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HomeOPINIONMamdani acts like petulant teen in front of the King and Queen

Mamdani acts like petulant teen in front of the King and Queen

The King and Queen don’t get to America often — their last visit was nearly two decades ago. On Wednesday, the royals honored the victims of 9/11 as the centerpiece of their short stay.

Charles and Camilla performed perfectly, but Mayor Mamdani’s bizarre behavior as host prompts only a question: what the hell is wrong with you?

King Charles and Queen Camilla’s remembrance, meeting with families and laying a wreath at the memorial downtown, is not just a gesture to Americans, months shy of marking the quarter-century anniversary of the terror attacks.

The British and Commonwealth people lost 67 souls on 9/11 — the most of any nation other than our own. The toll was an emblem of our countries’ closeness: executives thought nothing of a quick trip across the Atlantic. The Windows on the World conference atop of One World Trade Center — from which no one escaped — was a part-British event. Some victims marked their only time ever in New York not in days but in hours.

The King’s mother and his heir previously paid their 9/11 respects on New York soil. Queen Elizabeth visited a lower Manhattan garden dedicated to UK victims in 2010. Kate and William visited the 9/11 memorial in 2014. This tradition is becoming an important thread of the US-UK bond.

Mayor Mamdani had just one job: don’t be a jerk.

Instead, the mayor first tried to ignore the King’s visit. Mamdani knew he couldn’t skip the 9/11 appearance — but he omitted the purpose. On his press schedule, Mamdani’s staffers noted only that the mayor would “attend the 9/11 Memorial wreath-laying ceremony” — no mention that the point of the ceremony was so that the King could offer condolences.

Then, hours beforehand, asked by a reporter what he might say to Charles, the mayor purposefully unwelcomed the King. “I’ll be attending a wreath-laying alongside a number of other elected officials,” he said. “The focus of that wreath-laying is to honor the more than 3,000 New Yorkers who were killed.”

Pressed further, Mamdani offered a slap instead of a handshake: “If I was to speak to the king separately from that, I would probably encourage him to return the Koh-i-Noor Diamond,” he said.

No, Mr. Mayor, the King’s wish to honor the dead a few blocks from City Hall was not an opportunity for a freshman barb on colonialism, and imply that this crown jewel belongs to India.

Anyway, what is Mamdani’s standing to demand the diamond — has he appointed himself a representative of India’s government?

It wasn’t just the mayor’s rudeness, but tone and demeanor. Mamdani did his best version of a petulant teen imparting intolerable boredom.

But even the dullest teen would know to say at the press conference: I look forward to joining Charles and Camilla in reflecting on 9/11, including on the British lives lost.

Mamdani did briefly greet Charles at the 9/11 memorial.

It’s a good thing another mayor was on hand, though, to do the apparently arduous task of behaving like a normal person. Michael Bloomberg and the King spent significant time together Wednesday, walking and talking through the memorial’s grounds.

Serving as mayor of a city with so much global history is a big job — it is not all daycare and cheap eggs. On Wednesday, Mamdani made himself look small.

Nicole Gelinas is a contributing editor to the Manhattan Institute’s City Journal.



This story originally appeared on NYPost

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