President Trump laid waste to New York’s latest left-wing charade on national television Sunday, flatly declaring that 34-year-old Zohran Mamdani is an untested radical — and that he himself has the looks, the leadership and the patriotism to outclass Mamdani by a mile.

“I’m a much better-looking person than him,” the President said without hesitation. Then he dropped the real bomb: “He’s a communist. Far worse than a socialist.” No equivocation. No spin. Just the plain truth.

Mamdani bills himself as a “democratic socialist,” but Trump cut through the labels like a hot knife through butter. This isn’t idealism — it’s a full-blown assault on private enterprise and law and order, backed by promises of sweeping tax hikes, open borders and razor-thin public safety. That vision would turn Manhattan into a bureaucratic nightmare.

When asked if Mamdani is a left-wing version of Trump — charismatic, rule-breaker, outsider — the President smiled. “He’s breaking all the wrong rules,” Trump said. “He’ll make de Blasio look like a genius. And de Blasio was the worst mayor this city’s ever seen.”

The verdict was brutal: Mamdani’s policies would decimate small businesses, cripple the NYPD and saddle taxpayers with unaffordable welfare programs. New Yorkers deserve real leadership, not an amateur Marxist posing as the next big thing.

Trump didn’t stop at policy. He called out the mainstream media for giving Mamdani a free pass while demonizing conservative voices. “They’ll edit, they’ll twist, they’ll bury the truth,” the President warned. “I’ve sued them for it — and won. Now they’re paying up.”

Indeed, Trump secured a $16 million settlement from the network after exposing their unfair edits in a previous campaign interview. He’s also demanding the Senate GOP scrap the filibuster and legislate with the majority they’ve earned.

The message is clear: America can’t afford half-measures or soft-ball coverage when democracy itself hangs in the balance. As Trump put it, “If we don’t fight for our country, nobody else will.” New York voters have a choice — real results or radical ruin. The time to decide is now.