Cuomo Accuses Mamdani of Misusing Rent-Stabilized Housing

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Tuesday, Aug 12, 2025 7:02 pm ET2min read
Aime RobotAime Summary

- Andrew Cuomo accused mayoral rival Zohran Mamdani of misusing rent-stabilized housing, calling his $2,300/month apartment "disgusting" and urging him to vacate it.

- Cuomo proposed "Zohran’s Law" to bar high-income tenants from rent-stabilized units, sparking debate over housing equity and policy feasibility.

- Mamdani criticized the move as a political stunt, highlighting Cuomo’s own $8,000/month Manhattan apartment and advocating for housing as a universal right.

- Housing experts and advocates warn the policy could destabilize New York’s rent-stabilized system, which serves nearly 1 million units and balances affordability with neighborhood stability.

Andrew Cuomo, the former New York state governor, has escalated his mayoral campaign against Zohran Mamdani by accusing the state assembly member of benefiting from a rent-stabilized apartment that he does not deserve [1]. Mamdani, a 34-year-old Democratic socialist and mayoral candidate, resides in a one-bedroom apartment in Queens with his wife and pays $2,300 per month, a cost Cuomo dismissed as “disgusting” [2]. In a widely shared social media post, Cuomo demanded that Mamdani “move out immediately,” calling him a “very rich person” and arguing that the apartment could be better used by a homeless family [3]. The statement has reignited a debate over who should qualify for rent-stabilized housing, a system that caps annual rent increases and is currently open to residents of all income levels.

To further the attack, Cuomo proposed a policy he dubbed “Zohran’s Law,” which would bar landlords from renting vacant rent-stabilized units to tenants whose rent would cost less than 30% of their income [4]. This would effectively require new tenants to allocate a significant portion of their earnings toward housing—something critics say sets people up for financial failure [5]. The policy aligns with long-standing calls for income restrictions on rent-stabilized housing, but housing advocates argue that such a move would create a “bureaucratic nightmare” and disrupt the stability of the program [6].

Mamdani, who defeated Cuomo in the Democratic primary with a platform focused on affordability and rent freezes, has criticized the proposal as a political stunt rather than a serious housing reform [7]. His campaign spokesperson, Dora Pekec, said the proposal showed that Cuomo is “desperate and out of touch,” adding that Mamdani believes housing is a right, not a privilege [8]. Mamdani has also pointed out that Cuomo himself does not live in a rent-stabilized apartment, instead paying $8,000 per month for a unit in Manhattan’s upscale Sutton Place neighborhood [9].

The former governor’s campaign has defended the policy by stating it mirrors income thresholds used in other public housing programs and does not apply to current occupants of stabilized units [10]. However, housing experts remain skeptical, noting that rent-stabilized housing is not an affordability program but rather one that promotes neighborhood stability [11]. The Real Estate Board of New York, a landlord group that largely supported Cuomo in the primary, has not formally endorsed the proposal but acknowledged that rent regulation is not well targeted and could benefit from means testing [12].

As the mayoral race enters its final stretch, the debate over rent-stabilized housing has become a central issue in New York City’s political landscape. With nearly a million units under rent stabilization, the policy implications of Cuomo’s proposal could reshape the city’s housing market—and its political future [13].

Sources:

[1] Fortune, https://fortune.com/2025/08/12/cuomo-mamdani-rental-apartment-rent-stabilized-new-york-city/

[2] Yahoo, https://ca.news.yahoo.com/andrew-cuomo-swipes-zohran-mamdani-190916812.html

[3] amNewYork, https://www.amny.com/news/mamdani-cuomo-rent-stabilized-means-testing/

[4] Fox News, https://www.foxnews.com/politics/cuomo-proposes-zohrans-law-protect-rent-stabilized-housing-from-wealthy

[5] U.S. News, https://www.usnews.com/news/politics/articles/2025-08-12/andrew-cuomo-swipes-at-zohran-mamdani-over-a-classic-new-york-topic-rent

[6]

, https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/09/nyregion/cuomo-mamdani-apartment-rent-control.html

[8] The New York Post, https://nypost.com/2025/08/12/us-news/zohran-mamdani-mentions-andrew-cuomo-in-same-breath-as-jeffrey-epstein-in-new-video/

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