
Instead of staying behind his desk, Mayor Zohran Mamdani stunned many by showing up on the picket line alongside thousands of red-clad nurses striking outside some of New York City’s biggest private hospitals — instantly igniting political drama across the city and social media.
📍 Standing outside NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, Mamdani openly called out executives at Mount Sinai, NewYork-Presbyterian and Montefiore, branding them “the wealthiest CEOs in the city” while nurses struggle to pay their bills.
💬 “They’re not having trouble making ends meet — but 15,000 nurses are,” he said, as chants and noisemakers filled the air.
🚨 The clash quickly escalated:
– The nurses’ union accused hospitals of spending $100 million to hire out-of-state replacement nurses instead of improving pay, health insurance and workplace safety.
– Montefiore fired back, claiming the strike was about protecting nurses who show up to work drunk or high — a charge that sent outrage rippling through social media.
😡 Nurses on the picket line shot back, calling the accusation “complete nonsense” and “deeply insulting.”
😱 Former Mayor Rudy Giuliani blasted Mamdani’s move, warning: “A mayor shouldn’t be on a picket line for essential workers. Who’s going to help patients — communist angels?”
⏳ As the standoff drags on, everyday New Yorkers are already feeling the impact — longer waits, stretched staffing and growing anxiety for patients and families.
👉 Supporters hail Mamdani as a leader who stands with workers. Critics warn the gamble could backfire: private hospitals today, public hospitals tomorrow — with taxpayers left holding the bill.
📌 The strike shows no signs of cooling down, and one big question looms: how long can the city afford this stalemate before patients pay the price?

