Zohran Mamdani upended New York politics. Is a Democratic tea party next?

The path to Zohran Mamdani’s stunning rise in New York politics runs directly through New York’s immigrant neighborhoods, enclaves of young renters, the middle class, and subway riders. Fordham Road in the Bronx and Hillsdale Avenue in Queens are home to one of the more unlikely voter types to emerge from the 2024 presidential election: the Trump/AOC voter.

Like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Mr. Mamdani identifies as a democratic socialist. And like both President Donald Trump and Representative Ocasio-Cortez, Mr. Mamdani is a natural in front of the camera.

Rather than wring his hands after Mr. Trump’s victory last November, Mr. Mamdani put on a dark suit and tie, grabbed a microphone, and took his campaign film crew to ask dozens of working-class New Yorkers whom they voted for and why. Then he posted his man-on-the-street conversation to social media.

Why We Wrote This

First-time voters and young voters turned out in droves for the New York mayoral primary. Their choice for mayor, Zohran Mamdani, may or may not herald a wider tea party-like revolt. But his win serves as a repudiation of the political establishment.

“He told us, ‘I want to talk to these people … about my agenda and see how it goes,’” says Gustavo Gordillo, co-chair of New York City Democratic Socialists of America (NYC-DSA) and a longtime friend. “It was an immediate hit. It was the first stark contrast with the failures of the Democratic Party establishment in that moment having no response to working-class voters who supported Trump.”

Mr. Mamdani’s unexpected victory over former Gov. Andrew Cuomo in the Democratic primary for mayor last week signals a new way of doing politics in the Trump era. It also served as a repudiation of the city’s political establishment.

New York has had socialists win public office before, but Mr. Mamdani is the first major DSA candidate with crossover appeal. He won majorities of voters in conservative outer boroughs with sizable Asian populations, wealthy liberal strongholds, and rapidly gentrifying neighborhoods thanks to charisma, slick ads, and a political message that emphasized New Yorkers’ economic insecurities. Most significantly, his campaign brought many first-time voters to the polls, including many young people.

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