One social media user wrote that the hedge fund executive Bill Ackman ā€œwent from acting like Mamdani was going to import ISIS to extending a friendly handshake… in like six hours.ā€

. . . Hedge fund manager Bill AckmanĀ pouredĀ over $1.75 million into the mayor’s race with a laser focus on stopping Mamdani, whom he often ambushed with several-thousand-word screeds on his X account, which boasts nearly 2 million followers. HeĀ accusedĀ Mamdani—a staunchĀ criticĀ of Israel—of ā€œamplifying hateā€ against Jewish New Yorkers, whileĀ suggestingĀ that his followers (which happened toĀ includeĀ many Jewish New Yorkers) were ā€œterror supporters.ā€

Meanwhile, the billionaireĀ suggestedĀ that the democratic socialist Mamdani’s ā€œaffordabilityā€ centered agenda, which includes increasing taxes on corporations and the city’s wealthiest residents to fund universal childcare, free buses, and a rent freeze for stabilized units, would make the city ā€œmuch more dangerous and economically unviable,ā€ in part by causing an exodus ofĀ billionairesĀ like himself.

In turn, Mamdani often invoked Ackman’s name on the campaign trail, using him as the poster boy for the cossetted New York elite that was almostĀ uniformly arrayedĀ against his candidacy. In one exchange, MamdaniĀ jokedĀ that Ackman was ā€œspending more money against me than I would even tax him.ā€

After Mamdani’s convincing victory Tuesday night, fueled in large part by hisĀ dominant performanceĀ among the city’s working-class voters, Ackman surprisingly did notĀ respondĀ with ā€œthe longest tweet in the history of tweetsā€ to lament the result as some predicted. Instead, he came to the mayor-elect hat in hand.

ā€œCongrats on the win,ā€Ā he toldĀ Mamdani on X. ā€œNow you have a big responsibility. If I can help NYC, just let me know what I can do.ā€