The Democratic Thrill for Mamdani Is a Tell
What political insurgencies can teach us about major parties
			There are any number of personal qualities that make New York mayoral front-runner Zohran Kwame Mamdani's political prominence seem improbable: his youth, his inexperience, his socialism, his terrible rapping, his statements of anti-Israel animus in the world's second-largest Jewish city. But the unlikeliest aspect to the State Assembly member's meteoric rise may be that an electoral pulse-quickener got anywhere near a position of prominence in a one-party polity.
The default Democrat in jurisdictions where Republicans are rare (they're outnumbered six to one in NYC) isn't a social-mediagenic semi-outsider; it's a dull-as-a-doorknob survivor of internal party jockeying. Think Bill de Blasio (not the Long Island one), or former California attorney general (and, gobsmackingly, secretary of health and human services) Xavier Becerra, not a junior Barack Obama wannabe.
The hapless mayor of Los Angeles, Karen Bass, went from South L.A. activist to perpetual 80/20 winner of a safe House of Representatives seat to the final four in Joe Biden's vice-presidential search before being anointed the Democratic mayoral nominee, surviving a close primary, then waltzing into office. The lucky winner of Biden's veepstakes, Bass's fellow female minority Kamala Harris (don't get mad at my descriptors; they were Biden's stated requirements), was a human word-salad generator who had faced all of one competitive general election before failing her way up to the Eisenhower Executive Office Building and being gifted with the 2024 Democratic nomination.
So you could almost forgive the media giddiness for Mamdani—Jon Stewart comparing the candidate to Jackie Robinson, the Pod Saves America bros gushing like 12-year-old girls talking about the Beatles in 1964, and so forth. It can be genuinely exciting, after years of unlovable establishmentarians like Biden, Harris, Hillary Clinton, and various vice presidential nominees named Tim, to encounter someone who can send the ol' thrill back up that leg.
Populist insurgencies, ever aided by the cutting edge of online culture, teach us important things about the major political parties they aim to overturn from within. The early rise of Howard Dean in the 2004 Democratic primaries indicated an anti-war fervor that would not be mollified by the milquetoast flip-floppery of John Kerry. (Barack Hussein Obama would be both the ultimate vindicator and decisive extinguisher of that lamented tendency on the left.) Ron Paul's rEVOLutions revealed similar anti-imperial urges on the right; they also helped midwife the initially robust fiscal conservatism of the Tea Party, whose anti-establishment candidates sent not a small number of thrills up the leg of this very magazine.
But the twin rises in 2015 of Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders as the most consequential—and thrilling!—outsider change-agents on our two 19th century political parties marked a new if by now pretty long era of explicitly anti-libertarian populism, in which apocalyptic rhetoric about America's doom goes hand in hand with magical thinking about policy fixes, and where facility with memes supplants fluency with policy.
There's a reason Mamdani has been raising hands at rallies with Sanders and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D–N.Y.): He mixes Sanders's unapologetic socialism with AOC's youthful, multicultural toppling of a weary Democratic lifer. All three—quite unlike, say, New Jersey gubernatorial front-runner Mikie Sherrill, Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, and even the eternally oleaginous California Gov. Gavin Newsom—are modern-day Democratic rock stars, able to fill at least small stadiums.
Mamdani's chief opponent, the disgraced former governor Andrew Cuomo, who has run one of the most lackluster campaigns I've seen this side of Cruz Bustamante, would be lucky to fill a Shake Shack. His selling proposition is not just hold-your-nose-while-voting; it's hold-your-nose-to-block-the-smell-of-your-rotting-husband-he-killed. If voting is best understood as a consumer good, you can see why New York Dems are gravitating toward the head-tilter: In a state represented in the U.S. Senate by Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand, and a city whose last two mayors were the dreary de Blasio and the backlash-against-lefty-excesses Eric Adams, this may be Democrats' first affirmatively pleasurable experience at the ballot box since Obama.
For those of us on the outside of Team Blue, and for the other 332 million U.S. residents who don't live in (and are sick of hearing about) the Big Apple, here is the tell to watch out for in the coming days: Which prospective victory will Democrats be more fired up about Wednesday, Abigail Spanberger flipping the Virginia governorship away from the GOP, or Mamdani flashing his pearly whites in Gotham? The former is by far the more consequential indicator of the next two years in major-party competition; the latter tells you more about what's percolating under the Democratic hood.
If Mamdani wins the intra-Democratic beauty pageant, then hold onto your wallets. Populism, at least as channeled professionally through major-party politics, demands not results but proof of marketable concept. Why, you can win a high-profile election simply by smiling on social media and promising stuff even Saturday Night Live finds laughable? Get ready for a rent-freezing, billionaire-taxing, teachers union–fluffing, restorative justice–loving socialist near you. And keep the local U-Haul on speed dial.
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I laugh at the fate NYC voters will bring upon themselves.
Indeed. Unfortunately their problem will be made our problem when the taxers will be forced ( at gunpoint) to bail out N.Y. City's failure.
Money making opportunity in NYC bonds.
Just check the past when NYC was looking at bankruptcy and their bonds became almost worthless.....until the feds bailed them out.
Welch, tell us about that Red Wedding 2.0 you wishcast.
He will incorporate it into his Mamdani victory celebration.
Let's give him credit, at least he's not criticizing others for supporting violence on their enemies.
(don't get mad at my descriptors; they were Biden's stated requirements)
Matt, every forklift driver from Burbank to Buffalo knows this. Only a fellow Democrat would claim "no one ever said that" or "nothing was ever locked down".
Those were the same requirements for his SCOTUS pick as well. Actually, to be fair, he specifically said he wanted a black woman, not just any old minority.
Which should have immediately resulted in employment lawsuits against the POTUS as it would have if any corp in America made such a stupid statement.
Okay I'll admit that was an entertaining rant but the Koch/Reason strategic and reluctant support for the leftist revolution is still the elephant in the room.
the latter tells you more about what's percolating under the Democratic hood.
Matt, Marxism isn't percolating "under the hood". Sure for most of my adult life, Marxism percolated "under the hood" for the Democratic party, but as one thought leader pointed out YEARS ago, it was the garnish-- the parsley on the side of the plate, but it became the entree, the t-bone steak in the center of the plate, and I'd argue that became prominent around 2012.
And when people started noticing in 2015, your pal Nick Gillespie mocked them.
I mean... it's not like no one was talking about this over the last 35 years!
I wonder how that came to be.
Do you mean the actual Marxism of Karl Marx? You know, "seize the means of production" and all that? Not even Bernie Sanders advocates for that.
Do you mean so-called "cultural Marxism"? Guess what, that is just the name that you all apply to any oppressor-oppressed conflict when it's the other side doing it. But what exactly is the difference conceptually between the argument of "structural racism keeps Black people down", and the argument of "institutional capture keeps conservatives down"? Both of these invoke some shadowy nebulous ill-defined external force to explain why certain groups aren't performing as they think they ought to. Both of these have some tiny element of truth to them, but that small element is swamped by hyperbole and vast overstatements of the power assigned to those shadowy forces. It's the same fucking thing. You call it "cultural Marxism" when the other team does it, but in reality it's just a victimhood complex.
Don't worry, actual Marxism remains just a garnish. What is Zohran's main platform? He wants free buses, government-run grocery stores, more affordable housing while freezing rent. All are pretty terrible ideas, but it's also not "nationalize industry".
There is one politician, on the other hand, who strongly supports partial nationalization of some industries...
I mean, sure they say seize the means of production, but they don't really mean it.
sure they say seize the means of production, but they don't really mean it.
You mean, the same standard applied to Trump - you can't believe everything he says?
“But….. but…….. Trump!!!!!!”
Not an argument, Fatfuck.
Kudos to you. Anyone who claims Obama wasn't just as radical, antisemitic, socialist, ignorant and starfuckering as Mamdani is too stupid to comment on politics. And that feckless asshole was POTUS. Twice. (Or three times counting President Meatsack.)
But now the sky is falling because Obama 2.0 is going to be mayor of a city I hate? Sorry, not buying it. I hope NYC enjoys what it has coming. I know I will from thousands of miles away.
This ^
Oh please. Obama was an establishment Democrat wearing a chic, radical costume.
I didn't vote for him, but at least I understand who he actually was, rather than the scary caricature that Team Red created of him.
For once, it won't be California getting hazed for being the land of fruits and nuts.
For a fourth generation native like me, this is delicious!
Finally - New Yorkers can feel the same excitement and joy Germans felt in 1934.
Once again, not all New Yorkers were left out in 1934:
The real problem was that MSG didn't have a Section 230 to protect it as a platform at the time.
MSG almost has a Section 230, it's just the 200-level only goes up to 227 . . .
"...But the twin rises in 2015 of Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders..."
One of those is not like the other, you pathetic, steaming pile of TDS-addled lying shit.
Fuck off and die.
[Edit: Lets not engage with this chode]
Just ignore it.
Do t worry John, we won’t ignore your flaming antisemitism.
.22 short squib load, it is why you had been muted for some time. Never anything of value from your account. Keep seething about losing the culture war, you bitter he/she/it.
There is one thing that both these candidates did show.
A widespread dissatisfaction with the current direction of the political parties. Trump's nomination was a vote of no confidence in the GOP leadership. The fact that Clinton had to play dirty to get the nomination that she was effectively "owed" was the same for the Democrats, and that dirty dealing was instrumental in Trump's election.
So, in many ways, the outcome of the 2015 election was a vote of no confidence in both parties. Only the GOP really adapted at the time, but it seems that the DNC people listened, even if their leadership did not.
FYI, I can't WAIT for Mamdani to be mayor. I will celebrate with a libation when he's elected.
Buy some popcorn at a non-govt coop grocery store, sit back, relax, and enjoy the entertainment.
Things are about to get "interesting" in New Yawk.
Glad I don't live next door.
Popcorn ready, the beer is cold.
Get ready for a rent-freezing, billionaire-taxing, teachers union–fluffing, restorative justice–loving socialist near you. And keep the local U-Haul on speed dial.
AKA Seattle for decades. This is nothing new at all... for those of us that live in bluer-than-blue-found-in-nature-blue cities. Say what you will about New York, you had a Republican Mayor in the last 30 years.
The folks in N.Y. City are going to get the socialism they wanted.....good and hard.
And none of it will matter because if NYC budgets go into the shitter they'll blame racism, Trump's economy, tariffs, and then they'll get state and federal bailouts.
Seattle is dying: https://youtu.be/bpAi70WWBlw
Oh yeah, that documentary. That was when The Seattle Times was still in "it's not happening mode". Shortly after that doc, they pivoted to "Ok, it's happening but it's not as bad as you say" mode.
Like I said, money making opportunity.
Fire KMW and Welch.
Get out of DC and NYC.
Publish some libertarian content.
It struck me last week, after "tax cars to reduce traffic!" and several years of "the answer to too much ranch land is lab-grown meat!" that Reason is a lot like that Italian Pop Song where the singer is doing an imitation of English. It's a fun, toe-tapping tune, but if you pay any attention to the lyrics, it's just gibberish. Reason looks libertarian, sounds libertarian, it has all the right beats and phonemes, but in the end, it's just a bunch of words and syllables that are vaguely "pro innovation" and "tariffs are like, the worst, man".
You left out "drugs never hurt anyone but the user" and "all borders are fascism". But a fine screed, nonetheless. And that song is a real banger.
America: "NYC the call is coming from inside the house!"
NYC: "I think I'll go check the basement."
It is every large corrupt urban center. NYC was just one of the first to hand over voting to foreigners. Reason still wont acknowledge this fact.
NYC was just one of the first to hand over voting to foreigners.
Wait, NYC permits all citizens to vote, even foreign-born citizens? No way!
Reason still wont acknowledge this fact.
You mean, Reason isn't going to take the xenophobic bait and blame furriners for America's problems, the way that Team Red does? Why, it's almost as if Reason isn't on Team Red.
Allowing non-citizens to vote is a nonsensical policy. Having people with little commitment to the country to have a say in its governance is not the way to set good governance and compromises the sovereignty of the people.
Noncitizens cannot vote in New York City.
We are talking about foreign-born CITIZENS. Those are the people JesseBot and Team Red are complaining about.
So when JesseBot says that NYC is "hand over voting to foreigners", do you agree with him? That foreign-born CITIZENS should nonetheless be considered "foreigners"?
We get it. Reason loves illegals and so do you. And according to you, we can’t import enough indigent illiterates from around the world, especially the ones that hate America and will vote in your Marxist fellow travelers.
Now you can fuck off. Maybe go check your trunk for bears.
Jeff is the sort of asshole who visits someone else's home and demands how they act in their home.
They're desperate to regain their title:
https://www.travelandleisure.com/city-with-worst-rat-problem-orkin-report-11841013
In twenty years, the economics of most cities will be out and out socialism. The economics of the suburbs will be fascist. And the rural areas will be capitalist. Those of you around to see it will be living in interesting times.
Or……. we could just get rid of the Marxists right now. Why should we tolerate an existential threat?
Winning the Virginia governorship would hardly be "flipping", Youngkin was an anomaly in a solidly blue state.
Yeah, I noticed that too. Virginia tried their experiment and are returning to the warm, comfortable womb of business-as-usual.
Youngkin has barely done anything. At best you can say he didn't continue to advance the state far to the left. Spanberger is a vile human being who has been very visibly awful for a long time. NOVA and a couple other cities will vote for any democrat regardless of how radical their policy proposals are, so the rest of the state gets screwed.
Mamdami is not fascist like all the Republicans. He might be a bit more liberal and European socialist for some, but he is not openly destroying the US as a free country. Why would Jews support him? Because they live in New York and not Israel, and they want a better New York. Israel can deal with itself.
You get funnier by the minute.
And dumber.
Just lie how Lenin and Stalin were only center left, right Tony?
>>For those of us on the outside of Team Blue
okay, jeff
Wanna bet any number of businesses are now looking into other places to relocate including Florida. Most likely, any person making more than a five figure income is now planning an escape.
I guess the movie was more prophetic than the writers imagined.
Mamdani is a foreign born immigrant who should be barred from ever running for any public office.
Public office for Americans citizens only.
Zohran is just the left-wing version of Trump. Breaking the norms and conventions, upending the establishment, generating populist enthusiasm. This is what happens when the populist genie is let out of the bottle.
I look forward to sarc calling you out for saying Reps did it first.
Many are just too dumb to vote. We need to return to only property owners being allowed to vote.
There's a very good reason why no one cares about a socialist as mayor in a big blue city any more: raising tax rates does not now and never has raised revenues. No one cares if Mamdani tries to impose more socialism on New Yorkers: the six-to-one D-to-R ratio is because socialism - along with corruption and organized criminal employee unions - was maxed out long ago and the Rs who are not too wealthy to care already moved out (except for a few Reason editors, of course.) As far as the rest of the country is concerned, if we don't want to comply with any attempted spread of socialism to our neck of the woods, there are forty million trained and armed "unorganized" militia keeping their powder dry and just waiting for the spark.
**...a new if by now pretty long era of explicitly anti-libertarian populism, in which apocalyptic rhetoric about America's doom goes hand in hand with magical thinking about policy fixes, and where facility with memes supplants fluency with policy.**
Magical thinking like "We should allow open borders and endless access to drugs BEFORE we abolish the welfare state"? Or more like "The LP can wield outsized influence if we take a 5-10% party and, via never-learn policy and candidates chosen from the retard section at Bed Bath & Beyond, become little more than a rounding error away from 0%"?
Too bad all the Radio Zions up and down the AM dial squawked about Mamdani for 3 months instead of a more serious threat to conservatism, that being CA Prop 50. I'm hoping they shut up about him after tomorrow.