New York City‘s socialist mayor Zohran Mamdani has unveiled the plans for the first city-owned grocery store and revealed they will leave taxpayers on the hook for an eight-figure sum.
The municipally funded store will open next year in Manhattan’s East Harlem to the tune of $30 million.
The store would be built at La Marqueta, a city-owned marketplace in a mostly Latino neighborhood.
The controversial project is expected to be the first of five city-run grocery stores that formed the cornerstone of Mamdani’s campaign.
It has now emerged the total cost for the stores will be an eye-watering $70 million while New York City faces a $5.4 billion budget crunch.
‘At our stores, eggs will be cheaper, breads will be cheaper,’ he said during a 100-day address on Monday night. ‘Grocery shopping will no longer be an unsolvable equation.’
But critics say that the socialist stores could harm private businesses and drive billionaires out of the city, pointing to failed attempts in the US and around the world.
Mamdani, a self-proclaimed Democratic Socialist, shot back saying that he had a ‘simple’ answer for the concerns.
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani announced that the first city-owned grocery store would open in Manhattan in 2027
La Marqueta sits on a primarily Latino neighborhood in East Harlem. Mamdani said about 65,000 New Yorkers live within a 10-minute walk
‘I look forward to the competition,’ Mamdani said. ‘May the most affordable grocery store win.’
Billionaire supermarket executive John Catsimatidis, who owns the supermarket chains Gristedes and D’Agostino’s in Manhattan, has said the socialist stores would ‘drag us down a path toward the bread lines of the old Soviet Union.’
Catsimatidis also compared Mamdani’s plan to policies associated with Hugo Chávez in Venezuela and Fidel Castro in Cuba, as he derided the mayor.
Fernando Mateo, the co-founder of United Bodegas of America, the association representing New York City’s corner stores, predicted that Mamdani’s socialist grocers would quickly get ‘jam-packed.’
‘You’re going to have people rushing to these stores early in the morning to late at night, waiting on long lines,’ Mateo told WABC.
Mateo, who resigned from the bodega association in October over its support for Mamdani’s plan, added that the city-run stores would likely be ‘more turmoil than anything else.’
‘It’s a great punchline for him and for the socialist movement but New York is not a socialist city,’ Mateo said.
Mamdani’s announcement came as he faces a $5.4 billion budget deficit that must be addressed by the time a new spending plan comes into effect on July 1.
Billionaire supermarket executive John Catsimatidis, a Republican, previously compared Mamdani’s city-owned grocery stores proposal to ‘the bread lines of the old Soviet Union’
Mamdani said that he hoped the city-run grocery store at La Marqueta would be able to serve roughly 25,000 customers on a daily basis
The New York City Council still needs to approve Mamdani’s $70 million proposal for five city-run grocery stores.
City Council Speaker Julie Menin, who has emerged as an early critic of the mayor, acknowledged the city was confronting ‘fiscal and affordability crises’ but did not immediately indicate whether she would back Mamdani’s plan.
‘Speaker Menin looks forward to receiving details on the Mayor’s proposal and assessing its potential impacts on consumers and local small businesses, including bodegas,’ a spokesman for Menin told The New York Times.
Announcing the plan, Mamdani proudly said that he was ‘elected as a Democratic Socialist and I will govern as a Democratic Socialist.’
He also invoked former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher’s famous critique of socialism, albeit with a leftist spin.
‘If anything, my friends, it seems that you eventually need a socialist to clean up the mess,’ Mamdani said.
Grocery prices in New York City increased by nearly 66 percent between 2013 and 2023, according to Mamdani.
He said the decision to open the first socialist store at La Marqueta was a nod to former New York Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia.
New York City Council speaker Julie Menin (right) said she still needed to hear about how Mamdani’s plan would impact consumers and local small businesses
LaGuardia opened the Park Avenue Retail Market in the same area in 1936 and La Marqueta is considered its continuation.
Around 65,000 New Yorkers will live within a 10–minute walk of the city’s first socialist grocery store. He added that he hoped the store would serve about 25,000 customers per day.
The city plans to waive rent and real estate taxes for the project, which will be built on an empty lot without displacing existing vendors.
‘I know there are many who use ‘socialist’ as a dirty word, [as] something to be ashamed of,’ Mamdani said. ‘They can try all they want but we will not be ashamed of using government to fight for the many, not simply the few.’
Tobacco and lottery products, which are among the most popular at the city’s corner stores, will not be offered at the socialist grocery stores.
‘We’re talking about the very food and produce that working-class New Yorkers are so often priced out of while they’re being lectured to and told to eat healthier,’ Mamdani said during an appearance at La Marqueta on Tuesday morning.
Mamdani has said he hopes to open all five stores by the end of his current term in 2029.
Mamdani said that tobacco and lottery products would not be sold at the new socialist stores, of which he plans to open five by 2029
‘There will be an essential basket of goods that will be guaranteed at a cheaper price,’ he said.
‘The intent and something that we will fulfill is that New Yorkers will be able to recognize the price differential. It won’t just be incidental.’
The Daily Mail has reached out to the New York City Mayor’s Office for further comment.

