
Mamdani says he won't use ‘globalize the intifada' amid backlash
Mamdani, a democratic socialist who won the Democratic nomination last month, has been under pressure to clarify his position on the phrase that many regard as a call to violence against Jews, and one that he had previously declined to condemn.
The 33-year-old made the commitment during a closed-door meeting with business executives hosted on Tuesday by the Partnership for New York City, an influential business body that represents banks, law firms and corporations, per the New York Times.
Many executives have expressed alarm at Mamdani's positions, which they consider to be anti-business and risk driving corporations and the tax base of wealthy New Yorkers from the city.
But his cautious defense of the phrase has brought accusations that he is fostering antisemitism. He previously told the US news show Meet the Press that the term was 'not language that I use' but that 'I don't believe that the role of the mayor is to police speech.'
Mamdani explained at the Tuesday meeting that many use 'globalize the intifada' as an expression of support for Palestinians. He said that, for him, the phrase means protest against the Israeli occupation of Gaza, according to the Wall Street Journal. Mamdani also said he is willing to discourage the specific language, but not the idea behind it.
During his campaign for mayor, he had explained that the word 'intifada' had been used in translations by the US Holocaust Memorial Museum to describe a Jewish uprising against the Nazis in Warsaw in 1943.
He told reporters at the time: 'It pains me to be called an antisemite.'
Many New York business leaders, including Jamie Dimon, CEO of JP Morgan; Steve Schwartzman of Blackstone; Brian Moynihan, CEO of Bank of America; Larry Fink of BlackRock; and David Solomon, CEO of Goldman Sachs, did not attend the meeting.
'[Jamie Dimon] had other commitments and was unable to attend,' a JPMorgan spokesperson told the New York Post.
Just days ago, Dimon lambasted Mamdani at an event in Ireland, calling the mayoral hopeful 'more of a Marxist than a socialist'.
'And now you see these Democrats falling all over themselves saying, 'Well, he's pointing out some real problems, affordable housing and grocery prices,'' Dimon continued, before claiming Mamdani pushed 'the same ideological mush that means nothing in the real world'.
Mamdani reportedly told business leaders at the meeting that his goal is not to drive business from the city. Kathy Wylde, head of the business group, described the attitude to Mamdani among her members as 'guarded'.
'But most recognized that he's a smart young man and a good communicator and the proof will be in the pudding,' Wylde told the Times.
New York Democrats, Hakeem Jeffries, minority leader in the House, and senator Chuck Schumer, the Senate minority leader, have not yet endorsed Mamdani for mayor.
'What 'globalize the intifada' means is really wrong and should be condemned,' Schumer told the Times.
The New York governor, Kathy Hochul, sought to calm frayed nerves, telling MSNBC's Morning Joe on Wednesday that she felt she had become New York's 'therapist in chief'.
'I've spoken to hundreds of business leaders saying, 'Listen, nothing is going to happen to this city without me being aware of it and involved in it'. So don't talk about packing up and leaving and all these other overreactions,' Hochul told the show.
'I've become the therapist in chief, it seems. So I'm saying to everybody, 'We're going be OK.' Maybe it's the mom in me. I know how to calm down situations and we'll get through this.'
Mamdani faces three independent mayoral candidates in November's election, incumbent mayor Eric Adams, former New York governor Andrew Cuomo and attorney Jim Walden, as well as the Republican Curtis Sliwa.
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