Exclusive | ‘Y’all Street’ mayor rips Mamdani over – Business News
Dallas Mayor Eric Johnson taunted Zohran Mamdani over his warfare on Wall Street — claiming that the Big Apple mayor’s antagonism is accelerating a stampede of companies down to the booming Texas metropolis.
In an unique interview with The Post, the Republican mayor of Dallas — the fast-growing metropolis that financiers have branded “Y’all Street” — revealed that the migration of company titans out of New York is “only getting stronger” after the primary six months of the Mamdani administration.
“Mayor Mamdani might be the best thing for Dallas business to ever happen to the city, other than our not having a state income tax,” Johnson quipped. “My message to Mayor Mamdani is, you’re wrong, but keep it coming.”
Dallas Mayor Eric Johnson was in New York final month and rang the bell of the New York Stock Exchange together with a delegation of “Y’all Street’ business leaders. Getty Images
The 50-year-old, Harvard-educated Johnson likewise ripped Mamdani’s latest video stunt in opposition to Ken Griffin, the founder and CEO of the highest hedge fund Citadel, through which he promised to slap recent wealth taxes on second properties.
The Post reported earlier Friday that Griffin has been ghosting the mayor after he tried to set up a call amid the uproar.
“I would never, as the mayor, nor would anybody here, stand outside the residence of one of our corporate leaders and say: ‘We are going to try to figure out a way to tax you out of our city. You’re not welcome here,” he declared. “We don’t view businesses or their leaders as the enemy.”
Johnson’s feedback got here simply over a month after a two-day pitch in Manhattan on April 13 and April 14, the place he and a delegation of Dallas business leaders wooed Wall Street heavyweights, together with JPMorgan Chase, BlackRock, and Fortress Investments.
Mayor Mamdani introduced the plan to “tax the rich” final month in a video filmed outdoors Ken Griffin’s Central Park home. Mayor Mamdani/X
The conferences capitalized on what Johnson described as growing fatigue amongst New York executives over hovering taxes and open hostility from City Hall and Albany.
“The mayor of Dallas, myself, the mayor of New York couldn’t be more diametrically opposed,” Johnson mentioned. “He is an avowed socialist, I’m an avowed capitalist.”
Johnson accused Mamdani and Gov. Kathy Hochul of having “hostility towards business, and frankly, towards successful individuals,” which is actively driving high expertise and whole firms out of the Empire State.
“The rhetoric out of New York continues to be increasingly anti-business, and very much anti-capitalist, and showing no signs of reversing itself,” he added.
Mamdani unveiled a $124.7 billion govt funds this week, closing a deficit partially with an anticipated $500 million from the so-called ‘pied a terre’ tax.
How The Post first depicted the ‘Y’all Steet’ motion after Mamdani’s election in November. Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon and JPMorgan’s Jamie Dimon have already got massive footprints in Dallas. NY Post Design
During his assembly with JPMorgan Chase, Johnson famous that the banking giant now boasts more workers in Texas than in New York.
More devastating blows to New York’s tax base and Mamdani’s tax-and-spend look like on the horizon, with Johnson saying “multiple companies” are in talks to relocate their operations to Texas.
“I would hope by this fall that we’d have some announcements to make of some significant relocations,” the Mayor of Dallas instructed The Post.
“There’s one in particular,” he added. “I think it will send the message loud and clear that we mean business, and that the financial services industry is definitely looking to hedge its bets, and is betting on Dallas and against New York.”
His sit-down got here on the heels of CEO Jamie Dimon’s annual shareholder letter; the veteran Wall Street govt used his yearly missive to lash out at Mamdani’s plans for high taxes and elevated crimson tape.
Citadel CEO Ken Griffin known as Mamdani’s video “creepy” and prompt he would double down on his Miami investments in mild of the Mayor’s business-bashing rhetoric. AFP through Getty Images
“They’re saying that’s not a coincidence, that’s just a business decision,” Johnson defined. “I think that we are going to see just a continuous exodus of jobs out of Manhattan, particularly financial services, including JPMorgan Chase, and others.”
A JPMorgan Chase spokesperson declined to remark, however company insiders mentioned there are “no specific plans” to maneuver more people from New York at current.
The Jamie Dimon-led lender now employs 31,000 in Texas — more than its 24,000 staffers in New York.
That’s even if the bank simply opened a $3 billion Park Avenue headquarters designed by British celebrity architect Norman Foster.
Goldman Sachs can also be building an 800,000 square-foot $500 million “campus” in Dallas that may ultimately home not less than 5,000 staffers.
