Quick Honeymoon: New Yorkers Already Upset With Mamdani, Go Off On Him

New York is furious — and this time, it’s not just the usual critics on talk radio. Snow-clogged streets, eight-foot garbage mountains, and a mayor hiding behind “I’m new to the job” have turned the so-called socialist savior into the city’s newest villain. Even the Upper East Side, pampered and powerful, is choking on neglect whil… Continues…

 

When a city breaks, it rarely starts in its richest zip codes. That’s what makes this moment so damning. If the Upper East Side can’t get its trash picked up or its streets plowed, what does that say about Queens, the Bronx, or Brooklyn, where residents already live at the back of the line? The symbolism is brutal: towering piles of garbage for regular New Yorkers, pristine sidewalks for the mayor’s own block at Gracie Mansion.

Celebrities who once cheered progressive politics are now publicly asking, “What happened?” They’re not attacking from the right; they’re expressing betrayal from inside the tent. Mamdani’s shrug — “I’m new to the job” — lands like an insult in a city that expects competence before ideology. New Yorkers can tolerate a lot: noise, crowds, chaos. What they won’t tolerate, for long, is a leader who preaches collectivism while living above the mess he helped cre