Zohran Mamdani's win could mean more wealthy New York transplants to Florida, developer says
Mamdani, 33, who declared victory in the party's primary June 24, campaigned on promises that some business owners and affluent residents oppose. Those include freezing rental costs, offering free childcare, eliminating city bus fares, creating city-owned grocery stores, and hiking the taxes on the wealthiest New Yorkers and biggest corporations.
"Just when you thought Palm Beach real estate couldn't go any higher … ," Gov. Ron DeSantis said in a social media post with a link to a poll that put Mamdani ahead of opponent and former Gov. Andrew Cuomo before the primary results were released.
One day after the election, at least one South Florida developer said he and his properties had gotten calls from people in New Jersey, Manhattan and Connecticut who are interested in moving to Florida.
"Obviously, what they see happening makes them nervous and they want to plan their future and have peace of mind," said Isaac Toledano, CEO and co-founder of BH Group, which is working with the Miami-based Related Group to build the Ritz Carlton Residences in West Palm Beach. "I think the rush is going to start now because the unknown is something people don't like."
Realtors who deal in high-end properties said their phones are also ringing with people surprised about the result of the primary election and interested in potentially buying in Florida.
"Local politics matter, almost more than national politics, and if local is going to a more socialist form of government, you could lose some of your really wealthy taxpayers," said Nathan Zeder, co-founder of the Jills Zeder Group in Miami. "The calls and texts, the response yesterday, was way more than what I anticipated."
Celebrity real estate agent Ryan Serhant, who has a Netflix show called "Owning Manhattan", told the New York Post that his "number one job will be moving people from New York to Florida. Again."
'Based on the results, clients are going to hold off on making any kind of investment in New York City," Serhant said in the New York Post story.
Serhant specializes in New York real estate but has recently made a push into Palm Beach County with $100-plus million sales in the town of Palm Beach and offices in Delray Beach and Jupiter. He was previously on Bravo TV's "Million Dollar Listing New York."
Florida got a boost in New York transplants during COVID-19. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, 254,097 New York state residents moved to the Sunshine State between 2021 and 2023.
The number of people who traded in their New York driver's licenses in 2022 for ones with a Palm Beach County address totaled 8,059, which was a 38% increase from the average over the previous six years.
"Today is a great day for the state and we welcome businesses who want to grow jobs and families who want to live in safe communities!" Florida U.S. Sen Rick Scott wrote in a June 25 social media comment. Scott linked to a post from the National Republican Congressional Committee that called Mamdani an "antisemitic socialist radical."
Mamdani has declined to condemn the phrase "globalize the intifada," which is widely considered by the Jewish community as a call to violence. He has also referred to Israel's war in Gaza against Hamas after the Oct. 7, 2023 attacks as a genocide. Mamdani has also said he would have Benjamin Netanyahu arrested if the prime minister of Israel came to New York.
Other Palm Beach County Realtors said they have not fielded calls yet from New Yorkers antsy about what Mamdani's agenda may bring, but they don't doubt they will come.
"We had the pandemic, then we had the Trump bump and this is another reason why folks may want to move here," said Elizabeth DeWoody, founding principal of real estate firm Compass Palm Beach. "We are an incredible, pro-business, forward-thinking community."
The nonprofit Citizens Budget Commission, which tracks New York's economy and business finances, found New York City lost $3.1 billion in adjusted gross income from 19,540 New Yorkers who moved to Palm Beach County between 2018 and 2022. It lost an estimated $809.3 million from people who moved to Broward County during the same time period, and $6.1 billion from people who moved to Miami-Dade County.
More: West Palm Beach feels growing pains amid wealth influx as neighborhoods navigate change
"It was all New York until recently, or the Northeast," DeWoody said. "Now it's California, and I think we will see New York again. Sometimes it's just one thing after another that seals the deal for people."
Billionaire John Catsimatidis, whose Red Apple Group has real estate investments in Florida, said he would close or sell his Manhattan-based chain of grocery stores if Mamdani wins November's general election, according to a New York Post story. Mamdani's competitors for the mayor's seat include current Mayor Eric Adams, Guardian Angels founder Curtis Sliwa, former federal prosecutor Jim Walden and possibly Cuomo.
Stay up to date on South Florida's sizzling real estate market and sign up for The Dirt weekly newsletter, delivered every Tuesday! Exclusively for Palm Beach Post subscribers.
'We can't compete with Mamdani opening city-run supermarkets for free,' Catsimatidis said in the New York Post story.
In an interview with The Free Press, he said he'd spend more time in Florida.
Christian Prakas, a founding partner of Ryan Serhant's real estate office in Delray Beach, said he's already been in touch with his boss about the possible increase in New-York-to-Palm-Beach-County moves.
"He thinks it's going to be bad up there," Prakas said.
Kimberly Miller is a journalist for The Palm Beach Post, part of the USA Today Network of Florida. She covers real estate, weather, and the environment. Subscribe to The Dirt for a weekly real estate roundup. If you have news tips, please send them to kmiller@pbpost.com. Help support our local journalism, subscribe today.
This article originally appeared on Palm Beach Post: DeSantis muses about palm beach real estate after Zohran Mamdani won
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Bloomberg
7 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Japan LDP's Kono Adds to Chorus Urging BOJ to Tighten Policy
A member of parliament in the Liberal Democratic Party added his voice to those calling for the Bank of Japan to tighten monetary policy in order to bolster the yen. 'Now the economy is with inflation and interest rates, so we should have new economic policies,' Kono Taro said in a press conference Wednesday. 'Now what we need is tight monetary policy to bring the yen stronger.'


New York Post
9 minutes ago
- New York Post
Zohran Mamdani praises NYPD Commish Tisch's crime record but won't commit to keeping her if elected — and defends previous silence on slain cops
Mayoral frontrunner Zohran Mamdani would not commit to keeping NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch in his administration if elected, even as he praised her crime record. The Democratic socialist refused to say if he'd retain the popular top cop and also defended his previous silence on slain cops at National Night Out, an annual police-community bond-building event, on Tuesday evening. 'I have great appreciation of the swift and decisive action Commissioner Tisch took to root out corruption and the upper echelons of the NYPD and the way in which she has presided over in department that has seen crime continue to lower across the city,' Mamdani told reporters at the event. 3 Mayoral frontrunner Zohran Mamdani praised NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch for her crime record, but wouldn't commit to keeping her in his administration if elected during a National Night Out event Tuesday. REUTERS 'I'm appreciative of the work that's been done and still think that it's too early for me to make those commitments as I run for the general election,' he said at the event, where he made remarks alongside Attorney General Letitia James. Mamdani's statements come as new NYPD statistics revealed shootings so far this year plunged to the lowest level on record under Tisch's leadership. The Big Apple saw 412 shooting incidents, with 489 victims, during the first seven months of 2025, according to the data released by the police department this week. Both are records that comfortably shatter the previous lows for shootings — 426 — and shooting victims — 522 — respectively, set over the same time frame in 2017 and 2018, cops said. 3 Mamdani's statements come as new NYPD statistics revealed shootings so far this year plunged to the lowest level on record under Tisch's leadership. Stephen Yang The Democratic mayoral primary winner also defended himself against Mayor Eric Adams' criticism that he's only attended cop funerals while making a run for City Hall and has otherwise blown off NYPD burials during his years as a state lawmaker. Mamdani, 33, served more than four years in the state Assembly before his surprise Democratic primary win against former Gov. Andrew Cuomo in June. 'As a state legislator, my focus has been on the tragedies and the triumphs of my district that I've represented, of Astoria and Long Island City,' Mamdani told reporters, not directly acknowledging the no-shows. The Ugandan-born lefty paid his respects to relatives of NYPD cop Didarul Islam last week, after the four-year department veteran was gunned down in a mass shooting inside a Park Avenue office building. 3 The Democratic mayoral primary winner also defended himself against Mayor Adams' criticism that he's only attended cop funerals while making a run for City Hall. REUTERS But Mamdani was a no-show — and didn't say a peep — after a half dozen of New York's Finest died during his tenure in Albany after they were gunned down in the line of duty, records reviewed by The Post show. 'As I run for citywide office and seek to represent this entire city, my focus is on extending that to every single borough of this city and over the course of this campaign, to see the horrific mass shooting that took the lives of four New Yorkers, including Detective Islam,' Mamdani said. 'And I pray and hope that there will be no further shootings of police officers or murders over the course of this campaign or over the course of the time that I seek to be the mayor of this city,' he said.


Newsweek
10 minutes ago
- Newsweek
Andrew Cuomo Calls Gaza Crisis 'Heartbreaking,' Wants Aid Delivered
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo appeared to criticize Israel over the humanitarian crisis in Gaza in what Bloomberg News reported as a "shift" in tone as he revamps his campaign for mayor of New York after losing June's mayoral primary to upstart New York state Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani. In later comments to The New York Times, Cuomo argued that Israel was not solely responsible for the "heartbreaking" situation in Gaza. Newsweek reached out to Cuomo's campaign for comment on Tuesday night. New York City mayoral candidates Zohran Mamdani, left, is pictured in New York City on April 16, while Andrew Cuomo, right, is also shown in the city, on April 13. New York City mayoral candidates Zohran Mamdani, left, is pictured in New York City on April 16, while Andrew Cuomo, right, is also shown in the city, on April 13. Angela Weiss,Charly Triballeau/AFP/Getty Images Why It Matters Mamdani, 33, set off a political earthquake in June by winning New York City's Democratic mayoral primary, overcoming millions of dollars in ads and super PAC spending backing the campaign of political veteran Cuomo. A self-described democratic socialist, Mamdani leads a five-candidate New York City mayoral race by double digits and amasses more than 50 percent of the vote regardless of his opponent, according to a poll released at the end of July. Cuomo came in second, receiving 22 percent. Republican Curtis Sliwa garnered 13 percent in the poll, New York Mayor Eric Adams received 7 percent, former federal prosecutor Jim Walden collected 1 percent and "others/I don't know" totaled 6 percent. Cuomo is a staunch supporter of Israel while Mamdani's criticism of Israel's war in Gaza has set him apart from many mainstream Democrats and brought accusations of antisemitism, which he has fiercely denied. The issue could divide New Yorkers when they vote for mayor in November. What To Know Cuomo, in an interview with Bloomberg News, appeared to criticize Israel over conditions in Gaza, where aid agencies have warned of growing famine. "Do I support what the Israel government is doing vis-à-vis Gaza? No. Do I support Israel impeding humanitarian aid? No," he said. Israel has denied an intentional campaign to withhold food to Gaza's 2 million residents. Bloomberg said Cuomo "shifts [his] tone on Israel" as he revamps his campaign following his June primary defeat. But in later comments to the Times, Cuomo seemed to back off those earlier remarks, saying all sides had to act to ensure humanitarian aid gets through, the outlet reported. "Everyone should do everything they can to get the humanitarian aid delivered," Cuomo said, adding: "It's heartbreaking as a father to imagine what children are going through." Cuomo told the Times that in the earlier interview, he was expressing the views of some New Yorkers, but not his own. "I was airing what some people feel. You have some people who feel that Israel is not acting appropriately. That's their opinion," he said. What People Are Saying In his later interview with the Times, Cuomo said: "It is incumbent on every entity that is involved — Israel, Palestine, the United Nations, the Red Cross — to do everything to expedite the food and water." What Happens Next The New York City mayoral general election is set for November 4.