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Mamdani Stumbles Over the Irish Question

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/ March 19, 2026

Mamdani Stumbles Over the Irish Question

The mayor’s difficulty in handling a question on Irish unification wasn’t entirely his fault. But it was also a trap he should have seen coming.

D.D. Guttenplan

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New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani sits next to former Irish president Mary Robinson at a St. Patrick’s Day breakfast at Gracie Mansion on March 17, 2026.
(Ed Reed / Mayoral Photography Office)

On Monday, New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani was asked a question he obviously wasn’t expecting: “Do you support a United Ireland?”

There are two short, non-evasive responses that would have effectively disposed of the matter. He could, like Governor Kathy Hochul (whose roots go back to County Kerry) have said simply, “Indeed I do.” Or he might have noted that as mayor of New York he had constituents on both sides of that question, and that ultimately it was “for the people of Ireland to decide.”

Instead, the mayor began by laughing, before going on to admit, “I’ve got to be honest, I haven’t thought enough on that question.” Perhaps he should have. Because if the setting was indeed unlikely—the mayor and his transportation commissioner, Mike Flynn, were at Flushing International High School to announce a new 15 mph speed limit around the city’s schools—the timing was all but inevitable. The following morning, Mamdani was scheduled to host the good and great among New York’s Irish at a breakfast at Gracie Mansion marking the city’s 256th annual St. Patrick’s Day festivities. And it had only been a few days since the mayor had been invited by John Samuelson, head of the Transport Workers Union and an important Mamdani ally, to speak at a St. Patrick’s Day luncheon sponsored by the James Connolly Irish American Labor Coalition.

The mayor’s confession brought a quick rap on the rhetorical knuckles from Samuelson, who told AM New York he had “no doubt Zohran will wholeheartedly support the quest for a united Ireland.” Samuelson ascended to his union’s international presidency in 2017 from New York Local 100—which under his leadership backed Bernie Sanders in the New York Democratic primary the previous year.

But when I ran into Samuelson at the pre-parade breakfast he dismissed the fuss over what he described as “a cautious answer by a new mayor.”

“I don’t think the mayor can be expected to be on top of the demographic geopolitics of every community in New York City,” Samuelson added. On Tuesday morning the union leader, who still lives in the heavily Irish American Gerritsen Beach neighborhood in Brooklyn, was seated on the mayor’s right hand. Mary Robinson, who rose from the Dublin …
Mamdani Stumbles Over the Irish Question Log In Email * Password * Remember Me Forgot Your Password? Log In New to The Nation? Subscribe Print subscriber? Activate your online access Skip to content Skip to footer Mamdani Stumbles Over the Irish Question Magazine Newsletters Subscribe Log In Search Subscribe Donate Magazine Latest Archive Podcasts Newsletters Sections Politics World Economy Culture Books & the Arts The Nation About Events Contact Us Advertise Current Issue Politics / March 19, 2026 Mamdani Stumbles Over the Irish Question The mayor’s difficulty in handling a question on Irish unification wasn’t entirely his fault. But it was also a trap he should have seen coming. D.D. Guttenplan Share Copy Link Facebook X (Twitter) Bluesky Pocket Email Ad Policy New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani sits next to former Irish president Mary Robinson at a St. Patrick’s Day breakfast at Gracie Mansion on March 17, 2026. (Ed Reed / Mayoral Photography Office) On Monday, New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani was asked a question he obviously wasn’t expecting: “Do you support a United Ireland?” There are two short, non-evasive responses that would have effectively disposed of the matter. He could, like Governor Kathy Hochul (whose roots go back to County Kerry) have said simply, “Indeed I do.” Or he might have noted that as mayor of New York he had constituents on both sides of that question, and that ultimately it was “for the people of Ireland to decide.” Instead, the mayor began by laughing, before going on to admit, “I’ve got to be honest, I haven’t thought enough on that question.” Perhaps he should have. Because if the setting was indeed unlikely—the mayor and his transportation commissioner, Mike Flynn, were at Flushing International High School to announce a new 15 mph speed limit around the city’s schools—the timing was all but inevitable. The following morning, Mamdani was scheduled to host the good and great among New York’s Irish at a breakfast at Gracie Mansion marking the city’s 256th annual St. Patrick’s Day festivities. And it had only been a few days since the mayor had been invited by John Samuelson, head of the Transport Workers Union and an important Mamdani ally, to speak at a St. Patrick’s Day luncheon sponsored by the James Connolly Irish American Labor Coalition. The mayor’s confession brought a quick rap on the rhetorical knuckles from Samuelson, who told AM New York he had “no doubt Zohran will wholeheartedly support the quest for a united Ireland.” Samuelson ascended to his union’s international presidency in 2017 from New York Local 100—which under his leadership backed Bernie Sanders in the New York Democratic primary the previous year. But when I ran into Samuelson at the pre-parade breakfast he dismissed the fuss over what he described as “a cautious answer by a new mayor.” “I don’t think the mayor can be expected to be on top of the demographic geopolitics of every community in New York City,” Samuelson added. On Tuesday morning the union leader, who still lives in the heavily Irish American Gerritsen Beach neighborhood in Brooklyn, was seated on the mayor’s right hand. Mary Robinson, who rose from the Dublin …
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