JIHADIST MAYOR DOUBLES DOWN: Mamdani Defends His Calling AIPAC “Monsters”
[Video below.] New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani pushed back Monday against accusations of antisemitism, defending controversial comments he made last week targeting the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) after several prominent Jewish organizations sharply criticized his rhetoric.
Speaking at a City Hall press conference, Mamdani argued that his criticism was directed at the pro-Israel lobbying group’s political influence and support for Israeli policies, not at Jewish people.
“When I am speaking about AIPAC, I’m speaking about an organization that has been supportive of the status quo, that has fought any attempt to actually deliver safety to people, not just in Palestine, but frankly, through much of the region, and it is a status quo for immorality,” Mamdani said during a press conference at City Hall, pointing to Israeli operations in Gaza. “And when it comes to the way in which they defend the status quo, oftentimes they defend it through direct contributions, as we are seeing right now in New York.”
The mayor, who has long been outspoken in his criticism of Israel’s leadership, came under fire after comments he made during a rally for progressive candidates he has endorsed in several New York races.
At that event on Thursday, Mamdani denounced what he called “monsters,” a reference he said included individuals and organizations funding political advertisements aimed at defeating the candidates he supports. He specifically pointed to AIPAC, which has poured millions of dollars into congressional primary contests across the country, often focusing its advertising on domestic political issues.
“They move millions in dark money to accomplish a single goal, to preserve their power, so that they can turn us against one another, instead of our leaders turning towards the moral change we all know to be necessary,” Mamdani said.
Federal Election Commission records show that AIPAC’s political action arm, United Democracy Project, contributed more than $600,000 last month to BOLD America, a group backing Rep. Adriano Espaillat in New York’s 13th Congressional District. Espaillat is currently being challenged by Darializa Avila Chevalier, who has received Mamdani’s endorsement.
The mayor’s remarks quickly drew condemnation from major Jewish organizations, whose leaders argued that his language echoed longstanding antisemitic themes and was especially troubling coming from the leader of a city that is home to the largest Jewish population outside Israel.
“Mayor Mamdani, referring to fellow New Yorkers as ‘monsters’ is outrageous and dangerous, and the impact of your words extends far beyond politics,” said Ted Deutch, the AJC’s CEO, in a post on X.
Rep. Josh Gottheimer of New Jersey, a Jewish Democrat, voiced similar criticism over the weekend.
“Swap ‘AIPAC’ for ‘Jews’ and it’s the oldest antisemitic conspiracy theory in the books,” Democratic Rep. Josh Gottheimer, said in a post on X. “That’s not criticizing a lobby. That’s laundering antisemitism from your podium as Mayor of a city with more than a million Jews. This …. is dangerous.”
Despite the backlash, Mamdani declined to retreat from his position, citing the continuing conflict in Gaza and the mounting casualty figures reported since the implementation of a fragile ceasefire brokered by the United States. The Palestinian Ministry of Health says more than 1,000 people have been killed in Israeli strikes in Gaza since the ceasefire began in mid-October.
“I think that it is important that when we ask ourselves how such death and destruction is happening overseas, we also name those who allow it to take place,” he told reporters.
When questioned about his use of the word “monsters,” Mamdani insisted that he was invoking the writings of Antonio Gramsci, founder of the Italian Communist Party, and said the term was intended as a broader criticism of powerful political interests rather than a reference to AIPAC alone.
“I used the term to describe all those who are preventing the birth of a new world, not solely AIPAC, but frankly super PACs at large, who are spending millions of dollars in deceptive and misleading ads that are blanketing airwaves, not just in the case of Darializa Avila Chevalier, but also we see that kind of PAC spending when it comes to oppose Brad Lander, who’s running for Congress, as well as Claire Valdez, as well as a number of other races,” the mayor said.
Mamdani added that his criticism was also aimed at a political system that he believes has failed ordinary Americans.
“And I also use the term to describe a politics that, for far too long, has asked working people to lower their expectations,” he continued. “My use of the term is a broad use that speaks to the untenable nature of a status quo that is quite literally starving people in the city, all in the name of sustaining something that we simply cannot defend any longer.”
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{Matzav.com}
