Many New York Democrats, from Gov. Kathy Hochul to Attorney General Letitia James, quickly spoke up. It took Mamdani over a day to do the same.
Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images
New York City Mayoral Zohran Mamdani (L) and former Mayor Eric Adams attend the annual 9/11 Commemoration Ceremony on September 11, 2025 in New York City.
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani is facing criticism from Democratic leaders over his delayed and muted response to last week’s pro-Hamas protest in Queens that caused nearby schools and a synagogue to close early in anticipation of the demonstration, where dozens of masked protesters chanted “We support Hamas” near the synagogue.
Democratic elected officials across New York — including left-wing politicians hostile to Israel, like Mamdani ally and former City Comptroller Brad Lander — were quick to release statements condemning the support for Hamas that was on display at the demonstration, which was organized by the group Palestinian Assembly for Liberation, [PAL]-Awda, to protest an event held by CapitIL, a Jerusalem-based real estate agency.
The event was held at the Modern Orthodox synagogue Young Israel of Kew Gardens Hills.
A flyer promoting the protest, which took place on a residential street about half a block from the synagogue, called the meeting an “illegal event” promoting “blatant land theft and dispossession.” Keffiyeh-clad demonstrators also chanted “There is only one solution, intifada revolution,” “Globalize the intifada,” and “Death to the IDF” for more than two hours while banging on drums.
“Let’s be crystal clear: this is vile antisemitism,” Lander, who is running to unseat Rep. Dan Goldman (D-NY) as a Mamdani-endorsed challenger in New York’s 10th Congressional District, said on Friday morning. “This should not have to be said: you can oppose land sales in the West Bank, without supporting terrorism & the mass murder of Jews.”
Gov. Kathy Hochul, who endorsed Mamdani in the mayoral election, also weighed in on Friday morning, saying, “Hamas is a terrorist organization that calls for the genocide of Jews. No matter your political beliefs, this type of rhetoric is disgusting, it’s dangerous, and it has no place in New York,”
New York Attorney General Letitia James said Friday midday, “Hamas is a terrorist organization. We do not support terrorists. Period.”
Other New York Democratic leaders who condemned the protest quickly and directly on Thursday and Friday included New York City Comptroller Mark Levine, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand and Reps. Grace Meng and Ritchie Torres.
But the newly inaugurated mayor remained silent Thursday night and much of the following day regarding the demonstration, which marked his first major test in protecting the city’s Jewish community.
His spokesperson did not respond to multiple inquiries from Jewish Insider on Thursday, including one asking whether the mayor’s team had discouraged demonstrators from protesting and another, immediately after the event, asking if he condemned any of the slogans chanted.
Mamdani broke his silence late in the afternoon on Friday when he was asked about the protesters’ pro-Hamas chant by Politico reporter Jason Beeferman while leaving a campaign event in Brooklyn for Democratic Socialists of America-endorsed candidate Claire Valdez, who is running for a Brooklyn-Queens congressional seat held by Rep. Nydia Velazquez (D-NY)
“That language is wrong,” Mamdani replied while walking to a car after the event. “I think that language has no place in New York City.”
Mamdani later followed up with an additional statement just after Shabbat started in New York: “As I made clear, the rhetoric and displays that we saw and heard in Kew Gardens Hills last night are wrong and have no place in our city,” he said. “My team is in close touch with the NYPD regarding last night’s protest and counterprotest. We will continue to ensure New Yorkers’ safety entering and exiting houses of worship as well as the constitutional right to protest.”
On Saturday, when asked at a press conference why he didn’t “condemn both sides,” Mamdani answered, “I absolutely have an opposition to the sale of land in the West Bank. It’s a violation of international law and that comes from my belief in the importance of following international law.”
“It’s been a distressing few months for Jews everywhere. I appreciated the mayor’s statement,” Democratic strategist Chris Coffey told JI. “Could it have come earlier? Sure. But being mayor in the first week is pure pandemonium and chaos. The important part is that he got it right.”
But Mamdani’s eventual response was met with continued concern from Jewish leaders over its delay and neglect to specifically condemn Hamas. In a sign of the far-left character of his political base, he also received criticism from DSA-aligned allies in his own camp for criticizing the protest.
“It’s a step up from his statement [after the Oct. 7, 2023 terrorist attacks in Israel], which failed to even mention Hamas. Still, it’s concerning that it takes the mayor of the city with the largest population of Jews outside of Israel nearly 24 hours to condemn blatant antisemitism when every other major elected in New York found the time,” Democratic state Assemblymember Sam Berger, who represents the district where the protest took place, told JI on Sunday.
Another Democratic Queens assemblymember, Nily Rozic, told JI, “It shouldn’t take the mayor [nearly] 24 hours to condemn an antisemitic protest layered in antisemitism, let alone one that openly supports terror organizations.”
Rozic expressed dismay over the timing of the statement after Shabbat.
“If the mayor were genuine in his concern over Jewish safety he would have acted with urgency and not waited so long, when most of those impacted wouldn’t see his statement until long after,” she told JI.
“I am a vocal & passionate support[er] of Mamdani’s,” Adam Carlson, founding partner of the polling group Zenith Polls, wrote on X. “But I’ve waited patiently all day for him to forcefully condemn Hamas — watching dozens of other city & state electeds do so — and am still waiting. This is not only hurtful to me, but it’s bad politics & distracts from his agenda.”
New York magazine writer David Freedlander posted screenshots on X of texts sent to him on Friday afternoon from two city political operatives, both “broadly supportive of Mamdani.”
The messages were identical: “Zohran is completely blowing this pro-Hamas protest thing.”
Plus, Poland’s role in the Holocaust relitigated
JASON REDMOND/AFP via Getty Images
Former Binance CEO Changpeng "CZ" Zhao (C) departs federal court in Seattle, Washington, on April 30, 2024. Changpeng Zhao, the founder and former chief executive of Binance, the world's largest cryptocurrency exchange, was sentenced today to four months in prison after he pleaded guilty to violating laws against money laundering.
Good afternoon.
This P.M. briefing is reserved for our premium subscribers like you — offering a forward-focused read on what we’re tracking now and what’s coming next.
I’m Gabby Deutch, senior national correspondent at Jewish Insider. I’ll be curating the Daily Overtime for you today, along with assists from my colleagues. Please don’t hesitate to share your thoughts and feedback by replying to this email.
📡On Our Radar
Notable developments and interesting tidbits we’re tracking
A new federal lawsuit filed on behalf of families of victims of Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, attacks accuses the crypto giant Binance of knowingly facilitating the transfer of hundreds of millions of dollars to U.S.-designated foreign terror organizations on an “industrial scale,” Jewish Insider’s Matthew Kassel reports. The family members allege that Binance’s actions helped contribute to the deadly incursion in Israel that killed around 1,200 people and took more than 250 hostages…
The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation — the controversial U.S.- and Israel-backed aid mechanism launched earlier this year to provide humanitarian assistance to civilians in Gaza from a source other than the United Nations — announced on Monday that it would shut down. GHF said in a statement that it had distributed 187 million meals, marking a “successful completion of its emergency mission”…
Thomas Rose, the U.S. ambassador to Poland, delivered an address last week saying claims that Poland was complicit in Nazis’ crimes against Jews in the country during the Holocaust are a “grotesque falsehood,” which he likened to a “blood libel against the Polish people and Polish nation,” Jewish Telegraphic Agency reports. The remarks from Rose, a former publisher of The Jerusalem Post, have reignited a heated debate about whether Poland bears responsibility for the country’s treatment of Jews during World War II — or if the country had itself fallen victim to the Nazis…
NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch visited Park East Synagogue on Shabbat, days after antisemitic demonstrators gathered outside the Manhattan synagogue to protest an event promoting immigration to Israel. Tisch told congregants that the NYPD “fell short” in ensuring people could “easily enter and leave shul,” according to a report from the Shabbat service…
The Pentagon is investigating and threatening to court-martial Sen. Mark Kelly (D-AZ), a retired U.S. Navy captain, following his appearance in a video posted last week by several Democratic lawmakers urging U.S. military servicemembers to disobey illegal orders, according to a new statement from the Department of Defense. President Donald Trump has called the lawmakers’ actions “seditious” and “treasonous,” and suggested they should face trial. Kelly said he won’t be “silenced by bullies”…
As Democrats take stock of their electoral losses last year, longtime Democratic strategist James Carville argues in a New York Times op-ed published Monday that Democrats need to abandon the “era of performative woke politics” and instead “embrace a sweeping, aggressive, unvarnished, unapologetic and altogether unmistakable platform of pure economic rage” as the “only way out of the abyss”…
Senior BBC leaders addressed questions about the network’s impartiality during a parliamentary committee hearing in London on Monday afternoon. The inquiry comes as the broadcaster faces down the threat of a lawsuit from Trump, who is unhappy with what BBC critics have described as a deceptively edited clip of the president. The BBC is facing further criticism after a former advisor to the British news organization accused it of bias on topics including Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza and transgender issues…
Talks between the U.S. and Ukraine on a Ukraine-Russia peace plan are at a “critical moment,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said on Monday, after high-level negotiations between the two countries over the weekend. A joint statement from the White House and Zelensky’s office, released Sunday night, said the talks were “highly productive” and that “meaningful progress” had been made, after an early draft of the proposed peace deal sparked concerns that it did not demand enough concessions from Moscow. Zelensky has not yet agree to the deal…
Seventeen Hamas terrorists were killed or captured by Israeli forces in eastern Rafah on the IDF’s side of the Gaza ceasefire lines on Sunday, after over 200 of them were trapped there when the ceasefire went into effect…
An ongoing public dispute between Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz and IDF Chief of Staff Eyal Zamir about investigations over military failures around Oct. 7 continued on Monday, leading Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to reportedly invite the two for a private meeting with the goal of resolving the feud…
The Gaza terror group Palestinian Islamic Jihad said on Monday that it had “found” the body of another deceased Israeli hostage, though the group did not publicly indicate if or when it plans to hand over the body — one of three remaining in the Gaza Strip…
A federal judge in New York tossed out separate criminal cases against former FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James, arguing that Trump’s appointment of the prosecutor in those cases was not valid…
The organizers of the Eurovision Song Contest announced new rules to limit the influence of audience voting, following allegations that Israel meddled in the vote…
⏩ Tomorrow’s Agenda, Today
An early look at tomorrow’s storylines and schedule to keep you a step ahead
Keep an eye out in tomorrow’s Jewish Insider for a look at the status of Iran’s nuclear program amid a series of recent reports that have raised questions about whether the Islamic Republic is seeking to rebuild — with Russia’s help — the nuclear sites that sustained extensive damage from June’s U.S. and Israeli airstrikes.
We also will be reporting on lawmakers’ reactions to the revelations that a significant share of anti-Israel and antisemitic content on X — on both the far right and far left — is being produced overseas.
And we’ll be talking to ESPN college football commentator Paul Finebaum about his possible interest in running in Alabama’s Senate race, as he discusses how his Jewish upbringing shaped his worldview.
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By Jacob Kornbluh & JI Staff
DEEP DIVE: “How To Lose $1 Billion: Yeshiva University Blows Its Future on Loser Hedge Funds” by Steven I. Weiss in TakePart: “What they couldn’t have known… a decade ago was that the real danger in Yeshiva’s new leadership was not to the school’s spiritual welfare but to its very existence. Over the years to come, the new leadership at Yeshiva would ramp up risk in the school’s investment portfolio, vastly increase spending, and do little to insure against a rainy day. When rainy days did arrive, with the global financial meltdown of 2008, Yeshiva was heavily exposed. Today, its finances are overwhelmed by a sea of red ink. According to a recent announcement by credit ratings agency Moody’s, the school will run out of cash next year. (more…)
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