Zohran Mamdani faces deportation threat from Donald Trump!
Zohran Mamdani had barely finished celebrating his historic mayoral victory when the political ground shifted under his feet. Less than a week after becoming New York City’s first Muslim mayor-elect, he found himself facing something no newly elected American mayor has ever dealt with: the President of the United States publicly suggesting he should lose his citizenship and be deported.
Mamdani, 34, won decisively on November 4, defeating Independent candidate Andrew Cuomo and Republican Curtis Sliwa. With that win, he became the first Muslim, first South Asian, first African-born, and first Millennial elected to lead America’s largest city. It was a landmark moment for New York and, for many, a sign that the city was ready to embrace a different kind of leadership.
But even at his victory rally, Mamdani acknowledged he was anything but a conventional political figure. “The conventional wisdom would tell you that I am far from the perfect candidate,” he told a packed Brooklyn Paramount crowd. “I am young. I am Muslim. I am a democratic socialist. And most damning of all, I refuse to apologize for any of this.” The room erupted, sensing that they weren’t just celebrating a win — they were watching the start of a political shift.
That shift didn’t sit well with everyone.
Trump, back in the White House, wasted no time making Mamdani a target. To Mamdani’s supporters, the hostility was predictable. To legal experts, it was unprecedented. And to Mamdani himself, it was proof of exactly why he ran: to challenge systems that threaten vulnerable communities.
Mamdani’s life didn’t begin in New York. Born in Uganda, he arrived in the U.S. at age seven in 1998. He became a lawful permanent resident, then a citizen in 2018 — which eventually allowed him to run for office. He represented Queens in the State Assembly before launching his mayoral campaign, building a base around issues that hit working-class New Yorkers hard: housing affordability, transit access, childcare costs, and a citywide rent freeze on stabilized apartments. His proposal for free public bus service alone turned him into a champion for residents who felt ignored by decades of establishment politics.
Still, no one expected what came next.
During his primary victory speech in June 2025, Mamdani pledged that he would “stop masked ICE agents from deporting our neighbors.” It was a bold statement — and it triggered immediate backlash from conservative media and from Trump personally. According to ABC News, Trump’s first reaction was simple and blunt: “Well then, we’ll have to arrest him.”
Soon after, Trump publicly floated the idea that Mamdani wasn’t a legitimate citizen. He didn’t offer evidence — only vague insinuations and claims that “a lot of people are saying” Mamdani was in the country illegally. He went on to label him a communist, deliberately ignoring Mamdani’s self-described democratic socialist ideology. The message was clear: this wasn’t just political disagreement. It was personal, and it was meant to intimidate.