Page 14 - The Indian EYE120525
P. 14

North                       The Indian Eye

                          AMERICANNewsline






         14                                                                                                            DECEMBER 05, 2025

           Trump and Mamdani’s harmonious




              meeting bode well for New Yorkers






        OUR BUREAUA
        Washington, DC / New York, NY
               S President Donald Trump met New York
               City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani at the
        UWhite  House last Friday. The encounter
        with the man who once called himself “Donald
        Trump’s worst nightmare” unfolded far more am-
        icably than anticipated.
            What many expected to be a tense, combat-
        ive encounter between two ideological adversaries
        turned instead into a carefully choreographed dis-
        play of civility and converging interests. Inside the
        Oval Office, where Trump once railed against “so-
        cialists” and “radicals,” he now stood beside one of
        the most prominent left-wing figures in American
        city politics and called the conversation “great.”
        Mamdani, who built his campaign on attacking
        Trump-era policies as “authoritarian,” responded
        in kind, praising the president’s willingness to fo-
        cus on “shared purpose.”
            According to both leaders, their talks revolved
        around housing, living costs and inflation—issues
        that defined Mamdani’s insurgent campaign and
        also powered Trump’s 2024 return to the White
        House. “We’re going to be helping him, to make   his claim that he had helped de-escalate the May   cooperation with  Washington would  depend on
        everybody’s dream come true, having a strong and   confrontation between India and Pakistan, folding   respect for New York’s values. “I’ll work with the
        very safe New York,” Trump told reporters, pre-  that narrative into a broader list of “eight peace   President when it benefits New Yorkers. And I’ll
        senting himself not as Mamdani’s antagonist, but   deals” he says his administration brokered. India   fight like hell when our values are at stake.”
        as a partner in governing the country’s largest city.  has consistently rejected suggestions of third-party   The political stakes for all three leaders are
            Mamdani echoed that tone of cautious partner-  mediation, pointing instead to its own Operation   high. For Mamdani, this was an early national au-
        ship. “What I really appreciate about the president,”  Sindoor and the eventual ceasefire understanding   dition as he prepares to become New York’s first
        he said, “is that the meeting that we had focused not   of May 10, but Trump showed no sign of backing   South Asian and first Indian American mayor, and
        on places of disagreement, which there are many,  away from his version of events. For Mamdani—of   its youngest in more than a century. Born in Kam-
        and also focused on the shared purpose that we   Indian heritage and deeply aware of South Asian   pala to filmmaker Mira Nair and academic Mah-
        have in serving New Yorkers.” For a politician who   politics—the moment was a reminder of the com-  mood Mamdani, he moved to Queens at the age of
        ran on promising to stand up to Washington, the   plicated terrain he now occupies: a progressive   seven and became a US citizen in 2018. His rapid
        symbolism of standing next to Trump and speaking   mayor-elect dependent on federal support, stand-  rise from state lawmaker to City Hall has unsettled
        the language of cooperation was significant, if risky.  ing beside a president who routinely rewrites glob-  conservatives and energised progressives, making
            Throughout the press availability, Trump went   al crises in his own image.            his posture towards Trump a crucial test of how he
        out of his way to defuse potential flashpoints. When   Back in New York, Governor Kathy Hochul   will balance confrontation with pragmatism.
        a reporter pressed Mamdani about his past com-  moved quickly to frame the meeting on her own   And for New Yorkers, the unusual harmony on
        ments comparing Trump to a fascist, the president   terms. In a strongly worded statement, she wel-  display in the Oval Office offered at least the prom-
        jumped in with a shrug: “I’ve been called much   comed Trump’s “renewed commitment” to New   ise of something concrete: a mayor and a president,
        worse than a despot.” When the question was re- York and his focus on affordability and safety, but   poles apart in background and belief, acknowledg-
        peated, Trump again intervened: “That’s OK. You   condemned Islamophobic attacks against Mam-  ing that affordability, housing and security matter
        can just say yes. OK? It’s easier. It’s easier than   dani from within the president’s own party. Some   more than labels. Whether the warmth survives
        explaining it. I don’t mind.” The exchange drew   Republican  figures  have  repeatedly  branded  the   the first serious clash over immigration, policing
        laughter, but it also served a purpose—Trump sig-  mayor-elect a “jihadist,” a label Hochul called   or federal funds remains to be seen. But for one
        nalled that he was willing to absorb past insults if  “unacceptable” and “without place in our politics.”  afternoon, the city that so often lives at the fault
        the mayor-elect was prepared to work with him.  “I appreciate that the President  rejected ef-  line of national politics saw its next mayor and its
            The White House event also became a plat-  forts by members of his own party to weaponize   current  president  agree  on  a  simple  idea—that
        form for Trump’s familiar foreign-policy boast-  the mayor-elect’s background, faith, and identity   New Yorkers deserve more from Washington than
        ing. Standing alongside Mamdani, he repeated   for political gain,” she said, while warning that   endless war of words.


                                                               www.TheIndianEYE.com
   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19