Assemblymember Zohran Mamdani (D-Queens) finished primary night with an unprecedented upset in the mayor’s race, garnering enough votes to effectively clinch his spot on November’s general election ballot for mayor.
Among a slate of candidates who share similar ideals for the city, the democratic socialist’s ambitious plans for city-run grocery stores, free buses and rent freezes on rent-stabilized units resonated with over 432,000 voters who ranked him as their first choice.
But what about other issues impacting New Yorkers, like building more housing and teaching students to read?
Mamdani and other mayoral candidates responded to questions about these very topics in our Meet Your Mayor quiz. Here’s how the likely Democratic mayoral nominee answered all 18 questions:
1. What is your preferred model for outdoor dining?
Why we asked this question: Owners of cafes and restaurants say they are struggling to participate in a new seasonal outdoor dining program advanced by the City Council, which requires city permits and operates under stricter rules than those that prevailed during the COVID emergency.
Mamdani’s answer: Bring back year-round outdoor dining as it existed during the pandemic
In his own words: Mamdani said he would “eliminate the unnecessary and cumbersome design restrictions placed on restaurants,” in a March 2025 interview with Cityland.
2. Which best describes your approach to bike lanes?
Why we asked this question: Local Law 195 mandates that the Department of Transportation install 250 miles of protected bike lanes by 2026. The agency has yet to install enough lanes to meet its own 50-mile annual target, often falling short by some 20 miles each year.
Mamdani’s answer: Continue to expand the bike lane network and provide more protected lanes.
In his own words: “We have an opportunity here to do immense amounts of pedestrianization for the entire congestion pricing zone…. We have an opportunity to make one-way bike lanes into two-way bike lanes,” he said at a mayoral forum last December.
3. Do you support trash containerization?
Why we asked this question: The Department of Sanitation is rolling out rules requiring household trash to be put into containers for curbside collection. Residences with fewer than 10 apartments must place garbage inside individual bins for pickup, and an upper Manhattan pilot is underway of big bins for larger buildings.
Mamdani’s answer: Promote containerization for all residential buildings
In his own words: “With the current administration’s recent containerization plan, the City missed an opportunity to require residents to put recycling in containers. We should not have any more bags on the sidewalk – instead, small and midsize buildings should use shared on-street containers for all streams of waste, clearing the sidewalks of wheelie bins,” he added in his response.
4. Which statement best reflects your preferred approach to policing?
Why we asked this question: All major categories of crime are far above pre-pandemic levels, especially felony assaults, while the number of NYPD officers has declined below the department’s budgeted headcount. The current mayor has intensified criminal enforcement of quality-of-life offenses.
Mamdani’s answer: Maintain roughly the current size of the police force and focus enforcement on serious crimes
In his own words: “Police have a critical role to play, but right now we’re relying on them to deal with the failures of our social safety net — which prevents them from doing their actual jobs,” he said in his response. He also vows to “create the Department of Community Safety to prevent violence before it happens” and disband the NYPD Strategic Response Group.
5. How should the NYPD enforce transit fares?
Why we asked this question: The state-run Metropolitan Transportation Authority estimated that in 2022 it lost $600 million in revenue due to subway and bus fare evasion. The MTA reported a modest decrease in fare evasion during the last three months of 2024, even as fare evasion arrests more than doubled compared with the same period a year earlier.
Mamdani’s answer: Do not issue summonses for fare nonpayment
In his own words: “Only a third of the almost one million adult New Yorkers who are eligible access Fair Fares. At its core, this is an economic crisis, and we must address it as such,” he said in his response to the survey.
6. The number of people incarcerated at Rikers Island is approaching double the capacity of planned new jails. What would you do as the next mayor?
Why we asked this question: The four new borough-based jails – meant to replace the Rikers Island complex and place incarcerated folks in areas closer to their families and courts — will have 4,160 beds. As of March, 7,067 people were incarcerated at Rikers.
Mamdani’s answer: Stay on course with the Rikers Island shutdown, work with DAs to release more people pretrial or divert them from prosecution entirely
In his own words: Mamdani committed to closing Rikers and pointed to a need to invest in alternatives for incarceration at a mayoral forum in March.
7. What is your preferred path to creating more affordable housing?
Why we asked this question: New York City is short by half a million homes by some estimates, and over half of the city’s households are rent-burdened –— spending more than 30% of their income on housing.
Mamdani’s answer: Promote policies that give renters more control over their housing and curb real estate speculation
In his own words: “To achieve our goal of housing every New Yorker, we must reform our disjointed planning and zoning processes to create a holistic vision for affordability, equity, and growth. I will create a comprehensive, citywide planning process,” he said in response to the survey.
8. How would you manage decaying public housing?
Why we asked this question: The New York City Housing Authority operates under a federal monitor who is overseeing repairs. Dozens of developments now operate under private management via programs that invest in upgrades, including Rental Assistance Demonstration, or “RAD.”
Mamdani’s answer: Public housing is public. Stop bringing in private management to take over
In his own words: “Prioritize resident-led processes to address NYCHA’s ongoing capital needs, while finding new solutions…. I also vow to fight for Albany to overturn its decades of investment and at a bare minimum start to match City funding,” he said in response to the survey.
9. What should the Rent Guidelines Board do next year?
Why we asked this question: Each June, a panel selected by the mayor, representing property owners, tenants and the public, votes on whether to increase the rent on some 960,000 rent-stabilized units and by how much. The board proposed in April to increase rents of one-year leases by as much as 4.75% and two-year leases by as much as 7.75%.
Mamdani’s answer: Freeze rents, period
In his own words: “Yes, I will freeze the rent every single year that I am the mayor of New York City,” he said at a mayoral forum in December.
10. What’s the best way to admit students to specialized high schools?
Why we asked this question: State law requires three coveted specialized high schools to admit students based solely on a single exam’s scores. (Five other schools have adopted the same admissions procedure.) But the results are inequitable: less than 5% of offers last year went to Black students, while 7.6% went to Latino students, far lower than their population share.
Mamdani’s answer: Maintain the SHSAT as the exclusive test for all of the eight schools where it’s currently used for admission.
In his own words: “As a Bronx Science alum and a former standardized test tutor, I’ve seen firsthand the promise and the failure of our specialized high schools and their admissions process,” he said in response to the survey.
11. Just 28% of fourth graders are proficient in reading. What would you do as the next mayor to improve learning?
Why we asked this question: All public elementary schools are now teaching students how to read using city-mandated curricula, aimed at improving literacy rates among the youngest students. Educators typically promote students to the next grade level after a review of their work from the current school year.
Mamdani’s answer: Stay on the current course, since scores are gradually improving.
In his own words: “NYC Reads is an important step in the right direction. We need to continue our citywide commitment to wide-scale literacy efforts, while honing our programming — including providing educators with support,” he said in response to the survey.
12. What is your position on NYC’s sanctuary city laws?
Why we asked this question: NYC laws prohibit most cooperation with immigration enforcement, making exceptions only for the NYPD and Department of Correction to transfer custody where someone sought by federal agents has been convicted of a specified violent crime.
Mamdani’s answer: Change the laws: City authorities should further restrict cooperation with federal authorities.
In his own words: “The Trump administration is waging war on the First Amendment and our constitutional rights as it continues to abduct New Yorkers from across our city. Any effort to cooperate with these efforts is a moral stain on our city. We should strengthen our sanctuary city laws,” he said in response to the survey.
13. How would you deal with President Trump?
Why we asked this question: President Donald Trump has taken numerous steps targeting New York City specifically, including threatening to end congestion pricing that helps fund mass transit and clawing back funds the city uses to aid migrants.
Mamdani’s answer: Resistance is the priority.
In his own words: “What we saw under Donald Trump’s first presidency is there’s far more respect for someone who fights back than someone who simply relents,” he told The New York Editorial Board in February.
14. What is your spending priority for $500 million in opioid settlement funds?
Why we asked this question: Under settlements reached with pharmaceutical companies, the state and city have amassed funds to aid people with substance use disorders. By 2040, the city anticipates that it will receive a total of $500 million.
Mamdani’s answer: Supportive housing services for people with substance use disorders
In his own words: Mamdani said in a statement to THE CITY that he promises to expand access to substance use treatment and safe injection facilities, “ensuring they are equitably located across the city.”
15. Do you support involuntary hospitalization for people with volatile episodes of mental illness?
Why we asked this question: New changes to the state’s involuntary commitment law make it easier for police and health professionals to admit people with mental illness — even without evidence of imminent physical harm to themselves or others — to hospitals.
Mamdani’s answer: I oppose the law’s premise: People’s rights to make their own mental health care decisions should not be compromised.
In his own words: “I will build an integrated system of mental health, housing and substance use services, such that hospitalization is rare,” he said in response to the survey.
16. What kind of manager would you be as the next mayor?
Mamdani’s answer: The Delegator — hire top talent to run agencies and rely on their judgment.
In his own words: “I have seen in previous mayoral administrations, across the ideological spectrum, examples that I would love to bring into my administration of how you can empower the people who know the most about the work that you’re seeking to accomplish,” he told the The New York Editorial Board in February.
17. A generation from now, what’s the one legacy you’d like New Yorkers to recall from the next mayor?
Mamdani’s answer: I expanded opportunities for poor and working-class New Yorkers.
In his own words: “If you make it universal, the benefits are not just fiscal. They’re also public safety. They’re also peace of mind,” he told The New York Editorial Board in February.
18. What kind of early-career experience is most important for the next mayor to have?
Mamdani’s answer: Served as a community or labor organizer