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Mayor-Elect Zohran Mamdani Admits He Wants To Take Aggressive Action On Socialist Agenda: ‘It Is A Mandate’
New York City’s new mayor-elect, Zohran Mamdani, wasted no time in declaring his landslide victory as an open invitation to press forward with his left-wing agenda. “It is a mandate,” he declared unapologetically, making clear that his triumph was not just political but ideological.
Fresh from his upset win over Andrew Cuomo, the 34-year-old Democratic socialist outlined his ambitions in an interview with The New York Times. “I’m also looking to be clear about the mandate that we won over the course of this election, and it is a mandate to deliver on the agenda that we ran on,” he said. Among his priorities: taxing the wealthy and expanding social programs that many critics say could strain the city’s finances.
Mamdani’s assertion came as the Democratic Socialists of America celebrated his victory as their own. The organization boasted that its “army” had delivered the decisive blow against the establishment. “Our movement is at the heart of Zohran’s campaign,” said Gustavo Gordillo, co-chair of the group’s New York City chapter. “This overwhelming victory is a clear mandate for a Democratic socialist agenda to make New York City one that people can afford.”
DSA leaders didn’t hold back their triumphal tone, casting the win as proof that their influence is growing despite heavy opposition. “MAGA billionaires spent millions to prop up Andrew Cuomo and try to stop this movement, but we’ve proved once again: They have money, but we have power,” Gordillo declared.
The rhetoric echoed Mamdani’s fiery election night speech, when he repeatedly told supporters that his victory represented a “mandate for change.” His tone — defiant and combative — raised eyebrows among observers who noted how sharply it contrasted with the moderate image he projected during his campaign.
Critics accused Mamdani of pivoting to a far more radical stance now that the votes were counted. Some even called his speech a “character switch.” But the new mayor-elect brushed off concerns, insisting he was staying true to his values. “My supporters and our movement are hungry for a politics of consistency — a politics that actually focuses on the needs of working people,” he said in his post-election remarks.
“I think that our tax system is an example of the many ways in which working people have been betrayed,” he added, signaling that fiscal redistribution will be a central pillar of his administration.
For now, Mamdani has not confirmed whether any DSA members will officially join his transition team. Instead, he announced a roster that includes seasoned City Hall figures from the Bloomberg, de Blasio, and Adams administrations. That mix — of veteran insiders alongside the progressive mayor-elect — raised questions about whether his government will reflect moderation or Marxism in practice.
Behind the scenes, however, DSA activists reportedly celebrated the prospect of having allies positioned inside City Hall. According to insiders cited by The New York Post, the socialist group views Mamdani’s win as its best chance yet to “infiltrate” city leadership.
Asked directly if he intended to appoint DSA allies to key positions, Mamdani sidestepped specifics. “I am looking forward to having every member of my coalition be a part of our transition,” he said. “The transition will be guided by the work that we need to do, and the coalition that brought me to this point has done an immense amount of work and has also been leading in the fight for dignity, for a working-class Democratic Party.”
Whether that coalition will steer New York toward stability or upheaval remains to be seen — but one thing is certain: Zohran Mamdani intends to govern exactly as he campaigned.
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NOT SOON ENOUGH: Pelosi Will Not Seek Re-Reelection, Ending Decades-Long House Career
Ex-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, 85, To Retire From Congress After Nearly 40-Year Career
Nancy Pelosi has announced that her time in Congress will come to an end when her current term concludes, closing a remarkable forty-year run in national politics and marking the retirement of one of the most influential figures in Democratic Party history.
“I want you, my fellow San Franciscans, to be the first to know I will not be seeking re-election to Congress,” Pelosi, 85, declared in a recorded message directed to her longtime supporters and constituents.
The decision confirms widespread speculation that had swirled throughout the week, with many in Washington and California anticipating that Pelosi was preparing to formally step away from elected office after Tuesday’s off-year elections.
Her tenure reshaped the role of women in American politics. Pelosi served as the Democratic leader in the House from 2002 until 2022, holding the gavel as Speaker from 2007 to 2011 and again from 2019 to 2023 — becoming the first woman in U.S. history to occupy that powerful post.
{Matzav.com}
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EPIC SPEECH: Mark Levin Slams Tucker Carlson, Candace Owens, Nick Fuentes, and More At RJC Event
Mark Levin speaks at the Republican Jewish Coalition Leadership Summit in Las Vegas, Nevada, in one of the most potent speeches you’ll ever hear.
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