Trump and Mamdani Forge Unexpected Alliance in Oval Office Meeting, Defying Months of Mutual Barbs
WASHINGTON — In a stunning pivot from months of vitriolic exchanges, President Trump and New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani emerged from an Oval Office meeting on Friday with pledges of collaboration on urban affordability and crime, a display of pragmatism that left political observers reeling and prompted accusations of a “power flip” from the president’s critics on the left.

The sit-down, requested by Mr. Mamdani and held under the glare of live television cameras, unfolded against a backdrop of intense anticipation. Mr. Trump had repeatedly branded the 34-year-old democratic socialist a “communist lunatic” during the mayoral campaign, threatening to slash federal aid to New York and even deploy the National Guard to the city if Mr. Mamdani won. Mr. Mamdani, a Ugandan-born state assemblyman who secured a commanding victory earlier this month with over 50 percent of the vote, had fired back by calling Mr. Trump a “despot” in his victory speech, vowing to “show a nation betrayed by Donald Trump how to defeat him.”
Yet as the two men stood side by side before reporters at the close of their 45-minute private discussion, the rhetoric evaporated. Mr. Trump, patting Mr. Mamdani on the arm with uncharacteristic warmth, lavished praise on the incoming mayor. “We had a meeting that actually surprised me,” the president said, smiling broadly. “I expect to be helping him, not hurting him. A big help, because I want New York City to be great again.” Mr. Mamdani, beaming beside him, reciprocated: “We agree on a lot more than I would have thought — building more housing, lowering crime, tackling the cost of living. This is about New Yorkers who are struggling.”
The scene — captured live on C-SPAN and major networks — sparked immediate online frenzy, with #TrumpBendsTheKnee trending worldwide and memes proliferating on X and TikTok. Progressive activists decried it as Mr. Mamdani “selling out” to a “fascist,” while Mr. Trump’s MAGA base expressed bewilderment, one user posting: “Is this the same guy who called Zohran a communist? What happened to draining the swamp?” Late-night host Jimmy Kimmel, in a post-show clip, quipped: “Trump bending the knee? Next he’ll be auditing his own tax returns.”
The meeting’s conciliatory tone marked a sharp departure from the pre-election hostilities. Mr. Trump had endorsed Mr. Mamdani’s opponent, former Gov. Andrew Cuomo, and mocked the mayor-elect’s middle name — Zohran “Kwame” Mamdani — in a Truth Social post announcing the sit-down, putting it in scare quotes as if to imply subversion. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt had doubled down Thursday, calling the invitation “volumes” about Democratic extremism. Mr. Mamdani, the first Muslim and Indian-origin mayor-elect of New York, had prepared meticulously, consulting Gov. Kathy Hochul, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and the Rev. Al Sharpton on strategy.
Behind the handshakes, however, lay a clear power imbalance. Mr. Trump controls vast federal resources — including $10 billion in annual aid to New York — and has a history of withholding funds from Democratic strongholds like Chicago and Los Angeles. Mr. Mamdani, who takes office Jan. 1, 2026, faces immediate hurdles: a ballooning city budget deficit, migrant housing crises and potential ICE raids. “This is about survival,” one Mamdani aide said anonymously. “We can’t afford a war with Washington.”
The discussion, aides said, centered on shared priorities: Mr. Trump pledged federal support for affordable housing initiatives — a Mamdani hallmark — and crime reduction, echoing his “law and order” rhetoric. They also touched on food prices, with Mr. Mamdani pressing for tariff exemptions on imports affecting New York markets. Mr. Trump, in a nod to his campaign promises, agreed to “work out” differences on immigration enforcement, though he reiterated plans to expand deportations.
Analysts hailed Mr. Mamdani’s approach as a masterclass in pragmatism. “He disarmed Trump with flattery and focus on mutual wins,” said Ruth Mandel, director of the Eagleton Institute of Politics at Rutgers University. “It’s risky — his base sees it as capitulation — but it buys time and resources.” Mr. Mamdani’s team had gamed out scenarios, including Trump’s infamous volatility, but the president’s effusiveness caught even them off-guard. “We expected barbs; we got backslaps,” the aide said.
The reaction from Mr. Trump’s orbit was mixed. Representative Elise Stefanik, a New York Republican, tweeted support: “Smart move by the president — New York needs help, not handouts.” But hard-liners like Steve Bannon blasted it on his podcast as “Trump going soft on socialism.” On the Democratic side, Mr. Schumer praised the outreach privately but warned publicly: “Cooperation, yes; compromise on core values, no.” Progressive firebrands, including Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, expressed unease: “Bending the knee to bullies sets a dangerous precedent.”

For Mr. Mamdani, whose upset victory over Mr. Cuomo fractured the Democratic establishment, the meeting underscores his willingness to buck norms. A Queens assemblyman since 2021, he rose on a platform of rent freezes and police reform, drawing comparisons to Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez but with a sharper populist edge. His charm offensive — including a pre-meeting call to Mr. Trump invoking their shared New York roots — paid dividends, but skeptics question its longevity. “Trump’s hugs are tactical,” said one Democratic strategist. “Watch for the knife when funding talks heat up.”
The Oval Office tableau, with Mr. Trump grinning up at the taller Mr. Mamdani, symbolized a fleeting thaw in America’s polarized politics. As Mr. Trump put it: “The better he does, the happier I am.” For a city on the brink — facing $7 billion in deficits and surging homelessness — that happiness may prove New York’s most valuable export.
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