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Zohran Mamdani won over New York Cityβs tech industry workers β but their bosses are worried about what the mayor-electβs far-left agenda will mean for business.
Mamdaniβs high-energy, social media savvy campaign tactics drew major support from rank-and-file tech workers, who were among the largest individual donors to his mayoral bid, as The Post previously reported.
βIn many ways, Zohranβs campaign acted like a disruptive startup itself,β said Julie Samuels, who leads the influential Tech:NYC trade group. βBut like any other sector, thereβs some trepidation about what it means to have a democratic socialist as mayor.β
In addition to raising taxes on the wealthy and corporations alike, the self-proclaimed democratic socialist has vowed to step up regulations on delivery apps like DoorDash and has made cryptic statements about artificial intelligence. He also has a history of criticizing local police.
βThe tech industry is a lot about vibes and signaling,β said Eric Soufer, head of the advanced tech practice at Tusk Strategies. βThese early signals are really important.β
Soufer noted that former Mayor Bill de Blasio βdidnβt have to do very much to send a signal to the tech industry that he was anti-tech and basically didnβt want them here.β
The number of tech jobs in New York City has surpassed the number on Wall Street βby a widening marginβ since 2020, according to data from the comptrollerβs office. That makes it all the more crucial that Mamdani mends fences.
Mamdani has vowed to crack down on βpredatoryβ gig worker model and impose new regulations on tech heavyweights like DoorDash, Uber and Grubhub as well as startups like TaskRabbit and Handy.
His decision to appoint ex-FTC chair Lina Khan, known for her aggressive Big Tech antitrust crackdown, to co-lead his transition team was another red flag, according to Soufer, who notes that Meta and Google are major employers in the city.
βIs he going to use his bully pulpit to saber-rattle at those heavyweights?β Soufer said. βThe only reason to think that is when you appoint someone like Lina Khan to your transition team. Thatβs what sheβs known for.β
Tech workers are far less concerned about potential tax hikes than their bosses, according to one Big Tech policy official who requested anonymity to freely discuss the situation.
βI think the rank-and-file employees at these companies were willing to donate because theyβre fine if their bossβs boss boss gets taxed higher,β the official said.
Mamdani has called to raise taxes by 2% on individuals earning $1 million or more and to hike New Yorkβs corporate tax rate to 11.5% β tied for the highest in the country.
Samuels pointed out there is a βclear understanding in the industry that the city canβt raise taxes without the state.β As a result, tech leaders βdonβt have their hair on fire just yet,β she said.
At the same time, Mamdani and other local leaders should be cautious about messing with tax rates.
βItβs already really hard to do business here for small businesses, for small and large businesses,β Samuels said. βSo, I think we have to be really careful about that.
Mamdani had vowed to lower the high cost of city living. While some experts have questioned whether his proposals will help the situation or make it even worse, the message nevertheless resonated with tech workers facing sky-high rent payments to live near their offices.
As of last year, a tech worker earning an average entry-level salary could afford just 2.1% studio and one-bedroom rentals in NYC, according to study by Zillow and Tech:NYC.
Maintaining affordability is a key area of concern for local tech leaders, according to Samuels β but it goes hand-in-hand with a need for safe streets and subways.
Mamdani extended an olive branch to the business community with a series of meetings brokered by the Partnership for New York City and Tech:NYC in August β and will likely need to continue those discussions to keep local leaders onside.
It also remains to be seen if Mamdaniβs plan to expand public transportation β including controversial free city buses β will come at the expense of tech innovators like Waymo, who could be eying expansion.
βTech companies will go where the people they want to hire are,β Samuels said. βAnd as long as dynamic, smart, interesting people want to live in New York City, the companies will be here because those are the people the companies want to hire.β
βIt is in all of our best interests for Zohran to be successful and to ensure that New York is a thriving, safe metropolis, that people want to live it,β she added.

