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Zohran Mamdani riding high despite New York Post’s daily demonization
New York Post newspaper features a story for Zohran Mamdani's mayoral election win, with the communist hammer and sickle symbol, on 5 November 2025. Photograph: Eduardo Muñoz/Reuters View image in fullscreen New York Post newspaper features a story for Zohran Mamdani's mayoral election win, with the communist hammer and sickle symbol, on 5 November 2025. Photograph: Eduardo Muñoz/Reuters Analysis Zohran Mamdani riding high despite New York Post’s daily demonization Adam Gabbatt The media-savvy mayor’s popularity has only grown as the Murdoch-owned tabloid has thrown everything at him The rightwing New York Post has attacked Zohran Mamdani as a communist, a hater of the police, an antisemite, a driver-away-of-billionaires, and as someone who isn’t very good at bench press. But six months into his mayoralty, Mamdani has so far succeeded where most of his predecessors have failed: he has bested the city’s most powerful tabloid. Despite enduring near daily criticism from the Post, which is owned by Rupert Murdoch, since he launched his campaign for mayor in late 2024, Mamdani’s popularity in the city has grown in line with his influence – which saw the three candidates he endorsed for Congress win their primaries in June. “The New York Post is very influential, but there’s a real chance that it has met its match in Mamdani, that’s the shift here, and there’s never been a politician of his national stature and ability to combat the Post until he arrived on the scene,” said Ross Barkan, an author and columnist whose latest book, The Revolutionary : Zohran Mamdani and the Remaking of American Politics, will be released in October. Indeed, rather than Mamdani being diminished by rightwing attacks, a Siena University poll in late June found that Mamdani’s favorability had actually increased over the previous two months. About 58% of New Yorkers approve of the mayor, with only 26% disapproving – ratings that are better than the Democratic party as a whole. The popularity surge is not for want of trying from the Post, which publishes multiple pieces on the mayor every day. From Monday to Wednesday this week the Post has published 29 pieces that were tagged “Zohran Mamdani”, stories which ranged from criticizing the mayor over his stance on Israel , for his plans for public supermarkets , for his plans to invest more in public schools , over the spelling of a police officer’s name, for “ignoring Little Italy” on a map of New York’s immigrant neighborhoods, and for his wife going on holiday . Historically, the Post has managed to weaken liberal mayors. Bill de Blasio, a progressive, served two terms as mayor from 2014 to 2021, but parts of his agenda stalled in the face of relentless criticism – as did his subsequent bid for the presidency. “He did have relative popularity, but he was never beloved, and he did not have the same ability, unlike Mamdani, to exert his political will in various [political] races,” Barkan said. He said the Post had failed to find