Dispute over a $2,300 rent-stabilized unit escalates into a fierce mayoral campaign clash over who should benefit from affordable housing laws.
New York, NY – The New York City mayor’s race took a sharply personal turn this week after former Governor Andrew M. Cuomo criticized Democratic nominee Zohran Mamdani for living in a rent-stabilized apartment, igniting a broader debate over who should benefit from the city’s housing protections.
The controversy began Friday when Mr. Cuomo accused Mr. Mamdani, who earns $142,000 annually as a state assemblyman, of occupying a $2,300-per-month rent-stabilized unit in Astoria, Queens. Mr. Cuomo argued the apartment should be available to a lower-income resident in greater need of affordable housing.
What started as a pointed remark quickly escalated into a multi-day political clash. By Tuesday, the dispute had not only placed Mr. Mamdani, currently the frontrunner, on the defensive, but also brought the candidates’ differing approaches to tackling New York’s soaring housing costs into sharper focus.
The exchange grew intensely personal. Mr. Cuomo accused his opponent of “callous theft”. He pledged to introduce legislation, bearing Mr. Mamdani’s name, that would require income-based eligibility for the city’s roughly one million rent-stabilized apartments. In response, Mr. Mamdani denounced the proposal as “petty vindictiveness” and accused Mr. Cuomo, along with real estate interests backing his campaign, of contributing to the city’s affordable housing crisis.
The episode underscored the high political stakes in a city where housing affordability remains one of the most urgent and polarizing issues, affecting both policy debates and personal reputations on the campaign trail.