If there was any hope New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani would inch towards the middle or appeal to moderate Democrats as he launched his administration, it vanished in the bitter January air that ushered in the start of his term.
During his inaugural address Thursday, Mamdani sought to send a clear message: That the left had won the hard-fought race for mayor, and his administration is now intent on showing the rest of the country that progressive liberals can, in fact, govern.
At a time of deep political division across the US, Mamdani stuck to his political identity and ideology, reminding the crowd he had been “elected as a democratic socialist,” promising to “govern as a democratic socialist” and castigating the politics of complacency and the political establishment for failing its constituency.
It was an unapologetically progressive speech, in which Mamdani framed the mainstream Democratic party as one that lacked imagination and ambition. Then, he vowed to not “abandon my principles for fear of being deemed radical.”
“In writing this address, I have been told that this is the occasion to reset expectations, that I should use this opportunity to encourage the people of New York to ask for little and expect even less,” he said. “I will do no such thing. The only expectation I seek to reset is that of small expectations.”
Mamdani also tried to strike a unifying tone. He spoke directly to opponents and critics who remain skeptical the 34-year-old former state assemblyman will be able to run the largest city in the nation and enact an agenda many consider too liberal and unrealistic.
Mamdani has proposed taxing the city’s wealthiest residents and raising the corporate tax rate – moves that would require the support of the state legislature and the governor – to pay for his signature agenda items: universal childcare, “fast and free” city buses and enacting a rent freeze for rent stabilized tenants.
“If you are a New Yorker, I am your mayor,” Mamdani told the crowd. “Regardless of whether we agree, I will protect you, celebrate with you, mourn alongside you and never, not for a second, hide from you.”
Mamdani’s focus on working-class New Yorkers was peppered throughout his speech. He spoke of taxi drivers and restaurant servers, hospital workers and subway operators, describing people who work in the shadows and often go unnoticed while struggling to stay afloat.
Shortly before addressing the crowd, a duo performed the “Bread and Roses” anthem –– the title a nod to a political slogan that became a rallying cry for workers’ rights in 1912. The imagery is meant to symbolize people’s need for basic necessities, but also beauty. In choosing the performance, Mamdani’s administration appeared to try and tell New Yorkers it was possible to have both.
“What’s radical is a system which gives so much to so few and denies so many people the basic necessities of life,” Mamdani said, quoting Independent Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who administered Mamdani’s public oath of office. Sanders praised New Yorkers and Mamdani for giving hope and inspiration to “people all over this country.”
The barely-disguised vitriol in this article is disgusting. Hope “vanished?” Fuck off, CNN. Mamdani represents hope.
no surprise though, didnt some friend of Murdoch’s buyout CNN a couple years back?
I stopped watching and reading CNN over a decade ago. They don’t give a shit about any of us.
I think it’s funny how CNN words this in an attempt to demonize him but they just keep on making him sound better and better
CNN says
No, no, don’t you see, he will tax the billionaires!!! He will hurt the landlords!!!

“Mayor promises to do the things that people voted for.”
The constant flipflopping between calling him a “progressive liberal” and a “democratic socialist” is annoying. Pick a lane, CNN. He’s one or the other, and from what I’ve heard from him he’s very clearly a democratic socialist.
They see no difference. Fox calls him a liberal and a communist. These are buzzwords with no meaning beyond emotional impact. They do not care about political theory.
got to repeat as many scary words as possible until one sticks with their base, then hammer it endlessly
Hey remember just last week how people thought he was going back on his promises?
I don’t think this is proof for the opposite, but I’m still in the camp of: “let’s see what he actually does before we judge”.
Edit: after reading the article, this part jumped out at me
Mamdani’s election in November sparked a debate about whether the national Democratic party should shift leftward, focus on issues affecting the working class and specifically target voters by highlighting affordability, especially in the upcoming midterm elections.
As apposed to what exactly? Isn’t making things more affordable like the ideal goal for most politicians? They are almost saying the quiet part out loud.
Here’s an example of something I came across: Link
Fixing the Property Tax System, dealing with landlordship in New York, working with City Council to pass the Community Opportunity to Purchase Act (COPA), which gives qualified mission-driven nonprofits a first right to purchase multifamily buildings when landlords sell… there’s a lot being attempted here.
He spoke directly to opponents and critics who remain skeptical the 34-year-old former state assemblyman will be able to run the largest city in the nation and enact an agenda many consider too liberal and unrealistic.
They’re all cowards and liars.
Heck yeah. Get stuff done. Be a role model for the rest of the states.
Dude makes me want to move to NY.
NYC affordability was why my parents took us to Philly. I mean Philly housing was much cheaper… but its kinda “ghetto” here ngl
I mean it’s not that bad here, but I remember K-12 school felt less diverse for Asians like me so I got bullied in school a lot here. I remember having a better experience in NYC, like literally a quarter of the kids are ABCs, much less racism there.
I wonder if my life would’ve been better had we stayed in NYC… at least when it comes to the racism.
I don’t have kids yet, but I wouldn’t want my kids to grow up in Philly tbh, if NYC was more affordable, I might wanna go back there tbh.
So much positive childhood memories there, so nostalgic.
As much as I enjoy the fact that swearing in on the Quran rattles the cages of conservatives, it would have been more progressive to choose a non-religious text rather than a regressive one associated with things like keeping women down or anti-lgbtq laws.
Yeah but he’s a self proclaimed Muslim, not an atheist or agnostic.
And they really shat on him for being Muslim so I think he’s deserves it.
Tbf swearing on religious items was never supposed to be a “symbolic” thing.
It used to just mean “Yeah I believe lying right now will result in divine punishment.”
Like it’s just a confirmation to people you will not simply break your promise for your own benefit because you fully believe heavy consequences exist.
Damn that speech is very reminiscent of FDR











