Zohran Mamdani’s victory has put New York’s crypto sector on edge, raising questions about how a mayor critical of both Wall Street and digital asset wealth will govern the city.
On November 4, the 34-year-old Democrat defeated former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo in a race that gripped the prediction markets for months.
Mamdani’s rise is historic: he became New York’s youngest mayor in a century, the first Muslim, the first South Asian and the first African-born leader.
Meanwhile, his victory was part of a broader Democratic wave across the country, as several candidates aggressively pushed back against President Donald Trump’s policies and drew strong support from younger, more diverse voters.
But it was also a windfall for users of the largest decentralized forecasting platform Polymarket. More than $430 million flowed into the Mamdani market, with 92% of bets backing him.

But for the crypto industry watching from New York and beyond, his victory represents something far more complex than a single election result.
Mamdani is not a conventional crypto ally, unlike outgoing Mayor Eric Adams, who once poured his first three paychecks into Bitcoin and founded the country’s first mayoral office for digital assets.
Instead, he comes with a political record rooted in consumer protection, criticism of crypto excess, and a commitment to economic redistribution.
Considering this, his rise has divided the crypto world into a philosophical fault line between those who fear his policies and those who see in him a faint echo of Satoshi Nakamoto’s original ethos.
Crypto’s Contradictory Position
Before his victory, the loudest alarm came from prominent crypto figures who see Mamdani as a threat to the wealth and investments in America’s top financial center.
Tyler Winklevoss, co-founder of Gemini, argued that Mamdani is supported by “spoiled, well-educated college students” who, in his opinion, “never learned the value of Western civilization.”
He added:
“The Wall Streeters, financiers and hedge funders have been too busy working on their fishponds and climbing the rungs of polite society to remember to protect the system that allowed them to achieve their success and once gave New York City the opportunity to become the greatest city in the world.”
Former White House communications director Anthony Scaramucci had also reportedly warned that Mamdani’s proposed 2% income tax on residents earning more than $1 million would lead to a migration of high-income earners and founders.
According to him, this harms the entire economic ecosystem as it could result in the potential flight of crypto capital to states with more favorable tax laws.
This suggests that, according to these crypto advocates, Mamdani’s consumer protection stance and tax agenda threaten to weaken New York’s competitive advantage at a time when global crypto markets are restructuring following the FTX, Terra and BitLicense crises.
Those fears are not unfounded, as New York’s regulatory regime remains one of the strictest in the world, and the city’s status as a crypto hub is based as much on access to capital and talent as it is on technical fundamentals.
Yet that perspective only tells half the story.
Because while the city’s wealthiest crypto players are bracing for higher taxes and stricter regulations, another group of crypto builders and ideological purists see Mamdani not as a threat, but as a reflection of crypto’s original anti-gatekeeper philosophy.
The unexpected alignment
For many in the grassroots Web3 community, the irony is striking: crypto’s earliest vision was not about financial speculation, but about breaking gatekeepers, democratizing economic power, and creating systems that work for people excluded from traditional finance.
And in Mamdani’s rhetoric they hear faint but clear echoes of that worldview.
Amol G., co-founder of Solana Spaces, put it bluntly: while Mamdani may have “strange socialist leanings,” he is a product of a system that is failing the working class.
He said:
“When Satoshi showed up… the core ethos wasn’t ‘up the numbers’… it was that people deserve self-determination outside of predatory systems. It was to eliminate the coercive middle layers of the gatekeepers. It was to put the top end, sovereignty and choice back in the hands of the people, not in the hands of entrenched power. That’s literally the same philosophical DNA.”
It is striking that Amol’s statement does not stand alone.
Zack Guzmán, founder of Coinage Media, said Mamdani’s upset reflected the founding principle of crypto, adding:
“I can understand why people might be afraid of Zohran Mamdani. I can understand why someone wouldn’t want to vote for him. But if you’re in the crypto space, and you don’t understand why he’s going to win, then you really have to reconsider why we’re here.”
These voices see Mamdani’s politics of anti-incumbency, anti-gatekeeping, and pro-redistribution not as hostile to crypto, but as ideologically adjacent to Bitcoin’s original promise. Not the Bitcoin of ETFs and institutional inflows, but the Bitcoin of cypherpunks, privacy advocates and early internet idealists.
Here’s the paradox: the same political instincts that alarm wealthy crypto executives resonate deeply with the philosophical core of the movement.
Mamdani focuses the people that crypto claims to serve, the unbanked, the financially marginalized, communities of color harmed by predatory financing and fraudulent collapses like FTX and Terra.
In 2023, Mamdani supported a major law to protect crypto investors, arguing that small investors are “usually the biggest victims” of collapses.
He specifically criticized Cuomo for advising OKX during an SEC investigation. These views reflect a worldview that views crypto through the lens of public harm and structural inequality, rather than through corporate growth.
To his supporters, that makes him principled. To his critics, however, this makes him dangerous.
A defining test for New York and crypto
After Mamdani’s election victory, New York has now become the stage where two visions of crypto collide:
- Crypto as a high-finance sector, integrated with Wall Street, venture capital driven, billionaire friendly and highly tax sensitive.
- Crypto, as an anti-establishment technology, is intended to dismantle gatekeepers, redistribute power, and elevate individuals who have failed traditional systems.
The rise of Mamdani forces the industry to confront the gap between what crypto is today and what it claimed to be at its inception.
So when Mamdani comes to power in January 2026, he will inherit a city that remains home to the highest concentration of crypto founders, exchanges, institutional agencies and blockchain research labs in the country.
His policies on tax, compliance, government procurement and the technology sector will shape New York’s crypto trajectory over the next decade.
The stakes are enormous. A more challenging regulatory environment could accelerate an exodus of crypto wealth and talent.
But a credible consumer protection framework can also stabilize the market, attract long-term institutional participation, and legitimize New York as the world’s most regulated and most trusted crypto jurisdiction.
Ultimately, Mamdani’s victory reveals more about the industry he faces than it does about him.
Crypto must now ask itself:
“Is it a movement that fights centralized power – or an industry that defends the wealth of those who benefited first?”
For ten years the answer was conveniently both. Under Mayor Zohran Mamdani, that contradiction may finally be impossible to ignore.
