Saturday, May 2, 2026

Zohran Mamdani Is Doing Exactly What He Said He Would

 Democrats want America to fail as a nation just to prove our opposition is incompetent. The rest of us must be better than that and have the clarity of expression to teach why failure is endemic to liberal policies. Something I fear will not be done in academia and media. The Tunnel Dweller

Spencer Neale - The American Conservative  

"Though his critics have every right to deride the progressive policy goals and decisions of the new mayor of New York City, it is difficult to argue that Mamdani has lacked the courage to govern as a democratic socialist in the financial center of America."

"It has been more than 100 days since Zohran Mamdani took office, and New York City hasn’t imploded in the ways critics had warned it would. You don’t have to like Mamdani or agree with his progressive politics to recognize a core truth: The 34-year-old democratic socialist is governing New York City in line with the agenda he laid out on the campaign trail in the fall of 2025, and the sky has yet to fall. 

"Less than a year after defeating former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo in a race that stunned much of the Democratic establishment, Mamdani has quickly translated campaign rhetoric into policy. From advancing taxes on the wealthy to launching plans for city-owned grocery stores, he has begun implementing the economic agenda that helped carry him into Gracie Mansion.

“To be told a city-run grocery store is implausible, but $500 million a day to kill people in Iran and Lebanon is necessary, speaks to a broken politics,” Mamdani told NPR days after his widely-publicized grocery store announcement.

"The mayor’s criticism of a federal government obsessed with tax-funded war spending wasn’t finished there. Mamdani, who has cultivated a surprisingly friendly relationship with President Donald Trump, asked why spending public money to address affordability concerns in America’s biggest cities draws the ire of conservative critics who applaud immense spending on wars in the Middle East.

"'We’re talking about a federal administration that has spent close to $30 billion killing thousands of people at a time when working-class people across this country cannot afford the bare minimum,” Mamdani told NPR on the same weekend that Trump and Israel’s war in Iran stretched into its seventh week. The mayor went further in an interview with Al Jazeera in early April, speaking against “a war that has killed thousands of civilians" before noting that his controversial economic policies would “cost a fraction” of the tens of billions of dollars being spent on the Iran war.

"'Tupac said it decades ago, it continues to be true,” Mamdani said before quoting the late rapper Tupac Shakur. “We always seem to have money for war but not to feed the poor. That is not the way politics should be, that is not what Americans want politics to be.”

"While critics in the business community argue that his policy agenda could weaken the city’s economic competitiveness, predictions of large-scale capital flight have not yet materialized in any clear or measurable way. In fact, corporate America is actually expanding its footprint in Mamdani’s New York, and some of the city’s wealthiest residents have publicly signaled their willingness to remain in the city despite proposed tax increases.

"Mamdani, for his part, has governed with consistency grounded in the assurances he made on the campaign trail. For moderates and independents who were uncertain what a democratic socialist administration would look like in practice, his early tenure offers a vivid and straightforward demonstration." . . .  More...

Spencer Neale is the Features Editor at The American Conservative. He previously worked for Citizen Free Press, the Washington Examiner, the University of Richmond, and Virginia Commonwealth University.

Decommodification: The Dark Matter of Zohran Mamdani’s Agenda    "The beauty and genius of America is that we are free to live our lives the way we choose — by our own stars, our own compass, and our own judgment — to seek our individual goals and happiness as we see fit. We respect the rights of others and do not seek the unearned or the unmerited. In the end, we are comforted in the knowledge and understanding that individual rights are what keep society subject to justice and the rule of law.

"Morality can apply only to those who have a choice.

"In Mamdani’s mayoral victory speech, he invoked the words of Eugene Debs, the OG American socialist activist who ran for president five times between 1900 and 1920 (once from jail), co-founded the Socialist Party of America, and famously said, “The most heroic word in all languages is REVOLUTION.”

And on the left coast: Seattle's socialist mayor Katie Wilson slammed for cutting short interview over basic public safety question  . . . "Wilson awkwardly exited the interview with Seattle’s TV station KOMO after being asked about the role of surveillance cameras amid rising gun violence in the city.

"That's obviously been an issue that you weighed in on. Does that change it? Does that change your perspective at all?" the reporter asked.

As the question was posed, the mayor began to break eye contact and glance at what appeared to be her press staffers off camera, who can be heard telling the reporter to "keep it on topic."

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