
Zohran Mamdani is a political risk Democrats shouldn't take
That being said, assuming Mamdani wins November's general election, the joke may be on national Democrats.
Put another way, even as a mayoral candidate, by dint of New York City's status and his elevation into a national figure, Mamdani presents severe risks to the Democratic Party on the national stage.
And as the party looks to regain even one chamber of Congress next year, there is a very real chance that Mamdani's extreme, socialist policies put the entire party's political fortunes in jeopardy.
The first risk is if Mamdani's primary victory portends, or ushers in, a seismic shift for the wider Democratic Party.
Coming at a time when Democrats are at a crossroads, Mamdani's win may embolden progressives, sideline moderates and drive the party further to the left. If this is the direction the Democratic Party moves in, they will end up even less politically relevant than they are today.
At the same time, Mamdani's views are considerably out of line with what mainstream Democratic views should be — particularly on the economy and public safety.
The U.S. is a capitalist nation. Although more can be done to ensure everyone has an equal opportunity and is protected by a social safety net, the U.S. is not a socialist country.
And on public safety, Mamdani, a past proponent of 'defund the police,' is pledging to move 'billions of dollars (from the NYPD budget) to a new Department of Community Safety' that emphasizes soft on crime measures, according to New York Post reporting.
With Democrats already struggling to overcome perceptions that they can't be trusted to handle the economy or public safety. And given New York City's prominence, Mamdani's policies may quickly become the face of the entire party, a gift to the GOP.
The second, and arguably biggest, risk Mamdani poses lies in how he would govern.
Mamdani campaigned on endless handouts backed by huge tax increases, replacing police officers with social workers, and Soviet-inspired government-run grocery stores.
Whether Mamdani is able to implement any, or all, of these campaign pledges or not, Democrats will find themselves between a rock and a hard place.
Either Mamdani is seen as ineffective, and just another Democrat who promised utopia but was unable to actually deliver on his lofty promises. Or, more dangerously, New Yorkers get a firsthand lesson on the dangers of socialism, sparking a considerable backlash against the Democratic Party as a whole.
Worse, with New York City being a global center of culture, finance and entertainment, the entire country will witness the damage from Mamdani's policies.
When government-run grocery stores show themselves to be a horrendous idea, which the Soviet Union has already shown them to be, Republicans will immediately pounce on this failure to underscore the danger in electing any Democrat.
Should crime spike due to a sharp reduction in the number of police officers, Democrats across the country will be branded as soft on crime.
Similarly, if excessively high taxes on the city's high-earners cause capital flight, a destruction of the city's tax base and drastically lower the overall quality of life, voters' trust in Democrats to handle the economy will sink, and it's already tremendously low.
Finally, there is the issue of how Mamdani will govern the city with the world's largest Jewish population outside of Israel.
Due to his history of antisemitic remarks, whether his refusal to condemn 'globalize the intifada' or unwillingness to accept Israel as a Jewish state, vitriol he's never shared for other ethnoreligious states, there are very real concerns that under his leadership, New York City will be even more hostile for Jews.
Far from being a local issue, if Mamdani fails to protect New York's Jewish citizens, it will reinforce perceptions that the Democratic Party is rife with antisemitism.
To be sure, national Democrats seem to be aware of the risks Mamdani poses.
Some moderates, such as Rep. Josh Gottheimer (D-N.J.), have been blunt, saying Mamdani's 'policies do not comport' with Democrats' agenda.
Others, including House Minority Leader Hakeem Jefferies (D-N.Y.) have taken a softer approach, but still indicate some unease with the socialist who has become the face of the Democratic Party.
Speaking to CNBC's 'Squawk Box' on Thursday, Jefferies refused to endorse Mamdani or even say whether he was 'convinced' about Mamdani and the kind of mayor he would be.
Asked about Mamdani's policy proposals, Jefferies said, 'Now, he's going to have to demonstrate…that his ideas can actually be put into reality.'
Hardly a show of confidence from a party leader.
Taken together, the elevation of Mamdani and his extreme views may deepen the animosity and alienation many voters feel when they think about today's Democratic Party.
If voters see Mamdani's leadership devastating New York City and come to believe that this is what the Democratic Party has to offer, it stands to reason that Democrats across the country will pay the price, and likely for many election cycles to come.
'The End of Democracy? Russia and China on the Rise and America in Retreat.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Los Angeles Times
16 minutes ago
- Los Angeles Times
On Putin's advice, Trump launches assault on mail-in ballots and voting machines
President Trump said Monday he would renew his assault on mail-in voting after Russia's autocratic leader, Vladimir Putin, told him to do so at their meeting in Alaska last week. The president provided few details, but wrote on social media that he would 'lead a movement to get rid of MAIL-IN BALLOTS, and also, while we're at it, Highly 'Inaccurate,' Very Expensive, and Seriously Controversial VOTING MACHINES.' Already in March, Trump had issued an executive order directing the Justice Department to 'take all necessary action' to prevent mail-in ballots received after election day from being counted. The order also attempted to impose a proof of citizenship requirement for voter registration. Those portions of the executive action has been enjoined by courts over constitutional concerns. But another provision, directing the independent U.S. Election Assistance Commission to shift its guidance on voting machines banning the use of certain bar codes and quick-response codes, has been allowed to proceed. The U.S. Constitution states that the timing, place and manner of elections 'shall be prescribed in each state' by local legislatures, and that Congress has the ability to pass laws altering state election regulations. The president is given no authority to prescribe or govern election procedures. Trump's action comes on the heels of his meeting with Putin in Anchorage, where the Russian leader told him that mail-in ballots led to his electoral defeat in 2020, according to the president. The U.S. intelligence community has assessed that Putin attempted to influence the last three U.S. presidential elections in Trump's favor. 'Vladimir Putin said something — one of the most interesting things. He said, 'Your election was rigged because you have mail-in voting,'' Trump told Fox News in an interview. Trump has criticized mail-in voting since entering politics in 2015. But his presidential campaign embraced the practice leading up to the 2024 election, encouraging his supporters — especially those affected by Hurricane Helene in North Carolina — to take advantage of mail-in voting opportunities. 'Absentee voting, early voting and election day voting are all good options,' Trump said at the time. 'Republicans must make a plan, register and vote!'


Los Angeles Times
16 minutes ago
- Los Angeles Times
Texas Dems return to Capitol for Republicans' U.S. House map overhaul as California Democrats counter
AUSTIN, Texas — Texas Democrats said Monday that they were ending a two-week walkout that stalled Republican efforts to redraw congressional districts as part of a national partisan brawl over President Donald Trump's desire to reshape U.S. House maps to his advantage. Their return will allow the Republican-run Legislature to proceed as California Democrats advance a counter-effort to redraw their congressional boundaries in retaliation — a tit-for-tat that puts the nation's two most populous states at the center of an expanding fight over control of Congress ahead of the 2026 midterm elections. Dozens of Texas House Democrats left the state more than two weeks ago to deny their Republican-majority colleagues the attendance necessary to vote on redrawn maps intended to send five more Texas Republicans to Washington. They declared victory after Republicans adjourned that first special session, and Democrats around rallied in opposition to the Trump-led gerrymandering effort. They pointed specifically to California's release of proposed maps intended to increase Democrats' U.S. House advantage by five seats, effectively neutralizing any Republican gains in Texas. 'We killed the corrupt special session, withstood unprecedented surveillance and intimidation, and rallied Democrats nationwide to join this existential fight for fair representation — reshaping the entire 2026 landscape,' said Texas House of Representatives Minority Leader Gene Wu in a statement. Trump has pressured other Republican-run states to consider redistricting, while Democratic governors in multiple statehouses have indicated they would follow California's lead in response. Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom has said that his state will hold a Nov. 4 special referendum on the redrawn districts. The president wants to shore up Republicans' narrow House majority and avoid a repeat of the 2018 midterms during his first presidency, when Democrats regained House control and used their majority to stymie his agenda and twice impeach him. On a national level, the partisan makeup of existing district lines puts Democrats within three seats of a majority. Of the 435 total House seats, only several dozen districts are competitive. So even slight changes in a few states could affect which party wins control. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott jumped to the president's aid, adding redistricting to the agenda of an initial special session agenda that included a number of issues, but most notably a package of bills responding to devastating floods that killed more than 130 people last month. Abbott has blamed Democrats' absence for delaying action on those measures. Democrats have answered that Abbott's capitulation to Trump is responsible for the delay because he insisted on effectively linking the hyper-partisan matter to the nonpartisan flood relief. Redistricting typically occurs once at the beginning of each decade to coincide with the census. Many states, including Texas, give legislators the power to draw maps. California is among those that empower independent commissions with the task. The Texas House is scheduled to convene Monday at noon CDT. Barrow and Figueroa write for the Associated Press. Barrow reported from Atlanta.


New York Post
16 minutes ago
- New York Post
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman warns of AI bubble, says investors are ‘overexcited': report
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman warned that the billions of dollars being plowed into the artificial intelligence arms race risks causing a bubble comparable to the dot-com crash of the early 2000s. 'When bubbles happen, smart people get overexcited about a kernel of truth,' Altman said during a dinner with a group of journalists, The Verge reported on Friday. 'Are we in a phase where investors as a whole are overexcited about AI? My opinion is yes. Is AI the most important thing to happen in a very long time? My opinion is also yes.' Advertisement 4 OpenAI CEO Sam Altman testifies before a Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation. AP Altman likened the AI funding rush to 'the tech bubble,' when investors 'got overexcited' about internet-based companies in the late 1990s. Between March 2000 and October 2002, the Nasdaq lost nearly 80% of its value after many of these online companies failed to turn a profit. Advertisement In a report released last month, Torsten Slok, head economist at Apollo Global Management, argued that the AI bubble is actually bigger than the internet bubble, with the top 10 companies in the S&P 500 more overvalued than they were in the late 1990s. Ray Wang, research director for semiconductors, supply chain and emerging technology at Futurum Group, took a more optimistic stance. 'From the perspective of broader investment in AI and semiconductors… I don't see it as a bubble. The fundamentals across the supply chain remain strong, and the long-term trajectory of the AI trend supports continued investment,' he told CNBC in a statement. However, there is a high amount of speculative capital being thrown at companies who only have perceived potential – which could lead to pockets of overvaluation, Wang added. Advertisement 4 OpenAI chief Sam Altman likened the AI funding rush to the internet bubble of the early 2000s. REUTERS 'Calling it a bubble is too simplistic. What we're really seeing is a supply chain bottleneck – too much capital with real need, chasing too little compute,' Kyle Okamoto, chief technology officer at Aethir, a decentralized cloud GPU network, told The Post on Monday. 'Until infrastructure catches up, prices and hype will stay inflated, but that's not a bubble bursting – that's a market maturing.' Fears that the US might be in an AI bubble grew earlier this year after the explosive rise of DeepSeek, a Chinese tech firm that claimed to make a competitive AI model with a fraction of the time and money it took American rivals. Advertisement DeepSeek said its AI chatbot had been trained for under $6 million, far below the billions spent by US counterparts. OpenAI is on track to pass $20 billion in annual recurring revenue but it remains unprofitable, Altman said earlier this month. 4 OpenAI is on track to pass $20 billion in annual recurring revenue, but it remains unprofitable, according to Altman. AFP via Getty Images Its recent launch of ChatGPT-5 was so disappointing that customer complaints pushed the company to go back to the drawing board while reverting to the GPT-4 model. During the dinner with reporters, Altman said the term artificial general intelligence, or 'AGI,' is losing its relevance. AGI refers to a form of AI that can perform any intellectual task that a human can – which Altman previously said could be achieved in the 'reasonably close-ish future.' Altman's startup continues to draw in big investments. In March, OpenAI raised $40 billion at a $300 billion valuation – far above the largest amount ever raised by a tech company. Advertisement It now is preparing to sell around $6 billion in stock at roughly a $500 billion valuation. 4 Sam Altman jabbed at rival Elon Musk's Grok chatbot. REUTERS Altman said that he expects OpenAI to spend trillions of dollars on data center expansions. He has also expressed interest in buying Chrome if the US government forces Google to sell off the web browser as part of an antitrust case. Advertisement Separately, Altman confirmed reports that OpenAI is planning to launch a brain-computer interface startup similar to Elon Musk's Neuralink – and took a jab at his rival's firm xAI. 'You will definitely see some companies go make Japanese anime sex bots because they think that they've identified something here that works,' Altman said in a dig at Musk's Grok chatbot. 'You will not see us do that. We will continue to work hard at making a useful app, and we will try to let users use it the way they want, but not so much that people who have really fragile mental states get exploited accidentally.'