Governor Kathy Hochul is once again reaching deep into taxpayers’ pockets to bail out New York City’s radical leadership.
With re-election season looming and her approval ratings showing cracks, Hochul has sweetened the pot by pledging another four billion dollars to Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s budget plan, as reported by the New York Post.
The move spares Mamdani from carrying out his threats of a punishing property tax hike on struggling New Yorkers, but the timing and motive behind the deal are sparking outrage.
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Mamdani is set to unveil a massive 124.7 billion dollar executive budget for New York City, a figure that would already make any fiscal hawk’s jaw drop.
What is missing from this year’s plan is the nearly ten percent property tax increase he had floated earlier, an idea that sent homeowners into panic mode for months.
Instead of reining in spending, the city’s self-described socialist mayor found a willing partner in the governor’s mansion. Hochul has agreed to send billions in state funds spread over the next two years to patch the city’s so-called budget hole.
Most of the money had already been hinted at before, but that did not stop Hochul from staging a little political theater, framing her decision as proof of responsible leadership.
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“This is what a results-driven, responsible partnership looks like, and I am proud to work with Mayor Mamdani to deliver for working New Yorkers,” Hochul said in a statement that could double as a campaign pitch.
Image Credit: lev radin – Shutterstock.com
What taxpayers see, however, looks less like a responsible partnership and more like a bailout for a political ally.
The breakdown of the funding includes half a billion dollars from a proposed luxury home tax, more than five hundred million from delaying school class size mandates, and roughly two hundred million to offset other recurring city costs.
In other words, the state is juggling numbers while real structural problems remain unaddressed.
For months, Mamdani claimed the city faced a five-point-four billion-dollar shortfall that would require painful cuts or new taxes.
Yet once state funding appeared on the horizon, the so-called crisis evaporated almost overnight. Critics inside City Hall have accused the mayor of manufacturing panic to advance his tax-the-rich agenda.
“This whole thing proves there was never a budget crisis. It was performative,” a City Hall source told The Post. “He basically put the whole city in panic for months.”
Governor Hochul’s opponent, Republican Bruce Blakeman, wasted no time calling out the manipulation.
“Kathy Hochul just committed the largest daylight robbery in New York history, looting four billion dollars from your family’s grocery and rent budget to bankroll Zohran Mamdani’s socialist experiment,” Blakeman blasted in a statement that captured how many across the state feel.
The bailout has ignited criticism not only from conservatives but also from fiscal watchdogs who worry the plan is built on one-time gimmicks.
City Comptroller Mark Levine, a Democrat, warned that the state’s cash infusion does little to fix long-term financial risks.
“There still is a reliance on a number of one-shot measures,” he warned. “We are looking at about a seven billion dollar shortfall for the following fiscal year.”
Those concerns fall on deaf ears among the city’s progressive leadership. City Council Speaker Julie Menin and Finance Chair Linda Lee praised Hochul’s intervention and applauded the governor for saving them from making politically damaging decisions.
Their statement gushed about partnership and commitment, but ignored where the money is coming from or how temporary the solution really is.
Hochul’s alliance with Mamdani reflects her delicate political dance. The governor has tried to court progressive activists without entirely alienating moderates in her party, but that balancing act has left her open to charges of weakness.

With an election ahead and polls showing frustration over crime, taxes, and spending, the four billion dollar check to a far left mayor looks less like leadership and more like a survival instinct.
While Hochul tries to portray herself as pragmatic, voters can see what is happening. It is an election-year giveaway to buy peace with the city’s socialist wing.
If the governor truly valued fiscal responsibility, she would demand real spending reforms instead of writing an open-ended check.
At the end of the day, New Yorkers will be left holding the bill. The supposed “gap closing” deal is nothing more than a temporary patch on a much deeper problem, and it comes courtesy of taxpayers who are already stretched to the limit.
Hochul may think she has secured an ally in Mamdani, but she might discover that voters have had enough of politicians trading their hard-earned money for political convenience.
The state’s coffers do not exist to bankroll New York City’s endless experiments in progressive budgeting. Yet, that is exactly what Governor Hochul has just agreed to do.
Election-year panic has once again trumped fiscal sanity, and it is New Yorkers who will pay the price for it.
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