New York City voters are about to choose their next mayor. In the final stretch, Zohran Mamdani has emerged as a prominent challenger to former Governor Cuomo, who portrays him as inexperienced. In reality, Mamdani’s record in the State Assembly shows just how experienced he is—at prioritizing ideology over outcomes and making decisions rooted in rigid politics rather than measurable results.
During his term, Mamdani co-sponsored Assembly Bill A05478, titled the Gender Identity Respect, Dignity and Safety Act. The bill requires New York State prisons and jails to house inmates based solely on self-declared gender identity. It eliminates any requirement for medical documentation, legal status changes, or behavioral consistency.
Comparable policies have already produced severe outcomes in other jurisdictions. In California, after SB 132 took effect in 2021, more than 100 biologically male inmates requested transfers to female facilities. The state’s corrections department approved most of those requests. By the end of that year, multiple reports of sexual assault emerged from women incarcerated at the Central California Women’s Facility, and the department began issuing pregnancy prevention kits to female inmates.
In New Jersey, two biologically female inmates at Edna Mahan Correctional Facility became pregnant after the state transferred biologically male inmates into the facility under a similar policy.
Mamdani also co-sponsored Assembly Bill A03506, which prohibits state and local law enforcement officials from inquiring about a person’s immigration status. The bill applies to all categories of public safety personnel, including NYPD officers, school safety agents, and probation officers. It forbids such inquiries even when an individual is detained, charged, or suspected of committing a felony.
Sanctuary-style legislation like A03506 has led to serious public safety consequences. In San Francisco, city officials refused to honor an ICE detainer request for José Inés García Zárate, a five-time deportee with multiple felony convictions. Shortly after his release, he fatally shot 32-year-old Kate Steinle.
Mamdani’s legislative record includes co-sponsorship of A01749, the Packaging Reduction and Recycling Infrastructure Act. The bill mandates that all producers of packaging materials register with a newly created “Producer Responsibility Organization” (PRO) and submit multi-year packaging reduction plans for approval by the state Department of Environmental Conservation. Small businesses are not exempt.
Based on a similar environmental law in Maine, compliance costs range from $7,ooo to $50,000 annually, with most of that cost passed on to retailers and consumers.
Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) laws, such as A01749, have the potential to increase costs on consumer goods by billions annually if implemented. Additionally, administrative compliance with such regulations could consume between 4% and 7% of annual revenue for small businesses, according to industry analyses..
In the social services sector, Mamdani co-sponsored A00063A, a bill that would restructure the child welfare grant process under a new statewide initiative called the Child and Family Well-Being Program. The legislation requires that the program director have ten years of nonprofit leadership experience and, notably, demonstrate a “commitment to racial equity and repair.”. New Yorkers need a mayor who leads with solutions—not someone who filters leadership roles through vague activist language.
Mamdani notably co-sponsored A01042, the Local
Qualification for the list is based on race, ethnicity, immigration status, and other demographic characteristics—not circulation size, factual accuracy, or prior performance. The bill includes no audit mechanism or appeals process for excluded publications.
Under this framework, citywide and regional outlets with large readerships but lacking identity-based credentials would be ineligible for government advertising contracts. Conservative, independent, and mainstream outlets would be effectively excluded from the state media market.
Mamdani backed each of these bills during his time in the Assembly. Together, they reveal a clear pattern: advancing ideological goals with little concern for implementation risks, financial costs, or legal viability.
As a Jewish resident, I’m alarmed by Mamdani’s antisemitic rhetoric and his repeated attacks on Israel. But that’s not the core issue. The greater threat comes from his legislative agenda, which risks public safety, undermines fiscal stability, weakens administrative systems, and politicizes state institutions.
Voters evaluating Mamdani’s candidacy should not rely on campaign slogans or televised debate performances. His Assembly record provides a detailed, measurable forecast of how he would act as Mayor. A candidate’s policies matter more than their platform. And the facts of Mamdani’s legislative history show a pattern of choices with clear and damaging consequences for New York.
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