In a political twist that few saw coming, former President Donald Trump has officially endorsed former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo in the final hours before the New York City mayoral election, calling Cuomo “the only one tough enough to save the city.”
The endorsement — dropped in a late-night post on Truth Social and echoed in a fiery radio interview — immediately sent shockwaves through both parties, reshaping the narrative of an already volatile election.
“New York City has ZERO chance of success — or even survival — under Zohran Mamdani’s leadership,” Trump declared. “Andrew Cuomo may be a Democrat, but he’s strong, he’s smart, and he’s the only one who can get the job done.”
Trump’s words ignited a political firestorm, merging two names once considered bitter opponents into one of the most unexpected alliances in modern New York politics.
A Bizarre Alliance: Trump and Cuomo Unite (Sort Of)
For years, Donald Trump and Andrew Cuomo embodied opposing forces in American politics. Cuomo, the three-term Democratic governor who resigned amid scandal in 2021, frequently clashed with Trump during the pandemic and mocked his policies in public briefings. Trump, in turn, derided Cuomo as “incompetent” and “corrupt.”
Now, with both men eyeing political resurgences — and the city’s mayoral race hanging in the balance — their names are suddenly intertwined once again.
“I don’t care if he’s a Democrat or Republican,” Trump said. “New York needs a fighter, not a socialist. Mamdani would destroy what’s left of the city I love.”
Political observers were stunned. Trump’s endorsement of a Democrat, especially one with Cuomo’s history, has been described as “strategic chaos” — a move designed less to lift Cuomo than to undermine the progressive movement represented by Zohran Mamdani, the Democratic Socialist Assemblymember running a populist, left-wing campaign.
Mamdani Fires Back: “Trump’s Endorsement Exposes Cuomo’s True Loyalties”
Within hours of Trump’s announcement, Zohran Mamdani hit back hard.
“Donald Trump’s endorsement of Andrew Cuomo tells you everything you need to know,” Mamdani said in a statement. “When billionaires and power brokers line up behind one man, you can bet he’s not fighting for working people.”
Mamdani, a first-generation American of Ugandan-Indian descent and a self-described democratic socialist, represents the younger, more progressive face of New York’s political future. His campaign has focused on housing affordability, rent control, and redistributing city resources toward working-class communities.
Trump’s endorsement of Cuomo, Mamdani argued, was nothing more than an act of political self-preservation.
“Trump knows I’ll stand up to the real estate billionaires, corporate landlords, and the police unions that have long controlled this city,” Mamdani said. “Cuomo represents their interests. I represent the people’s.”
Cuomo’s Comeback: “I Don’t Need Trump’s Endorsement — But I’ll Take Every Vote”
Andrew Cuomo’s campaign initially tried to distance itself from Trump’s comments — but stopped short of rejecting the endorsement outright.
“I didn’t ask for it, but I welcome support from any New Yorker who believes in competence, safety, and leadership,” Cuomo told reporters. “If Donald Trump finally recognizes that New York needs to be saved, then I guess we agree on that much.”
Behind the scenes, campaign insiders admit the endorsement could be a double-edged sword.
While Trump’s backing might help Cuomo win over moderate and conservative-leaning Democrats tired of far-left policies, it could alienate urban progressives and revive old resentments among Democrats who blame Trump for the city’s political polarization.
Still, Cuomo’s team appears ready to lean into the message of “strength over ideology.”
“This election isn’t about left or right,” said one campaign adviser. “It’s about who can keep New York safe, clean, and functional. Cuomo is that guy.”
Trump’s Strategy: Divide and Dominate
Analysts see Trump’s late-game endorsement as part of a broader effort to fracture the Democratic coalition in the country’s most iconic liberal city.
“Trump is playing chess,” said Dr. Lena Roberts, a political analyst at Columbia University. “By praising Cuomo, he forces progressives and centrists to turn on each other — and keeps his name at the center of every headline.”
The move may also be a preview of Trump’s 2026 national strategy: align with select Democrats who echo his “law and order” message to draw in independent voters while deepening divisions within the left.
“He’s betting that chaos benefits him,” Roberts added. “Every Democratic fight becomes a win for Trump.”
A City on Edge
With New York City facing rising housing costs, record homelessness, and growing crime concerns, the election has become a referendum on what kind of leadership — pragmatic or ideological — voters want.
Cuomo’s platform centers on public safety, infrastructure repair, and economic revitalization, promising to “restore the city’s swagger.” Mamdani’s campaign, by contrast, envisions a redistribution of wealth and resources, promising “a city that serves people, not profit.”
The contrast could not be starker — and Trump’s intervention has only sharpened that divide.
“This election is no longer just about New York,” said journalist Carl Ramos of The Gotham Ledger. “It’s a test of what kind of politics America wants next — power politics or people politics.”
The Public Reacts: Outrage, Laughter, and Disbelief
Social media erupted in the hours after Trump’s statement. Memes, reactions, and think pieces flooded X (formerly Twitter), Instagram, and TikTok.
One viral post read:
“Trump endorsing Cuomo is like Batman teaming up with the Joker — you can’t make this up.”
Another user quipped, “Guess Cuomo’s next press conference will open with ‘Make New York Great Again.’”
Meanwhile, conservative influencers celebrated the move as a “realist endorsement,” claiming that Cuomo’s toughness and pragmatism “make him the last sane Democrat left.”
Progressive activists, however, called the alliance “a betrayal of New York’s values” and vowed to mobilize voters against what they called “the billionaire-political machine.”
The Final Countdown
As election day dawns, New York City stands at a crossroads — a city of contradictions, chaos, and choices.
Trump’s last-minute endorsement may have turned a local contest into a national spectacle. Whether it helps Cuomo, hurts Mamdani, or backfires entirely remains to be seen.
What’s clear is that the battle for the city’s future — between power and populism, between the old guard and the new left — has reached a fever pitch.
“This isn’t just about who runs City Hall,” Mamdani said at a rally in Queens. “It’s about who runs New York — the people or the powerful.”
And in typical Trump fashion, the former president left his followers with one final, incendiary message:
“We’ll see what happens,” he posted. “But if New York chooses wrong — it might not survive it.”