NYC NOW - Evening Roundup: NYC Mayor-Elect Zohran Mamdani Unveils Transition Team, and Mayor Adams’ Housing Legacy
Episode Date: November 5, 2025New York City Mayor-Elect Zohran Mamdani names his transition team, speaking with WNYC’s Brigid Bergin about his early plans for office. Plus, as Mamdani prepares to take charge, WNYC’s David Bran...d looks back at Mayor Eric Adams’ housing record and the challenges the incoming administration will inherit.
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New York City's mayor-o-elect Zoran Mamdani announces his transition team and chats with WNYC's
Bridget Bergen.
And a look back at Mayor Eric Adams' legacy on housing.
From WNYC, this is NYC now.
I'm Elizabeth Shwe.
If you haven't already heard by now, Democratic Socialist Zeran Mamdani has won the race
for New York City mayor, easily defeating former governor Andrew Cuomo and Republican candidate
Curtis Sliwa on Tuesday night.
The poetry of campaigning may have come to a close last night at nine,
but the beautiful prose of governing has only just begun.
WNYC's senior politics reporter Bridget Bergen caught up with Mamdani
to speak about the Mayor Alec's transition team and his immediate plans after taking office.
Hello, Mayor-elect.
Hello, how's it going?
Great, congratulations. Thank you so much for taking some time.
We really appreciate it. You're running on fumes, I'm guessing.
Yes, I'm going.
I am. Thank you so much for the conversation. I'm happy to be on.
Your victory last night came the same night. We saw two Democratic women elected governor in New Jersey, in Virginia.
Do you see a common thread there?
Yeah, I think it is exciting to be part of a big tent that is looking to not only take on an authoritarian administration, but also to deliver in time.
and I had a chance to speak with soon-to-be Governor Cheryl,
and I'm looking forward to what it can look like to have partnership
at the core of so much of our politics,
which has sadly been missing for quite some time.
Mayor Elect, we often hear about new administration setting goals
for that first 100 days.
Can you say anything about what yours are?
My goal at this time is to spend the next 57 days of the transition
ensuring that my first day in office is not one of preparation, but rather one of execution.
And I'm excited that we began today with the announcement of our four incredible co-chairs of our transition,
Grace Bonilla, Mel Herzog, Lena Khan, and Maria Torres Springer.
And that is the kind of team that will help us shape and fill out our city hall such that those first hundred days are ones where we are taking concrete and substantive actions.
deliver on the cost of living crisis that is pushing so many New Yorkers out of the city.
Do you think that there is a way for the city and through your office to do more to regulate corporations
and maybe even get into more regulation of the crypto industry?
I don't believe that the Adams administration has set the highest bar for what regulation can
look like for taking on corporate greed. And I also have spoken to many a small business owner
who are at a loss for why they seem to face more regulations than the most profitable
companies in the city and in the world. And it is time to showcase our ability to take on that
corporate greed while also streamlining the processes within City Hall so that businesses cannot
just open, but stay open. And we will do that through the appointment of a mom and pop czar by
cutting fines and fees by 50% across the board and by ensuring that we start to streamline some of the
processes by which these businesses are receiving their permits and their licenses.
Mayor-elect, what should New Yorkers expect when it comes to one of your key priorities,
universal child care next year?
The governor has said that 2026 is the year of child care.
And I have appreciated her continued focus on universal child care, and it is one that I share.
And we will be building out a timeline to fulfill our commitment.
for universal child care and to do so by not only reckoning with the ways in which the Adams
administration has made it harder to afford raising a child in the city, but also by going beyond
that to the final point of having every child from six weeks to five years of age receiving
that child care. When you started this campaign, you know, you were out there in the streets
listening to voters. You also are known for quoting Mayor Koch, one of his favorite experiments.
is how am I doing? So how are you going to continue to get that regular input from New Yorkers?
The outreach that characterized our campaign, the transparency of it, that is one that will not only continue to animate my work in City Hall, but even in the transition on our way to City Hall.
And it is our responsibility to bring politics to the people as opposed to ask ourselves why the people are not coming to politics.
And that will be through conversations I'll have directly with New Yorkers, it will be,
through meetings that we schedule.
It'll be through all wide variety of outreach,
all of it to ensure that we understand the strength of a democracy
can be measured by just how many of its people are involved in it.
That's WNYC's senior politics reporter Bridget Bergen
in conversation with newly elected New York City Mayor Zoran Mamdani.
Up next, housing was one of Mayor Eric Adams' biggest challenges,
from rising rents to stalled affordable.
projects. What kind of legacy is he leaving for Mayor-elect Mumdani? We'll take a look at that
after the break. One of the biggest questions facing Mayor-elect Mumdani's administration is housing.
It was a centerpiece of his campaign. And it's also a big part of what current Mayor Eric Adams
leaves behind. WNYC's housing reporter David Brand joins us for a look back at Mayor Adams' legacy
on housing, what he accomplished, what he didn't, and the
work mayor-elect Momdani has cut out for him once he takes office. Hey, David. Hey, Elizabeth.
Eric Adams called himself the most pro-housing mayor in city history. When we look back, what does he
actually leave behind on housing? Yeah, it's kind of been a joke among journalists that every single
press release from the city housing agency, every single news conference that Adams has about housing,
he's always saying, this is the most pro-housing administration in city history. And when he says that,
mainly referring to rule changes that he has shepherded for future housing development. And those have
been significant. So most recently, a charter revision commission that he appointed proposed these ballot
questions that could make it easier to build a lot of housing around the five boroughs. And on Tuesday,
voters headed to the polls and approved those by a wide margin. Before that, there was the city of yes zoning
plan, which was this pretty sweeping plan to change land use rules in every part of the city to
allow for slightly more housing development, whether that's in suburban style sections of the city,
like Northeast Queens, Staten Island, or places like central Brooklyn, Manhattan to just
allow for a lot more housing to be built. And then there are these neighborhood rezoning.
So right now, these two proposals for rezoning Long Island City and Jamaica in Queens,
to potentially add tens of thousands of new apartments or working their way to a final city
council vote. His administration proposed and accomplished this big rezoning along Atlantic Avenue
and Bedstai and Crown Heights. And then there was this major plan to turn the garment district in
Manhattan into a new residential neighborhood, kind of like what we've seen in Fidei in Lower Manhattan,
financial district. I spoke with Maria Torres Springer about all this, and she helped steer a lot of
these proposals. When future generations look back at this time, you know, the last four years of the
work on housing, that they might say that this was the moment that New York stopped just managing
a housing crisis and really started solving it. She's now actually co-chair of mayor-elect
Zeran Mamdani's transition team. And so she'll have a role in shaping these policies going forward, too.
So housing was also a centerpiece of Zeranamdani's campaign.
How do those promises line up with what Adams left him?
So this is one of many contradictions of Adams' tenure.
Okay.
He put forth a lot of proposals and plans for easing housing development
and ideally easing affordable housing development down the road.
But during his time in office, New York City has just continued getting more and more unaffordable.
Rents are at record highs.
So are home prices.
They're out of reach.
The vast majority of New Yorkers,
couldn't even dream of buying a place here. About 90,000 people are staying each night in city homeless
shelters. And so affordability was really the issue that animated the campaign to replace Adams.
But Mamdani will now benefit from the reforms and the new housing rules that he's inheriting
from Adams. You mentioned the ballot questions that voters approved on Tuesday. Adams appointed
that commission that proposed those measures. Remind us what those measures are and what that vote
tells us. So these were four questions meant to speed up the review process for new housing
or to challenge the city council's authority to block housing projects. At their core,
these questions kind of took aim at the city's land use review process. So the way things have
worked for many years is there's this pre-certification phase that can take many months or even
years. Then once an application becomes official with the city to make changes to land use rules,
That's followed by a seven-month review that ends in a city council vote.
So just to summarize what these measures are that voters approved, one speeds up the approval process for 100% affordable housing projects everywhere in the city and also any new housing and neighborhoods that have so far produced the fewest new units.
Another will shorten review times for some apartment and condo complexes that are slightly larger than current rules allow.
A third will allow developers and city planners to appeal rejections of their land use applications by the city council.
There's going to be a three-member board now, and that will include the mayor, the city council speaker, and borough president in the borough that the project's located in.
And then a fourth measure will allow the city to digitize its official paper maps for the purpose of streamlining rezoning proposals.
These were controversial and there was a pretty compelling campaign to block them on the ground.
that they're going to limit community input, especially for major rezoning plans that are initiated by the city itself.
So those neighborhood plans that change the rules and big swaths of the city.
But voters approve them anyway.
And I think that shows how important the housing crisis is, that it's really top of mind to a lot of people,
even if they were uncomfortable with some of these proposals, might have held their nose and voted for them anyway.
We're seeing that a lot on Tuesday because Mom Dani had been kind of cagey about his own opinion on these.
proposals until he went to vote Tuesday morning and said he was a yes. And that seemed to sway a lot of
voters. We heard a lot of callers to the station. I talked to a lot of voters who said, you know, I was on
the fence, but I want to give Zeron the tools that he needs to build affordable housing. And so they
voted yes. David, supporters say the city now has rules to build more housing. And critics say nothing
is guaranteed for people who are struggling the most. So what should we expect to see in the coming
years. Yeah, so Adams oversaw a lot of reforms around zoning that we've been talking about. So basically
changing rules for what can possibly be built on a specific lot or in a whole neighborhood. But zoning
itself isn't a housing plan and it doesn't really guarantee anything. It just gives the
possibility to build. I talked with Howard Slacken about that. He runs the Citizens Housing and Planning
Council. And he used to be a city planning official making some of these rules and proposals under the
Bloomberg administration and then under Mayor de Blasio.
Great ambitious accomplishments have been achieved by this administration on housing.
The second thought is there's no end zone dances at this stage of the game, though.
Basically, he says that Adam's real legacy will be defined by Mamdani and his successors as mayor.
It'll come down to how they invest in housing and what their priorities are.
And then a lot of it will be outside their direct control anyway.
So there's state policy and tax incentives that make it easier to build more housing.
There's what happens in a chaotic Washington, D.C. right now, especially under the Trump administration.
Then there's these unpredictable market forces that can make development cheaper or much more expensive.
And that can lead to more housing or to less housing.
So the new rules will allow for more housing to get built, but only time will tell if that new housing does get built.
And if so, is it affordable or is it just more homes out of reach to most New Yorkers?
That was Dublin, YC's housing reporter, David Brand.
Thank you so much for joining us.
Thank you.
Thanks for listening to NYC now from WNYC.
I'm Elizabeth Shway. We'll be back tomorrow.
