For Mamdani’s private inaugural ceremony, held underground in the Old City Hall station downtown in the early hours of Thursday morning, the stylist employed her strategic savoir faire in a manner that only enhanced our perception of the city’s young mayor. As she wrote in her newsletter, owns two pairs of boots and sources his suits from a popular purveyor: Suitsupply. (Lest we forget, Barack Obama wore Brooks Brothers to his presidential inauguration in 2009.) He’s of Indian heritage and a people-first politician, and his tie effectively references those simple truths through its origins and gold floral embroidering—a wink, per Karefa-Johnson, at one of the city’s beloved mayors and a fellow progressive legislator, Fiorello La Guardia, who expanded public housing, fought for laborers, and was known, affectionately, as the “little flower.”
And on his wrist, as per usual, the mayor wore his preferred Casio watch.
During the private ceremony, holding Mamdani’s grandfather’s Quran was the mayor’s wife, Duwaji, 28, who was also dressed by Karefa-Johnson. The city’s new first lady wore a secondhand Balenciaga coat, pointy leather boots from the London-based label Miista (which, as Karefa-Johnson clarified in her post, were a loan from the brand), and tailored shorts from The Frankie Shop. Later in the day, for Mamdani’s public inauguration, she wore a brown fur-tiered coat by Palestinian-Lebanese designer Cynthia Merhej of Renaissance, Renaissance, a look that evoked the elegance of Jackie O., thoughtfully updated for a new, politically passionate generation.