers who will take on the bad landlords who
mistreat their tenants and free small business owners from the shackles of
bloated bureaucracy. And I am proud to be one of those New Yorkers.

When we won the primary last June, there were many who said that these
aspirations and those who held them had come out of nowhere. Yet one man’s
nowhere is another man’s somewhere. This movement came out of eight and a
half million somewheres — taxi cab depots and Amazon warehouses, D.S.A.
meetings and curbside domino games. The powers that be had looked away from
these places for quite some time — if they’d known about them at all — so
they dismissed them as nowhere. But in our city, where every corner of
these five boroughs holds power, there is no nowhere and there is no no
one. There is only New York, and there are only New Yorkers.

Eight and a half million New Yorkers will speak this new era into
existence. It will be loud. It will be different. It will feel like the New
York we love.

No matter how long you have called this city home, that love has shaped
your life. I know that it has shaped mine.

This is the city where I set land-speed records on my Razor scooter at the
age of 12. Quickest four blocks of my life.

The city where I ate powdered doughnuts at halftime during A.Y.S.O. soccer
games and realized I probably wouldn’t be going pro, devoured too-big
slices at Koronet Pizza, played cricket with my friends at Ferry Point
Park, and took the 1 train to the BX10 only to still show up late to Bronx
Science.

The city where I have gone on hunger strike just outside these gates, sat
claustrophobic on a stalled N train just after Atlantic Avenue, and waited
in quiet terror for my father to emerge from 26 Federal Plaza.

The city where I took a beautiful woman named Rama to McCarren Park on our
first date and swore a different oath to become an American citizen on
Pearl Street.

To live in New York, to love New York, is to know that we are the stewards
of something without equal in our world. Where else can you hear the sound
of the steelpan, savor the smell of sancocho, and pay $9 for coffee on the
same block? Where else could a Muslim kid like me grow up eating bagels and
lox every Sunday?

That love will be our guide as we pursue our agenda. Here, where the
language of the New Deal was born, we will return the vast resources of
this city to the workers who call it home. Not only will we make it
possible for every New Yorker to afford a life they love once again — we
will overcome the isolation that too many feel, and connect the people of
this city to one another.

The cost of child care will no longer discourage young adults from starting
a family, because we will deliver universal child care for the many by
taxing the wealthiest few.

Those in rent-stabilized homes will no longer dread the latest rent hike,
because we will freeze the rent.

Getting on a bus without worrying about a fare hike or whether you’ll be
able to get to your destination on time will no longer be deemed a small
miracle, because we will make buses fast and free.

These policies are not simply about the costs we make free, but the lives
we fill with freedom. For too long in our city, freedom has belonged only
to those who can afford to buy it. Our City Hall will change that.

These promises carried our movement to City Hall, and they will carry us
from the rallying cries of a campaign to the realities of a new era in
politics.

Two Sundays ago, as snow softly fell, I spent 12 hours at the Museum of the
Moving Image in Astoria, listening to New Yorkers from every borough as
they told me about the city that is theirs.

We discussed construction hours on the Van Wyck Expressway and E.B.T.
eligibility, affordable housing for artists and ICE raids. I spoke to a man
named TJ who said that one day a few years ago, his heart broke as he
realized he would never get ahead here, no matter how hard he worked. I
spoke to a Pakistani Auntie named Samina, who told me that this movement
had fostered something too rare: softness in people’s hearts. As she said
in Urdu: *logon ke dil badalgyehe.*

New Yorkers out of eight and a half million. And yet, if anything united
each person sitting across from me, it was the shared recognition that this
moment demands a new politics, and a new approach to power.

We will deliver nothing less as we work each day to make this city belong
to more of its people than it did the day before.

Here is what I want you to expect from the administration that this morning
moved into the building behind me.

We will transform the culture of City Hall from one of “no” to one of “how?”

We will answer to all New Yorkers, not to any billionaire or oligarch who
thinks they can buy our democracy.

We will govern without shame and insecurity, making no apology for what we
believe. I was elected as a democratic socialist and I will govern as a
democratic socialist. I will not abandon my principles for fear of being
deemed radical. As the great Senator from Vermont once said, “What’s
radical is a system which gives so much to so few and denies so many people
the basic necessities of life.”

We will strive each day to ensure that no New Yorker is priced out of any
one of those basic necessities.

And throughout it all we will, in the words of Jason Terrance Phillips,
better known as Jadakiss or J to the Muah, be “outside” — because this is a
government of New York, by New York, and for New York.

Before I end, I want to ask all of you, if you are able, whether you are
here today or anywhere watching, to stand with me.

I ask you to stand with us now, and every day that follows. City Hall will
not be able to deliver on our own. And while we will encourage New Yorkers
to demand more from those with the great privilege of serving them, we will
encourage you to demand more of yourselves as well.

The movement we began over a year ago did not end with our election. It
will not end this afternoon. It lives on with every battle we will fight,
together; every blizzard and flood we withstand, together; every moment of
fiscal challenge we overcome with ambition, not austerity, together; every
way we pursue change in working peoples’ interests, rather than at their
expense, together.

No longer will we treat victory as an invitation to turn off the news. From
today onward, we will understand victory very simply: something with the
power to transform lives, and something that demands effort from each of
us, every single day.

What we achieve together will reach across the five boroughs and it will
resonate far beyond. There are many who will be watching. They want to know
if the left can govern. They want to know if the struggles that afflict
them can be solved. They want to know if it is right to hope again.

So, standing together with the wind of purpose at our backs, we will do
something that New Yorkers do better than anyone else: We will set an
example for the world. If what Sinatra said is true, let us prove that
anyone can make it in New York — and anywhere else too. Let us prove that
when a city belongs to the people, there is no need too small to be met, no
person too sick to be made healthy, no one too alone to feel like New York
is their home.

The work continues, the work endures, the work, my friends, has only just
begun.

Thank you.

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