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Mamdani’s Victimhood Claims Distract from Bigger Issues in NYC Race

On October 24, 2025 Zohran Mamdani staged an impassioned press conference outside a Bronx mosque, declaring that Islamophobia is “endemic” and vowing he will no longer hide his faith in public life. He framed himself as a target of a city-wide campaign of bigotry and demanded solidarity while leaning hard on identity politics to galvanize his base.

Patriots should look past the tearful rhetoric and ask why a mayoral frontrunner is playing the victim card while legitimate questions swirl about his past statements and associations. Republicans in Washington and others have urged probes into his naturalization and flagged his ties to far-left groups, and those are not the kinds of distractions New Yorkers need from the crime and homelessness crises.

Conservative voices on cable and talk radio did not buy Mamdani’s contrived victim narrative, and viewers saw Greg Kelly and others call him out for political theater and opportunism. Kelly’s harsh reaction — summed up bluntly in the conservative media clip now circulating — captures a broader frustration: this is not about faith so much as a calculated attempt to deflect scrutiny.

The substance of Mamdani’s politics matters. He is an avowed democratic socialist with a history of provocative remarks about the Israel-Gaza conflict that critics say flirt with dangerous rhetoric, including debate over his past comments about “intifada” that many Americans understandably found alarming. Voters deserve clear answers about whether his positions translate into hostility toward law-abiding allies and whether they would make New York less safe.

And let’s be clear: the left’s attempt to paint every political attack as “Islamophobia” is a tactic to shut down debate and shield questionable policy choices from accountability. Even after the controversy over an AI-generated Cuomo ad and heated comments from opponents, the proper response is scrutiny and clarity — not sanctimonious victim politics that blame America first.

Conservative leaders who have warned about Mamdani’s agenda are not scaremongering; they’re sounding the alarm about the practical consequences of radical experiments in governance. Figures like Rudy Giuliani and other center-right commentators have repeatedly told viewers that a socialist mayor who soft-pedals crime and social rot would be a disaster for every hardworking family in the city.

Election Day is coming fast — Tuesday, November 4, 2025 — and New Yorkers must decide whether they want policies that prioritize public safety, assimilation, and prosperity or a politics of grievance and identity that rewards theater over results. Don’t be distracted by the tearful speeches; read the record, watch the rhetoric, and make a choice that protects your neighborhood, your family, and the future of the city.

For those who care about preserving American civic life, Greg Kelly’s blunt assessment — that Mamdani is “no victim” but a political operator playing to emotion — is a useful wake-up call. Patriots should demand straight answers, tougher scrutiny, and above all a mayor who puts law and order, common-sense governance, and traditional American values ahead of viral press conferences and identity-driven messaging.

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