Trump says he expects 'civil' meeting at White House with Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani
Watch: What Trump and Mamdani have said about each other
- Published
New York's incoming mayor, Zohran Mamdani, and President Donald Trump will meet on Friday at the White House, after months of trading barbs and insults during the city's recent election.
Mamdani, a 34-year-old Democratic socialist, won New York City's mayoral race earlier this month, defeating former governor Andrew Cuomo by nine points. While he was little known outside of New York before the election, he has now become a nationally recognised figure.
Trump said in a statement the "communist mayor" requested the meeting, which would take place in the Oval Office.
Mamdani told reporters on Thursday that the meeting would focus on public safety, affordability and economic security.

Mamdani said the two will discuss public safety and affordability in an Oval Office meeting
"I intend to make it clear to President Trump that I will work with him on any agenda that benefits New Yorkers," Mamdani said. "If an agenda hurts New Yorkers, I will also be the first to say something."
The mayor-elect's spokesperson Dora Pekec said the meeting with Trump was customary for an incoming mayoral administration.
Trump said in a Fox News radio interview on Friday morning that the meeting would be "civil".
"He's got a different philosophy," said the Republican president of Mamdani. "He's a little bit different. I give a lot of credit for the run. He did a successful run, and we all know that runs are not easy, but I think we'll get along fine."
The White House schedule for Friday listed the meeting for late afternoon and closed to press coverage. But the president's schedule could change before then.
The incoming mayor posted a selfie around 8:30 EST (1330 BST) where he appeared to be sitting in an plane seat.
Mamdani's predecessors - Democrats Bill de Blasio and current Mayor Eric Adams - did not have high-profile Oval Office meetings on their own with a president, although they participated in gatherings at the White House alongside other mayors and officials.
The acrimony between the two-term president and rapidly rising political newcomer began building shortly after Mamdani won the Democratic primary in June.
Trump has decried Mamdani as the "communist" future of the Democratic Party and has threatened to withhold billions of federal dollars to the largest US city because of his victory.
In the weeks leading up to Mamdani's election, Trump - a born-and-raised New Yorker - frequently portrayed the mayor-elect as an extremist who "practically hasn't worked a day in his life".
In an unusual last-minute move, the Republican president endorsed Mamdani's rival, Cuomo, a Democrat who was running as an independent.
In Mamdani's victory speech on election day, he taunted Trump, telling him to "turn the volume up" on his television.
Minutes later, Trump responded on his social media site Truth Social: "…AND SO IT BEGINS!"
Mamdani, a former state assemblyman who campaigned on a platform of affordability in one of the most expensive US cities, shocked many when he won New York City's Democratic primary in June.
"I know that for tens of thousands of New Yorkers, this meeting is between two very different candidates who they voted for for the same reason," Mamdani said Thursday. "They wanted a leader who would take on the cost of living crisis."
He has vowed to take on Trump, hiring extra lawyers to prepare to file legal challenges and pledging that New York will "remain a city of immigrants" as Trump carries out his immigration crackdown across the country.
Watch: Zohran Mamdani on his upcoming meeting with President Trump
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- Published8 November

