By now, you have certainly heard that a 33-year-old Muslim democratic socialist named Zoltan Mamdani won the Democratic primary for mayor in New York City. Most remarkably, Mamdani upset former Governor Andrew Cuomo, the favorite. At the start, Mamdani was an unknown, Cuomo had name recognition. Cuomo ran on a platform touting his experience and promising to be tough on crime. Mamdani focused on the high cost of living and promised to freeze rents and to make city buses free. He also pledged to open a city-run grocery store in each of the city’s five boroughs, where prices would be low.
Mamdani had the support of a large number of enthusiastic young volunteers and a considerable segment of the working class. Cuomo had a huge financial advantage and the solid support of the Democratic Party’s leading figures, like former President Clinton and former Mayor Bloomberg. Mamdani skillfully used social media and his cheerful personality in the absence of a huge campaign fund. He pledged to pay for his promises by raising taxes on the rich.
Mamdani was born in Uganda to Indian parents. His father is now a professor at Columbia University. His mother is a successful film-maker. Mamdani graduated from the Bronx High School of Science, one of the city’s elite high schools that admits only those students who pass a test given on a single day. He graduated from Bowdoin College in Maine.
The General Election is in November. Mamdani will again face Cuomo and also incumbent Mayor Eric Adams, who is running as an independent.
Adams has been in disrepute after being indicted by the U.S. Attorney’s office on multiple counts of corruption. Adams met with Trump, and Trump made sure that the indictments were dropped. Several experienced prosecutors in the US Attorney’s office resigned rather than sign the statement dismissing Adams’ indictment.
The business community opposes Mamdani; they fear his views. The big labor unions have endorsed Mamdani, most recently, the city’s biggest union, the United Federation of Teachers. It should be noted that Mamdani cannot raise taxes without the Governor’s approval, which is unlikely.
Into this unsettled situation comes The New York Times with a story that paints Mamdani in a bad light. The title of the story was: “Mamdani Identified as Asian and African American on College Application.” Someone hacked into Columbia University’s files and found Mandani’s college application. When asked about his race, he checked both Asian and African-American.
Margaret Sullivan, a journalist who previously served as ombudsman for The New York Times, wondered whether the newspaper was trying to undermine Mamdani. The story implied that he lied, but he was in fact born in Africa to parents of South Asian heritage.
Mayor Adams was quick to use the Times‘ story to say that Mamdani was falsely portraying himself as “African-American.” Supposedly this would help his chances of gaining admission to Columbia. However, Mamdani was rejected by Columbia.
In an interview on Thursday, Mr. Mamdani, 33, said he did not consider himself either Black or African American, but rather “an American who was born in Africa.” He said his answers on the college application were an attempt to represent his complex background given the limited choices before him, not to gain an upper hand in the admissions process. (He was not accepted at Columbia.)
“Most college applications don’t have a box for Indian-Ugandans, so I checked multiple boxes trying to capture the fullness of my background,” said Mr. Mamdani, a state lawmaker from Queens.
The application allowed students to provide “more specific information where relevant,” and Mr. Mamdani said that he wrote in, “Ugandan.”
Sullivan points out that the story was given to the Times by an intermediary whom she describes as a “white supremacist.” She wondered why the Times would publish a story based on hacked information.
She wrote:
For one thing, it came to the Times due to a widespread hack into Columbia’s databases, transmitted to the paper through an intermediary who was given anonymity by the paper. That source turns out to be Jordan Lasker, who – as the Guardian has reported – is a well-known and much criticized “eugenicist”, AKA white supremacist.
Traditional journalism ethics suggests that when news organizations base a story on hacked or stolen information, there should be an extra high bar of newsworthiness to justify publication. Much of Big Journalism, for example, turned their noses up at insider documents offered to them about JD Vance during last year’s presidential campaign, in part because the source was Iranian hackers; in some cases, they wrote about the hack but not the documents.
Sullivan points out that the rightwing media ecosphere used the story to pummel Mamdani, whom they already hated because he is both a Muslim and a socialist:
The rightwing cable network was having a field day with Mamdani, a Muslim and social democrat, even before the Times story. President Trump has called him a communist and suggested he should be deported. Other rightwing outlets picked up the story, too, presenting it as a DEI scandal – that Mamdani lied about his race in order to take advantage of the affirmative action admission policy at Columbia. (Making the story even more absurd is the fact that Mamdani didn’t get in.)
Mamdani has become a national figure almost overnight as a result of the controversy. The right happily portrays him as the frightening face of the Democratic Party. Democrats are torn between those who embrace the energy he has brought to a party known for aging leaders and those who are frightened that he will scare away white, middle class voters.
Stay tuned.

The same people who brought you “Vote Blue No Matter Who”. I hope you’re starting to see who the Democratic/liberal establishment really are.
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Huh? Have you not learned what smearing members of your own party(?) continuously gets us? The democratic party is and will continue to change, maybe too slowly for even me, but refusing to work with anyone who doesn’t hold strictly to your own views is asking for what we got.
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Yeah, the Democrats have changed all right – they’ve lurched so far to the right that they surpassed Reagan. You keep doing the same thing and expecting different results though.
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Thank you, speduktr. I wrote a long reply that is being held up, but perhaps this will post.
One of the city’s most prominent Latino leaders is Representative Adriano Espaillat – he endorsed Cuomo in the primary.
BUT – he did what dienne77 seems to hate and when Mamdani defeated Cuomo in the primary, endorsed Mamdani. He followed the “vote Blue no matter who” philosophy that the person above scorns. He did not follow her mantra, which seems to be “vote against the Dems and work to defeat the evil Dems if your candidate doesn’t win the primary, because the Republicans are no worse”.
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I will excuse your ignorance because you don’t live in NYC. You seem to believe that the NYT – the newspaper that normalized Trump (and continues to do so) while demonizing Biden, Kamala and HRC is the “Democratic/liberal establishment”. NYT’s smug journalists who self-identify as “very biased liberals” and believe it is their sacred journalistic duty to use any tiny “scandal” to attack Democrats while normalizing authoritarian law-spurning Republicans to prove they are “fair and balanced” are NOT the “Democratic/liberal establishment. Which you would probably know if you actually lived here. Instead, you express the MAGA view that “elite” politicians who hate working people control the Democratic party – which is why they hate Mamdani and believe he is a typical elitist worker-hating Democrat. Do you feel the same way?
Brad Lander and Mamdani cross endorsed one another. And many of the “Democratic/liberal establishment” folks like Jerry Nadler already endorsed Mamdani.
One of the most powerful Latino political leaders in NYC (no doubt you would attack him as an evil Democrat) is Representative Adriano Espaillat.
He endorsed Cuomo in the primary! But I guess you hate him for following the “vote Blue no matter what” because Adriano Espaillat ENDORSED MAMDANI in the general election because Mamdani won the primary!
It seems from your scornful comment that you would only respect Espaillat if he was more like you, claiming that the candidate that defeated his preferred candidate in the Democratic primary was evil and that even having a right wing authoritarian Mayor would be better than doing what you hate so much – voting Blue no matter what.
Would you respect Espaillat more if he was just like you, amplifying lies and working hard to defeat the Democrat who defeated the candidate he preferred to win the primary?
How DARE Espaillat endorse Mamdani and “vote Blue no matter what”! Why can’t’ he be more like you and stick to his values and work to defeat the winning Democratic candidate because he knows the candidate that defeated the one he wanted in the primary is no better than a right wing Republican.
Some people think there is no difference between America under Biden and Democrats controlling Congress, and Trump and Republicans controlling Congress. They’d rather defeat the evil Dems than Republicans if their primary candidate doesn’t win.
Fortunately, even former Cuomo-supporters like Espaillat are not as gullible as those who believe that they did something good when they said there was no value to having RBG guaranteed to lead a 5-4 liberal majority on the Supreme Court because “the Dems are no better than Trump and the Republicans”.
The Democratic establishment isn’t some monolith. But the REPUBLICAN establishment is. The fact that Republican authoritarian monolith has unprecedented power doesn’t scare you, but having a former Cuomo-supporting Democrat endorse Mamdani is bad because he “voted blue, no matter what” speaks volumes.
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The Times has been developing its yellow dog journalism muscle lately. See its recent article “A Landscape of Death,” with the incriminating subtitle: “What’s Left Where Ukraine Invaded Russia.” https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/12/world/europe/ukraine-russia-kursk.html
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How interesting, rather comparable to Oct. 7th ultimately revealing the sordidness of this country, so too has coverage of Mamdani revealed the cheesiness of NYT “journalism” (surprised that Margaret Sullivan hasn’t been found face down in the East River).
So big money and the dumb Dems are panicking, reinvesting in a bad idea, Cuomo. They call this the “smart money”? I hope they lose every fornicating dollar, and then some, in their cynicism, contempt for a decent society.
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Mamdani comes across as both intelligent and likable. He has an uphill battle in this election as the NYC elites are all backing sexual predator Cuomo, who intends to run as an independent. Democrats risk handing the election to the GOP. It is sad that the corporate Democrat elites would jeopardize the chances of the actual democratic candidate because he would try to make NYC more affordable for working families and require the ultra-wealthy contribute more.
Forms are not always user friendly for mixed culture and race groups. Every year as a NY teacher, I had to fill out BEDS forms for the state. Trying to explain the demographics of my diverse students via a “bubble” on a scan form was a challenge. Sometimes we were told to just fill in whatever the student looks like which is not very scientific, but that is what we did.
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This was indeed a bit of a non-story and the Times looks foolish for running with it. Mamdani was just 17 years old, and can be forgiven for the technical inaccuracy from checking the “African American” box.
To me, what this underscores is how silly the checkbox approach to identity is. Frankly I don’t think schools should be collecting this kind of information in the first place. Ideally they would also end the loathsome “personal essay,” the greatest vehicle for narcissism and boring writing ever conceived by man. If schools value having interesting and diverse perspectives, they should instead interview prospective candidates.
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FLERP,
I’m happy to see you back!
I have always hated those racial identity boxes. I usually post “unknown” or “won’t disclose.”
As for the personal essay, I don’t know how colleges will be able to tell who wrote them.
Of course, the unreliability of the personal essay makes SAT and ACT Scores even more important. Perhaps more attention should be given to a teacher’s letter of support.
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Here’s one thing I love about Flerp. When we disagreed about some things over the years, we could have an intelligent, reasoned back and forth, each presenting his arguments as forcefully as possible BUT willing to concede points and flesh out the complexities of the issue. There are far, far, far too many black and white thinkers in this complex world, and thank God, Flerp is not one of them. Nuanced reason. That’s what one sees from him.
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Good post to start my day off with.
Have a great one, all.
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The state university that I went to for my BA (and MA) had prospective students write the required personal essay in an auditorium on campus, where we were closely monitored.
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Good idea. These days, it’s hard to know whether an essay was written by a student or AI.
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We had to show an official ID that had our picture as well, like a state driver’s license, which they checked very closely.
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Points well made, as always, FLERP!!! Much love to you and yours!
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Tried to agree to your earlier post about being able to have rational discussions with Flerp. Totally agree.
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Thanks, speduktr! Love to you and yours in this dark time.
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Mamdani wasn’t admitted to Columbia despite checking those boxes as a 17 year old. Just like many outstanding Black, Latino, Asian and white students (often from public schools) get rejected from these very selective schools very year. While the less academically outstanding but very privileged white students like Jared Kushner and the Trump kids are admitted.
So it’s mystifying why the NYT ran this hit job on a rejected college application of a 17 year old using information that was illegally obtained.
It is similar to the hit job the NYT ran on Maryland Governor Wes Moore, based on leaks from their right wing sources.
“Wes Moore and the Bronze Star He Claimed but Never Received: For years, the Maryland governor has faced questions about whether he had wrongfully said he had a Bronze Star. He insisted no. But an old document proves otherwise.”
FYI – it turned out that decades earlier, Moore had been told by his commanding officer that his Bronze star had been approved, and that commanding officer also told him to include that award on a single application (the “old document”) – but Moore did not continue to claim he won the Bronze Star beyond that one application. It was certainly not the scandal that the NYT presented it as in order to destroy him. (After the NYT tried to destroy him by implying he was one of those guys who constantly embellish their military careers, Moore got the Bronze star whose paperwork had been wrongfully held up.)
It’s so much easier for NYT reporters to publish the leaks from their coveted right wing sources to destroy Democrats for perfectly normal actions than to actually cover the very authoritarian, law-spurning actions of Republicans except to present them as normal because “both sides” have equally valid opinions on whether stripping rights from Americans and throwing them into concentration camps is something the Constitution allows.
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“The right happily portrays him as the frightening face of the Democratic Party.” This blog’s host often claims that she is a “centrist”, but she supports every far Left cause other than the destruction of Israel, and this posting is her implied endorsement of this nutty candidate. Mamdani isn’t qualified to manage a lemonade stand, let alone govern a large city like NYC.
Consider just one of his financially illiterate ideas. He wants the city government to operate several grocery stores because – in his deep ignorance – be believes existing grocery stores have too high of prices that result in excessive profits (i.e. anything above zero profits). He says that the new public stores will buy store inventory at wholesale prices and charge customers those same prices – no markup above wholesale. Apparently the store employees who stock the shelves, clean the floors and bathrooms, etc. will volunteer their time – no wages accepted – the electric company won’t charge anything, neither will the water utility, and on and on. The end result will be huge public subsidies for money-losing stores.
If I didn’t know better, I would bet my life that he majored in Education. Not so: he has a degree in Africana Studies. Such is the leadership of the 2025 Democratic party.
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Every candidate makes promises that he can’t keep. Trump promised that Mexico would pay for a border wall. He promised to end the war in Ukraine in a day. He promised to reduce inflation.
So far he has kept none of those promises.
I have not endorsed anyone for Mayor of NYC.
I thought the Times article about him was unfair. So did Margaret Sullivan, who used to be the ombudsman for the Times.
Mamdani can’t keep all his promises. He can’t raise taxes without Albany’s approval, which is unlikely. Will he be able to make buses free? The municipal buses are under the control of a state agency, the MTA.
Will he open one nonprofit grocery in each of the five boroughs? Why not? How does that hurt you?
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One thing really concerns me about Mamdani. He’s clearly the most articulate candidate, has the strongest policies for working people, the most pro–public education platform with broad union support, and he doesn’t seem to be bought by corporate interests. Candidates like that usually lose—and frankly, I’m not quite sure how to deal with that.
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David Pearce,
Bill de Blasio was a candidate like that, and he won election twice.
However, the NYT trashed him at every opportunity and undermined him. de Blasio was not perfect, but he was a politician trying to do good things which went unappreciated by too many people expecting perfection.
My kid, a big fan of Mamdani, told me before the primary that Mamdani had praise for de Blasio. It made me like Mamdani more than he cared about the truth and wasn’t jumping on the anti-de Blasio bandwagon because it was so popular, even among some progressives.
It also made me respect de Blasio for laying very low during the primary so as to avoid the media using him to hurt Mamdani, who he clearly quietly supported. (post-primary the media is now trying to trash Mamdani using de Blasio, just as expected).
Here is a clip from the NYT Editorial Board interview transcript with (then highly unlikely to win) primary candidate Mamdani on January 30, 2025.
“Akash Mehta
I want to ask about one of those past administrations. Bill de Blasio came into office as an unlikely progressive insurgent telling a “tale of two cities.” He had major accomplishments, but the central problem that he set out to solve, income inequality, by some metrics didn’t budge over the course of his tenure. What do you think prevented his administration from more fully transforming the city, and how would you overcome the same obstacles?
Zohran Mamdani
To spell out some of the successes that you are alluding to, I think that standing up universal pre-K and the beginnings of 3-K is an incredible accomplishment. Because alongside my very clear and explicit platform of freezing the rent, making buses fast and free and providing universal child care — whether your child is six weeks or five years — is a belief that government can and must do big things. That it must show itself able to intervene in the lives of working-class people and provide them with relief at the very least.
And I think that those accomplishments of the de Blasio administration with universal pre-K, also with multiple rent freezes, did provide that to millions of New Yorkers. And we’re talking about an expense when it comes to child care that can be $20,000-$25,000.
In the broader analysis of income inequality across New York City, I think that some of this also has to do with being mayor at the time of a governor [Andrew Cuomo] who was hell-bent on a very different kind of politics. A governor who chases press releases and publicity more than the actual results of those programs, and one who for many years refused to even acknowledge that the state ran the MTA. And I think that some of those structural factors do create limitations.
And I also think that there were some approaches in the de Blasio administration that I did disagree with. I say that as someone, sitting in front of incredible food, who was on a 15-day hunger strike protesting the de Blasio administration’s approach to debt forgiveness for thousands of working-class taxi drivers. And I’m proud that after that two-and-a-half-week strike which had already followed civil disobedience of myself and five other elected officials being arrested outside of City Hall, which had already followed 45 days of consecutive protests, which had already followed years of the New York Taxi Workers Alliance fighting for this issue, the de Blasio administration did change its course and we secured more than $450 million in debt relief.
So I think that obviously there are things that could have been done differently. I also think that there are a lot of things to acknowledge and appreciate, especially in light of the administration we’ve had since.”
Spot on. As is the rest of that early interview.
If Mamdani wins, it’s up to NYC residents not to get brainwashed by anti-Mamdani propaganda that spins him as an embarrassing fool who accomplishes nothing.
He wasn’t my first choice, but (thanks ranked choice voting!) he is a very good choice. I am looking forward to him being Mayor.
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The far left supports the destruction of Israel, as implied by Matt?! That’s just an outright lie but what else would I expect from a rightwing concern troll. Criticizing Israel over the slaughter in Gaza is not antisemitic and does not mean that one advocates for the destruction of Israel. However, the destruction of Gaza is ongoing. Isreal has a RIGHT to exist but so do the Palestinians, they both have a right to exist.
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Your concern for workers is touching, but apparently you are unaware that employee salaries are not part of profits? Just because government run stores wouldn’t run a profit doesn’t mean employees wouldn’t get paid.
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Wait a minute. If there is no markup of wholesale prices, just where do salaries come from? Yes, the word profits is loosely used, but read the sentence directly before to provide context.
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My understanding–and I may be wrong–is that Mamdani wants to open five city-owned grocery stores, one in each borough (Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx, and Staten Island). Groceries would be sold–at no profit–by the city. In a city with more than 8 million people, this is not likely to hurt existing grocery stores.
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I was responding to dienne’s comment in response to Matt. It would be great if we could create ways to provide quality food to people at cost. Mamdani has some work to do to flesh out his ideas. It would be great if a few of the power brokers spent some time on his ideas rather than defaulting to Bloomberg, obviously not known as a man of the people.
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No billionaire is “a man of the people.”
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If the city owns the stores, the workers would be city employees. Cue all the people who have a problem with that, but not with the city spending gadzillions militarizing the police.
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If the city owns the stores, the workers would be city employees. Cue all the people who have a problem with that, but not with the city spending gadzillions militarizing the police.
Point well made, Dienne!
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Grocery stores have notoriously low profit margins. So, Matt is right about that.
However, in a country as rich as the United States is, there is no good reason why a quarter of our children live with food insecurity. We can do better. Matt, any ideas there?
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Maybe the profit margins aren’t so low. John Catsimidis owns grocery stores and he has become a billionaire.
https://share.google/vsAUCx7ZKpePcrmpq
He announced that if Mamdani wins, he will leave NYC.
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The average profit margin for grocery stores typically ranges from 1% to 5%, with conventional stores averaging around 2.2% and niche markets like organic or gourmet stores achieving margins of 5-10%.
Conventional grocery chains depend upon large volume.
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Oh Geez! For many years, I taught in the most diverse area of my city and was the only American born teacher at the school. Thus, except for the teachers who came from communist countries that had been part of the Soviet Union, a lot of teachers there came to me to ask what color they were considered to be here, so they could fill in the correct bubble on forms. Many had come from places like India and Pakistan and there were no options that seemed to me to include them, since countries of origin were not listed, so I suggested they indicate white. They didn’t think that was accurate, but the choices were very limited on forms in the 80s and early 90s, so now I have to pray they don’t get in trouble today for doing that then, since it was my fault! Holy c*ap…
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Some of the updated forms include a option for “mixed.” How can we determine someone’s ethnicity without a DNA sample, and plenty of families result in children that are a blend of those backgrounds? A “bubble’ form isn’t nuanced. It’s binary.
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Outrage of the day, 7/15/25:
Trump admin set to burn nearly 500 metric tons of emergency food meant for starving kids
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Eric Adams jumped onto the Mandani’s an antisemite bandwagon, but he got tripped up by the word “antifada”. <blockquote class=”twitter-tweet” data-media-max-width=”560″><p lang=”en” dir=”ltr”>I asked Mayor Eric Adams if Mamdani is an antisemite. Watch. <a href=”https://t.co/0RrT00yf71″>pic.twitter.com/0RrT00yf71</a></p>— Neria Kraus (@NeriaKraus) <a href=”https://twitter.com/NeriaKraus/status/1944786611834675516?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw”>July 14, 2025</a></blockquote> <script async src=”https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js” charset=”utf-8″></script>
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That’s “intifada”.
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