
New York — American Senator Bernie Sanders Zahran Mamdani gathered supporters in a municipal hall in Brooklyn on Saturday, where they closed President Donald Trump and strengthened their joint progressive message, as Mamdani works to stimulate his base in the last weeks of New York City Mayor’s race.
The crowd was friendly, and the reception was almost warm.
The idea of health care as a human right? Cheers. Just mention of Trump? Heavy holes. The idea of the oligarchy? Even more Oscars. At one time, the crowd chanted the slogans of the campaign that helped Mamdani win the democratic nomination in the race.
“Will Najd?” Mamdani’s request. The booming response: “rent!”
“Make buses fast and?”
“Free!” The audience shouted.
City Hall – Part of Sanders The “oligarchy fighting” tour,, Which drew huge crowds in both red and blue states – packed a hall in Brooklyn while Mamdani’s campaign towards the November elections.
He is facing former state governor Andrew Como and current mayor Eric Adam
Sanders, an independent representing Vermont, is called Mamdani “the future of the Democratic Party”, while senior democratic leaders in the state criticize the state for not supporting it.
“I find it difficult to understand how the main Democratic leaders in New York does not support the democratic candidate,” Sanders said.
The event, which felt more Lah-Rah Lovefst came from the usual caustic interrogation of most of the halls of political cities, near the weekend of a messy in the race.
Adams has spent the past few days in formulating reports that Trump’s brokers are being ready to get out of the competition to take a job with the federal government.
At the same time, Trump told the correspondents that he did not want Mamdani, the Social Democrat, to be the next mayor of the city, but he believes he would win unless two of the other three main candidates came out of the race. Trump also said he believed Komo might be able to win a single race, adding: “If you have more than one candidate running against (Mamdani), it cannot be won.”
Edward Hanlon, a 75 -year -old Mamdani supporter who was wandering from Statin Island to Brooklyn on a rainy day in the city hall, said he would be “heavy” for the president to participate in the race.
“I want to have an honest politician,” said Dunlula, a retired lawyer. “I would like to have someone you can believe what he says.”
Through the city hall, Mamdani and Sanders, the independent who represented Vermont, presented mostly friendly questions, although there is one noisy moment where a man was removed by security.
Just a few minutes after the opening notes of Mamdani, a man with a shirt read Cuba and had a Cuban flag that approached the theater and started screaming, saying that you are communist.
“You know that something had changed when that is not enough to invite democratic socialism anymore,” said Mamdani while the man was removed by the security.