Ana MarĂa Archila to lead Mayor’s Office of International Affairs
Faiza Ali will head Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs
TODAY, Mayor Zohran Kwame Mamdani announced the appointments of Ana MarĂa Archila as Commissioner of International Affairs and Faiza Ali as Commissioner of Immigrant Affairs.
Archila, a longtime immigrant rights leader and former co-director of the New York Working Families Party (NYWFP), will serve as the city’s chief liaison to the United Nations and the State Department. Ali, who has served in the City Council for over a decade, most recently as the former Speaker’s Deputy Chief of Staff of Community Engagement, will lead the critical Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs.
The Commissioner for International Affairs is the City’s liaison with the United Nations, U.S. State Department and broader diplomatic community. In leading the Mayor’s Office for International Affairs, Archila will advise city agencies on diplomatic matters, welcome foreign diplomats to New York and run leadership development programs like the NYC Junior Ambassadors. As commissioner, Archila will work to ensure New York City remains a welcoming home to the global community.
“New York City has always belonged to the world—a city that immigrants helped build and one strengthened by our many languages and stories. I’m proud to welcome Ana MarĂa Archila into this administration to build on that legacy,” said Mayor Zohran Kwame Mamdani. “Through her leadership at the Working Families Party, she has helped lead a movement that puts working New Yorkers first and demands a government that does the same. She brings moral clarity and a deep commitment to the people who keep this city running. As Commissioner of International Affairs, she’ll continue to do the same as she ensures that the world continues to be welcome in the city we all call home.”
“I’m deeply honored to join Mayor Mamdani’s transformative administration and to imbue into the Office of International Affairs his commitment to make New York a place where everyone can live with dignity,” said Ana MarĂa Archila. “New York City is where diplomats gather, and it’s also the home to millions of working-class New Yorkers from across the world, with hundreds of nationalities represented and languages spoken. In New York City, international relationships are built at the United Nations and across the five boroughs. I am excited to apply my 20-plus years of experience leading immigrant rights and economic justice organizations to the task of building strong relationships with diplomatic missions, governments and movements working to tackle the challenges of inequality, climate change and democratic backsliding.”
About Ana MarĂa Archila
Ana MarĂa Archila has been a leader in New York and nationally in the fight for immigrant rights for over two decades. Born in Colombia, Ana MarĂa has spent her entire adult life in New York. She co-founded and led several grassroots progressive organizations, including Make the Road New York and the Center for Popular Democracy.
Throughout her career, Archila has led efforts for immigration reform, paid sick leave, raising the minimum wage and passing the New York Dream Act. She ran for Lieutenant Governor of New York in 2022 and as a first-time candidate, won 213,210 votes. She most recently served as co-director of the NYWFP and played an integral role in the election of Mayor Mamdani.
Faiza Ali will lead the Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs. Ali is the daughter of Pakistani immigrants and brings years of experience in community organizing and city government. The Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs (MOIA) advises the Mayor to ensure New York City takes care of its immigrant neighbors.
“I am proud to appoint Faiza Ali as the next Commissioner of the Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs. As the daughter of Pakistani immigrants, Faiza understands firsthand the promise and the precarity that define the immigrant experience in New York. She brings more than a decade of experience in community engagement and city government, and a proven record of leadership in advancing immigrant rights and services,” said Mayor Zohran Kwame Mamdani. “At a time when immigrant New Yorkers face escalating attacks and uncertainty, this administration will not equivocate. We will defend our neighbors. We will expand access to services. And we will ensure that New York City remains a place where immigrants are not merely welcomed in words, but protected in policy, supported in practice, and able to live and work with the dignity they deserve.”
"I am the proud daughter of immigrant parents from Pakistan who came to New York City with courage, an unshakable belief in possibility, and the determination to build a future here. This city gave us opportunity, stability, and the chance to put down roots, just as it has for generations of immigrants before us. It is an honor to serve as Commissioner of the Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs. New York City is not just home to immigrants, it is powered by them. Our neighborhoods, our economy, our culture, and our future are shaped by people who arrived here seeking safety and opportunity. As Commissioner, I am committed to building a city that ensures every New Yorker, regardless of when they arrived or where they were born, can live, work, and raise families with dignity,” said Faiza Ali.
About Faiza Ali
Faiza Ali has spent more than a decade working in community engagement at the New York City Council. In 2014, she served as a Community Liaison before working her way to Director of the Community Engagement Division. Prior to joining the Council, Ali was the Advocacy & Civic Engagement Director for the Arab American Association of NY and co-founded the Muslim Democratic Club of New York. She also served as Director of Advocacy at the Arab American Association of New York, an organizer with Brooklyn Congregations United and Director of Community Affairs at CAIR-NY.
Ali helped lead efforts to include two Muslim holidays in the New York City public school system and has fought for immigration reform and language access. She most recently served as First Deputy Chief of Staff at the City Council. As commissioner, Ali will work to increase the accessibility of city programs and benefits to non-English speaking New Yorkers and work collaboratively with other agencies to protects immigrants throughout the five boroughs.
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