NEW YORK — Mayor Zohran Mamdani stood in front of a camera along one of New York City’s most exclusive strips of real estate with a message for his constituents: “Today, we’re taxing the rich.”
Before he outlined a new plan to tax multimillion-dollar pied-à-terre properties that dot the city’s luxury towers, he moved uncomfortably close to the camera, looked into the lens and pecked at it with his finger.
But the mayor was tapping into something much bigger. On the city’s streets, an anti-rich current has been building, highlighted by the election of the mayor himself who ran on an affordability platform. And this week, a mix of events appeared to indicate new levels of intolerance for New York’s uber-wealthy.
On the same day that Gov. Kathy Hochul proposed a new pied-à-terre tax backed by the mayor on second homes with assessed values of $5 million or more, doormen, superintendents and others who typically earn a salary of $62,000 a year and enable the trappings of a luxury life threatened to go on strike. Then on Thursday, Mamdani confirmed to Hell Gate that he and his wife planned to snub the Met Gala, a springtime rite of celebrities and the wealthy, criticized for its annual display of elitism. (This year, billionaire Jeff Bezos is sponsoring the event.)
Inequality is part of the rhythm of the city, on full display in places including Billionaires’ Row, where on a recent afternoon whiffs of the perfumed lobbies of the luxury towers wafted toward a man in ragged clothes sprawled across the concrete.
“In New York we all live together. You have much more class overlap than in other places,” said Marissa Thompson, an assistant professor of sociology and the co-director of the Center for the Study of Wealth and Inequality at Columbia University. “All of that has come to a crescendo. People are feeling the squeeze of inequality.”
The image of the city’s ultra wealthy class looms in the sky, hovering over the rest of New York in supertall luxury apartment towers.
Down on the streets, residents have marched outfitted in “eat-the-rich” T-shirts alongside groups such as Trillionaires for Trump, mocking the superrich in “No Kings” protests. “It dovetails with a frustration that the levers of government are at the hands of the extremely wealthy and the rest of us are left to eat the crumbs,” said the Manhattan borough president, Brad Hoylman-Sigal, who as a state senator 12 years ago proposed a pied-à-terre tax that fell flat.
Back then, Hoylman-Sigal noted, the concept of Billionaires’ Row, the name for a stretch of luxury high rises near to and along 57th Street, barely existed.
But many New Yorkers worried the new moves against the rich could upend livelihoods. Agents working in real estate, a major driver of the city’s economy, were eager to hear more details about plans for a second-home tax.
“The natural reaction is to have a kind of freak out moment,” said Jade Chan, a high-end real estate broker for Douglas Elliman. “We’re trying to stay calm and pray for the best that it doesn’t happen.”
The city has seen a steep increase in extremely high-priced apartments, while many low-cost units have disappeared. Over a 30-year period ending in 2023, New York lost more than 600,000 units with rents of $1,500 or less and a net increase of about 75,000 units with rents of $5,000 or more, according to city data. (The figures were adjusted for inflation.)
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