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Zohran Mamdani: I Will Tax White Neighborhoods Higher, There Shouldn't Be Any Billionaires 

Zohran Mamdani’s proposal to shift NYC’s property tax burden onto “whiter neighborhoods” has ignited a firestorm of accusations, legal threats, and deepening racial and class divides. As critics cry racism and supporters call it justice, the plan has become a political flashpoint in one of the city’s most volatile mayoral races in decades.

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Zohran Mamdani, the Democratic nominee for New York City mayor, has ignited a fierce controversy with a proposal to overhaul the city’s property tax system by shifting the burden onto “more expensive homes in richer and whiter neighborhoods.”

Outlined in his campaign memo “Stop the Squeeze on NYC Homeowners,” the plan aims to ease taxes on lower-income, predominantly Black and Latino communities while increasing rates in wealthier areas like Brooklyn brownstones. Critics, including Mayor Eric Adams and conservative commentators, have branded the proposal racist and legally dubious, while supporters argue it addresses systemic inequities.

The Proposal: Reforming an Unequal System

Mamdani’s plan, detailed on his campaign website, targets New York City’s property tax system, rooted in a 1981 law that taxes homes based on potential rental income rather than market value. This has led to stark disparities: a $2.15 million Williamsburg property pays $157 annually in taxes, while a $234,840 Bronx home pays $3,917, according to Bloomberg. The memo proposes lowering class assessment percentages for all properties to reduce taxes in outer-borough neighborhoods like Jamaica, Brownsville, and Tremont, while raising rates on wealthier areas described as “richer and whiter,” where assessments are artificially capped. Mamdani also highlights “deed theft,” noting the city is six times more likely to sell tax liens in Black neighborhoods, stripping wealth from these communities.

The goal, Mamdani’s campaign states, is to create a fairer system that alleviates pressure on working-class homeowners while ensuring wealthier areas contribute proportionally. The plan aligns with his broader progressive agenda, which includes a 2% tax on incomes over $1 million, an 11.5% corporate tax rate (up from 7.25%), free buses, universal childcare, a $30 minimum wage, and city-run grocery stores.

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Mamdani’s Defense

During a June 29, 2025, appearance on NBC’s *Meet the Press*, Mamdani rejected accusations of racial targeting, insisting the plan is about systemic fairness, not race. He stated that the term “whiter neighborhoods” reflects the demographic reality of wealthier areas, where white residents have historically had greater wealth-building opportunities. Mamdani emphasized addressing the city’s poverty rate—one in four New Yorkers lives below the poverty line—and denied anti-billionaire sentiment, saying he’s willing to work with all to make NYC equitable. His campaign has not detailed how “whiter” neighborhoods would be defined, such as specific racial percentages or geographic criteria.

Backlash: Accusations of Racism and Legal Threats

The proposal’s explicit reference to “whiter neighborhoods” has drawn sharp criticism:

Media and Political Reaction: The *New York Post* editorial board called it “pure racism,” questioning how “whiteness” would be measured, whether a 51% or 80% white neighborhood qualifies, and sarcastically suggested Mamdani would need to identify “nefarious Caucasians” door-to-door. Fox News’ Joe Concha labeled Mamdani a “full-blown racist,” tying the tax plan to separate accusations of antisemitism and communism. Mayor Adams, running as an independent, criticized Mamdani’s broader agenda, arguing mayors lack authority to raise state income taxes and warning that his socialist policies would harm working-class families.

Legal Concerns: Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon, an Indian-American, threatened a Department of Justice investigation, stating that racial discrimination is illegal under federal and New York law. She questioned the plan’s constitutionality, a sentiment echoed on X by users like @MHarrisonW, who predicted courts would strike it down.

Business Fears: Kathryn Wylde of the Partnership for New York City said business leaders are “terrified” of Mamdani’s tax hikes, fearing they could drive wealthy residents to low-tax locales like Palm Beach. Billionaire Bill Ackman warned that the policies could render NYC “economically unviable,” citing Tax Foundation studies on tax-driven migration.

Support and Broader Context

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Some progressives defend Mamdani, arguing the plan targets structural inequities, not race. On Reddit’s r/politics, users noted that wealthier, predominantly white neighborhoods benefit from an outdated tax system, and the policy would also tax wealthy people of color in those areas. One user wrote that white residents have had more wealth-building opportunities, dismissing critics as overreacting. Bernie Sanders and other progressives have supported Mamdani, condemning racist attacks targeting his Muslim faith and Ugandan-Indian heritage.

Mamdani’s plan faces significant hurdles:

Legal Risks: Critics argue it could violate anti-discrimination laws, with ambiguity around defining “whiter neighborhoods” (e.g., racial demographics or income-based proxies).

State Approval: NYC’s tax rates require state legislature and gubernatorial approval. Governor Kathy Hochul rejected the plan on June 26, 2025, citing affordability concerns and the risk of losing residents.

Economic Impact: Critics warn of capital flight, with high earners potentially leaving for lower-tax states, a trend already noted in NYC’s post-COVID recovery.

Public and Political Divide

Public sentiment, reflected on X, is deeply split. Conservative users like @PooTruePatriot called the policy blatant racism, while @ImMeme0 criticized its discriminatory framing. Progressive supporters argue it addresses systemic issues, pointing to Mamdani’s broader affordability agenda. The *New York Times* noted his primary win drew support from both wealthier and whiter neighborhoods, suggesting broader appeal, but Hochul’s rejection and business opposition point to the plan’s political risks.

With Mamdani facing Adams and Republican Curtis Sliwa in the November 2025 election, the tax proposal has made the race one of NYC’s most divisive in decades. President Trump’s threat to cut federal funding if Mamdani wins adds further stakes, while Mamdani accuses critics of deflecting from the city’s inequality crisis.

Sources: Jewish Breaking News, The Daily Wire, Canary Mission, New York Post, Bloomberg, The New York Times, Fox News, Reddit (r/politics), X posts

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