Karoline Leavitt Slams Zohran Mamdani and Democrats in Fiery Fox News Interview
White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt delivered a sharp rebuke to the Democratic Party and New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani during a recent appearance on Fox News, accusing Democrats of pandering to the far-left and failing to condemn extremism.

Leavitt’s remarks came after Zohran Mamdani, a prominent NYC Democrat and current mayoral candidate, refused to call for Hamas to lay down its weapons amid ongoing conflict in the Middle East. The refusal sparked controversy, with critics arguing that clear condemnation of terrorist violence is a basic expectation for American leaders.
During her Fox News interview, Leavitt did not mince words:
“That is the basis of the Democrat Party today; they don’t stand for anything except for catering to their far-left base,” Leavitt said, blasting both Mamdani and the broader Democratic Party.
She went further, accusing Democrats of prioritizing the interests of “Hamas terrorists, illegal aliens, and violent criminals” over those of law-abiding Americans. Leavitt argued that such positions reflect a troubling trend within the party to appease radical elements rather than uphold mainstream American values.
President Donald Trump also weighed in, taking aim at Mamdani’s policies and rhetoric. Trump labeled Mamdani’s platform as “Communist,” further intensifying the criticism from the Republican side and framing the NYC mayoral race as a referendum on the direction of the Democratic Party.

Leavitt’s comments are part of a larger Republican strategy to paint Democrats as out of touch with mainstream America and beholden to the party’s most radical factions. The refusal by some Democrats to explicitly denounce groups like Hamas is being used by GOP leaders to argue that the party is moving further left and abandoning core American principles.
The exchange highlights the increasingly heated rhetoric surrounding both national security and local politics in the United States. As the NYC mayoral race heats up and foreign policy remains a hot-button issue, voices like Leavitt’s are likely to continue dominating headlines—underscoring the deep divisions that define the current American political landscape.