Mamdani's lies about the rich are only meant to demonize -- they...

Mamdani's lies about the rich are only meant to demonize -- they...
Source: New York Post

"Together, we will tell a new story of our city," Zohran Mamdani said in his inauguration speech Thursday.

"This will not be a tale of one city, governed only by the 1 percent. Nor will it be a tale of two cities, the rich versus the poor."

And so Mamdani picks up right where former Mayor Bill de Blasio left off, demonizing the wealthy and sowing division.

It wasn't true then, and it isn't true now.

When have the rich been "versus" the poor in New York City?

The top 1% of earners pay 46% of the city's budget -- a budget, by the way, that at $116 billion equals that of the spending for the entire state of Florida.

Were the rich "versus" the poor when they funded billions in social services?

When de Blasio wasted $1 billion on his wife's pointless Thrive mental-health program?

When Mayor Eric Adams sheltered and fed 210,000 migrants from President Joe Biden's open border?

Thanks to Wall Street bankers, tech-company innovators and dreamers of all sorts who want to live in this city, Mamdani has a tax base of which most leaders can only dream.

Mamdani spun a dystopian fantasyland in his speech, asking "who does New York belong to" and then claiming "for much of our history . . . it belongs only to the wealthy and well-connected."

What is he talking about?!

We must have missed the City Council meetings where committee chairs wore cravats and monocles.

For much of our recent history, New York has had one-party rule: the Democrats.

Is he suggesting Koch, Dinkins, de Blasio and Adams were oligarchs?

Mamdani railed against "crowded classrooms and public-housing developments where the elevators sit out of order."

Who is to blame for that, we wonder?

If classrooms are crowded, it's because parents want to get their kids into the best schools, because the union refuses to hold bad teachers to account.

With public housing, they've made residents feel less safe by letting gang members go free without bail.

We spent more per student than almost anywhere else in America.

Our welfare budget is the size of a small country.

Yet Mamdani claimed his predecessors were scared to do things.

"We will govern expansively and audaciously," he said.
"To those who insist that the era of big government is over, hear me when I say this -- no longer will City Hall hesitate to use its power to improve New Yorkers' lives."

It is not how much money we're spending, but the bad ideas that never change.

Before Mayor Mamdani starts writing more checks, maybe he should consider that he needs better solutions.