
Mamdani, Trump and the End of the Old Politics
The Democratic primary that just wrapped up in New York was a collision between two very different candidates on almost every level: ideologically, outsider versus insider and name recognition. But it was also a collision that I think matters, for much beyond New York City politics, of two very different theories of attention.
Andrew Cuomo ran a campaign that was based on a tried-and-true strategy of buying attention. He had this gigantic super PAC with tens of millions of dollars purchasing all the advertising money can buy, absolutely dominating airwaves with negative ads about Zohran Mamdani.
Archived clip: In his own words, Zohran Mamdani wants to defund the police.
Archived clip: Zohran Mamdani is a 33-year-old dangerously inexperienced legislator who has passed just three bills.
Archived clip: Zohran Mamdani, a risk New York can't afford.
And then you had Mamdani, who was running a campaign on a very different theory of attention, a theory of viral attention, a campaign built on these vertical videos that, if you opened Instagram, if you opened TikTok, and you were in any way connected to his ideas or to New York City, this was all you saw.
Archived clip of Kareem Rahma: So what's your take?
Zohran Mamdani: That I should be the mayor.
Archived clip of Mamdani: New York is suffering from a crisis, and it's called halalflation.
Archived clip of Mamdani: Did you know that Andrew Cuomo gutted the pensions for hundreds and thousands of New Yorkers?
Archived clip of Mamdani: Mr. Cuomo, and furthermore, the name is Mamdani. M-A-M-D-A-N-I. You should learn how to say it.'
Attention works differently now. This is one of the core political theses of this entire podcast. It is laced through so many of these episodes.
You just watched these two incredibly different attentional strategies collide. Cuomo got flattened. He got flattened. It was not close.
There are things you cannot learn about how to win elections in other places from an off-year June Democratic primary in New York City using rank-choice voting.
But there are things you can learn about how attention works right now — and that's in a large part the subject of this conversation.
Want all of The Times? Subscribe.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
18 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Trump's tariffs and the tax bill are splitting the stock market. Here's the playbook for investors, according to Morgan Stanley.
Trump's policies are splitting the stock market, Morgan Stanley says. The bank said it believes Trump's tariffs and tax bill are splitting parts of the market in half. It says there are a handful of things for investors to look for when deciding where to put their money. President Donald Trump's policies are splitting the market into distinct camps, Morgan Stanley says. Lisa Shalett, the chief investment officer of the bank's wealth management arm, pointed to the effects of Trump's tax bill and his sweeping tariffs in a recent podcast. "Now, as the impacts of the tax reform bill and global tariff implementation begin to roll through the economy, we sense that yet another series of great divides are opening up," Shalett said. Here are the splits that are emerging: 1. Consumer-facing businesses vs. B2B businesses Businesses that sell directly to consumers are more impacted by any potential weakening fo household balance sheets, a risk that business-to-business firms are less worried about. Market pros believe that tariffs could weaken consumers' spending power, as companie can pass along the cost of import duties by raising prices. Shalett added that those pressures are coming at an already critical time for consumers, pointing out that more Americans are falling behind on credit card and auto loan payments. The job market is also flashing signs of weakness, with payrolls in May and June seeing a large downward revision, while job growth for the month of July was below expectations. A weaker labor market often leads to a pullback in consumer spending. 2. Multinational exporters vs. importers Multinational exporters outside of the consumer space are facing "fewer external barriers" to sending products abroad, Shalett said, suggesting they were more shielded from the trade war. Those firms are also benefitting from a weaker US dollar, which is making their products more attractive to foreign customers, Shalett added. Multinational firms are also typically more capital- and research & development-intensive, she said. That also positions them to benefit more from the tax benefits outlined in the "One Big Beautiful Bill," which creates favorable tax treatment for domestic R&D costs. "So, with this new structural division emerging, global stock selection is more important now than ever," Shalett said. Here are some characteristics of the companies investors should be leaning toward, in Shalett's view: Multinational non-consumer exporters. Tailwinds for these companies should continue, Shalett said. Select tech, financials, industrials, energy, and healthcare stocks. Stocks in these areas could benefit from some of the policies included in Trump's tax bill, which could lead to upside surprises in earnings and cash flow. Stocks that aren't "overhyped." International stocks, commodities, and energy infrastructure. Companies in these areas could help an investor diversify their portfolio, she added. Sentiment has shifted slightly more bearish in the last week, with Trump doubling down on tariff threats and markets digesting weaker-than-expected economic data. Goldman Sachs, Evercore ISI, Stifel, Pimco, and HSBC are among the firms that have recently flagged the risk of a stock correction or advised investors to rethink their portfolio allocations. Read the original article on Business Insider Sign in to access your portfolio
Yahoo
18 minutes ago
- Yahoo
The president doubled down on his claim that the issue was a Democratic 'hoax' with an added expletive.
Vice President JD Vance has denied hosting a strategy dinner to discuss the Epstein crisis as Donald Trump dismissed the ongoing scandal as 'bulls--t.' Hours after reports emerged that Vance was expected to meet on Wednesday night with top Trump officials to coordinate a plan to deal with the ongoing firestorm over sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein, the vice president rebuked the story as 'fake news.' The denial came during an Oval Office event with Apple chief executive Tim Cook, where Trump touted billions of dollars of new investment from the tech company.
Yahoo
18 minutes ago
- Yahoo
GOP Rep. Mocks Party's Hypocrisy Over Texas Gerrymandering Chaos
In a brutal tweet post on Wednesday, one Republican member of Congress has called out his own party's hypocrisy in blasting Texas Democrats for leaving their state. Dozens of Democrats left Texason Monday to deny Texas Republicans a quorum to vote on a newly gerrymandered map that would add five Republican-leaning seats to the House of Representatives. But where a lot of Republicans saw opportunity, Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) saw hypocrisy — especially since House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) suddenly canceled House votes last month and sent lawmakers home early for five weeks to avoid a vote on releasing files connected to sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, a former friend of President Donald Trump. Despite Johnson's very public efforts to sweep the scandal under the rug, Massie and Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) have introduced a bipartisan resolution calling for the release of files. After Republicans criticized Texas Democrats who left their state to prevent the passage of a gerrymandered map, Massie apparently wondered why they were OK with lawmakers ditching Washington, D.C., to avoid a vote on a topic Trump has tried to downplay. Massie made his thoughts known on social media with a tweet that compared 'Democrats leaving Texas to protect their district' to 'Republicans leaving D.C. to protect the Epstein files,' with Johnson's head superimposed over the image of a driver in a car meant to represent Republicans. Some people saw Massie's post as a sign that he was just a D-D-Democrat in Republican clothes. But Massie pointed out just how conservative he is in his response. Related... Texas Democrats Evacuate After Bomb Threat At Chicago Hotel Mike Johnson Shuts Down House Early To Block Vote On Jeffrey Epstein Files Rising Dem Star Talks Texas Gerrymandering Chaos: 'You Don't Beat A Bully By Playing Dead' Obama Slams Texas GOP's Gerrymandering Plot As 'Power Grab'