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Home » Transcript: Zohran Mamdani on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart

Transcript: Zohran Mamdani on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart

Read the full transcript of New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani’s interview on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart on “Reimagining NYC Through Safety and Affordability”, October 27, 2025.

Welcome to The Daily Show

JON STEWART: My guest tonight, he represents Queens in the New York State assembly and he is the Democratic nominee for mayor of New York City. Please welcome to the show Zohran Mamdani.

Oh, very nice. Oh, very nice. This is it? These are the people you would like to represent?

ZOHRAN MAMDANI: Yes.

JON STEWART: The New York City people. I’m curious about that. You know, I had spoken with you months ago and I felt a real love that you had for New York City. Now that you’ve gotten to know us, still there?

ZOHRAN MAMDANI: Still love it.

JON STEWART: Really?

ZOHRAN MAMDANI: Still love this.

JON STEWART: All of it?

ZOHRAN MAMDANI: All of it. All of it. All of it.

The Final Days of the Campaign

JON STEWART: What do you got now? You got three days? Four?

ZOHRAN MAMDANI: We’ve got about eight days left.

JON STEWART: Eight days. And what is that? In that moment, do you have to keep… What do you think you need to do to close the deal, to keep this? You are clearly right now in the front running position. I can tell because they’ve gone 9/11 on you. So that’s clearly a sign of a closing argument. So what do you feel like you’ve got to do to close the deal with New York citizens?

ZOHRAN MAMDANI: You know, it is in many ways the same thing that got us here, which is canvassing.

JON STEWART: Oh, really?

ZOHRAN MAMDANI: You know, for all of the focus on rallies, on commercials, on debates, it really comes back to people speaking to other New Yorkers about the city that we all love. We have 90,000 volunteers right now on the campaign. And it’s 90,000 people who are picking up the phone, phone banking someone that they don’t know. 90,000 people who have knocked on a door of a New Yorker they’ve never met. 90,000 people who just wait for 15 seconds and hope someone will open that door.

JON STEWART: More than anything, it’s strangers coming to the door or calling them.

Building Community Through Politics

ZOHRAN MAMDANI: You know, I think this is the thing: for people that we’re often characterized as being rude, I will tell you that New Yorkers have been so kind in the experiences they’ve had with our volunteers, because what they’re speaking to is another New Yorker.

And it’s an understanding that politics is not something you have, it’s something that you do. And in this moment where politics has become just another word for division, for not just Republicans, but also Democrats, these New Yorkers are ones who’ve understood that you never hate someone more than before you know them.

Knocking on that door, having that conversation doesn’t just win the election for us. It also starts to build the city that we want to lead.

JON STEWART: What’s the kind of feedback that you get from your volunteers in the field? And what about for you, canvassing? Because I have to tell you, one of the most, I thought, shrewdest campaign moves, and this was in the primary, not in the general, is when you walked from the top of Manhattan all the way down to the bottom and just met people.

You’ve got to be very confident in yourself to do that, because New Yorkers will generally tell you what they think when they see you.

ZOHRAN MAMDANI: And even when they are telling you something that’s technically supportive, it sounds like you’re being heckled.

JON STEWART: That is what we do.

ZOHRAN MAMDANI: I was on Nostrand Avenue a few days ago, and this woman just pulled up in her car. She was like, “I’m voting for you.” I was like… I don’t… thank you. It just sounded like I was about to get my a whooped. But it was by my voter, so it was fine.

JON STEWART: And New Yorkers, by the way, no one will be as mad at you if it doesn’t go right as the people who love you. Now, have you felt that as well?

The Opportunity of High Expectations

ZOHRAN MAMDANI: You know, it’s often framed as a burden or as an obligation.

JON STEWART: Right.

ZOHRAN MAMDANI: But frankly, I think it’s an opportunity. It’s an opportunity to actually show that this whole campaign where we’ve talked about freezing the rent, making buses faster and free, delivering universal childcare—these are not just slogans. These are commitments.

And when we deliver them here in New York City, it will be also the delivery of a politics that can actually aspire for more than what you’re living through. And for so many people across the city, politics has just become synonymous with an argument of “celebrate the little you have or lose that.”

JON STEWART: And it can’t be that zero sum.

ZOHRAN MAMDANI: It can’t be.

Safety and Livability: The Foundation

JON STEWART: Do you have a Mamdani hierarchy of needs? You know, I lived in this city for a very long time, and I can tell you, livability is… if you can run this place, you will earn a great deal of leeway to do all kinds of innovative things. But if people feel disorder, man, you won’t be able to do… And I’ve lived through the eras of New York where it was disorder, and it does make it… people feel it.

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ZOHRAN MAMDANI: I mean, look, public safety is the prerequisite for an affordability agenda. Job one, right? People have to be safe. And we also know that safety is something that you not only deliver with the NYPD, it’s also something that you deliver by ensuring that there are actually jobs that can pay people enough to stay in the city. All of these things are integrated.

JON STEWART: Tell me that last part again.

Addressing Homelessness and Inefficiency

ZOHRAN MAMDANI: Today I was taking the 1 train downtown with a reporter from ABC, and we were having a conversation, and we walk on the train and there’s a homeless man sleeping on the train.

JON STEWART: And is he with the Cuomo campaign?

ZOHRAN MAMDANI: No, but my…

JON STEWART: That’s just bad humor.