Zohran Mamdani’s rent-stabilized apartment touched off a shouting match on MSNBC, with one panelist calling the Democratic socialist New York City mayoral frontrunner a “hypocrite” for railing against affordability struggles while living in cut-rate housing despite his hefty paycheck.
Republican strategist Susan Del Percio and Democratic operative Michael Hardaway went head-to-head on Tuesday during Ana Cabrera’s afternoon slot, sparring so intensely that the host was forced to cut to commercial.
Del Percio unloaded first, blasting Mamdani for decrying the lack of affordable housing while paying below-market rent.
“The lesson is that the frontrunner for mayor of New York City is living in a rent-stabilized apartment, definitely making way more than the average New Yorker,” she said.
Hardaway, a former spokesperson for House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY), jumped in to defend the Queens assemblyman, insisting critics are missing the point.
“None of those things matter. The point is that people can’t afford to live,” he shot back.
“It does matter!” Del Percio replied.
The exchange was reported by the news site Mediaite.
The clash highlighted the growing controversy around Mamdani, who vaulted into the 2025 mayor’s race as an affordability crusader.
His housing situation has become a lightning rod. Supporters say it proves he’s living the same struggles as voters, while detractors claim it shows he’s gaming the system.
Hardaway framed the attacks as little more than class-war smears against a left-wing insurgent.
“Pushback to Mamdani comes down to him being a democratic socialist,” Hardaway argued.
“There are lessons to be learned from our previous victories and how we can move forward here. Instead of shying away from him, Mamdani, and these titles that elites put on him. The reality is that people can’t afford to live today.”
Cabrera pressed the pair on whether Mamdani’s own rent deal undermines his message, noting the optics of a candidate benefiting from a stabilized unit while cashing a sizable paycheck.
Del Percio insisted that “there’s a difference there.”
“He doesn’t need it,” she said.
“As a matter of fact, he wouldn’t probably qualify for it under previous laws. He got into it at a certain age, and when he was making less money, yes. But given the fact that he is making a combined income of hundreds of thousands of dollars, you can talk about affordability, but you shouldn’t look like a hypocrite when you’re doing it.”
She blasted Mamdani for staying in the apartment instead of moving out before launching his mayoral bid.
Hardaway dismissed her points as cheap shots.
“This is all nonsense,” he fumed, accusing Del Percio of running “ad hominem attacks.”
But Del Percio doubled down, claiming the hypocrisy matters as voters struggle with skyrocketing costs.
“I’m talking about one candidate running for mayor, not a national headline,” she said.
“Because you know for months and months I’ve been saying the affordability issue is the number one issue out there when Americans are paying with credit cards instead of debit cards for their groceries, meaning they are paying interest. On their groceries. That is a big systematic problem for people in this country.”
Hardaway refused to budge, pivoting back to his main theme.
“The message of affordability is the issue of our time, and… it’s the issue that every candidate should be talking about now. We can get into this pocketbook checking of certain candidates, but that’s meaningless,” he argued.
The two kept trading jabs, speaking over each other until Cabrera was finally able to break them up by cutting to commercial.
Mamdani has made affordability the centerpiece of his campaign as New Yorkers battered by record-high rents, soaring grocery bills and rising subway fares are looking for relief.
But his personal finances have left him exposed. Rent-stabilized units are designed to shield tenants from massive annual increases, often leaving residents paying far below market rate.
The Post has sought comment from Mamdani.