
Anti-woke activist applauds his ‘friends' at the New York Times for Zohran Mamdani college application ‘scoop'
Just before the July 4th holiday weekend, the Times sparked outcry when the paper dropped a piece about the New York City mayoral candidate having identified himself on a 2009 application to Columbia University as both 'Asian' and 'Black or African American.' Mamdani is of Indian descent and was born in Uganda.
The 33-year-old state lawmaker told the Times that while he doesn't consider himself Black, he does see himself as 'an American who was born in Africa.' He also explained that, as a 17-year-old, he was attempting to represent his complex ethnic and racial background with the limited options provided on the form.
'Most college applications don't have a box for Indian-Ugandans, so I checked multiple boxes trying to capture the fullness of my background,' Mamdani said, adding that he also wrote on the application that he was born in Uganda. 'Even though these boxes are constraining, I wanted my college application to reflect who I was.'
While criticism has focused on the newsworthiness of the piece in general, with intense debate centered on the Times' framing of how Mamdani self-identified in high school as a scandal, much of the outrage has also concentrated on the main source of the story.
As initially published, the Times article noted that the story revolved around documents that had been hacked from Columbia's computer systems and provided to the paper by an 'intermediary' known as Crémieux, whom they merely identified as 'an academic and an opponent of affirmative action.'
Journalists and researchers of right-wing extremism, however, quickly pointed out that Crémieux is the social media pseudonym of Jordan Lasker, a purveyor of white supremacist and eugenicist views whose public identity has been known for months. Amid the growing outcry, the paper would later update its article to indicate that Crémieux 'writes often about IQ and race' while editor Patrick Healy publicly defended the decision to publish the story and grant the source anonymity.
'What matters most here is whether the information was true and factual—it was, confirmed by Mr. Mamdani; that it was independently confirmed; and that it is relevant to the public,' Healy told the Columbia Journalism Review, though he did acknowledge on social media that it was 'fair feedback' for readers to want to know more information about Crémieux.
On Sunday night, Semafor Media added another wrinkle to the roiling controversy over the Times story when it reported that the paper rushed to publish the story on Thursday afternoon over concerns that Rufo would beat them.
'Two people familiar with the reporting process told Semafor that the paper was aware that other journalists were working on the admissions story, including Rufo,' Semafor noted. Rufo has risen to prominence in recent years as a crusader against critical race theory, DEI policies, and 'woke' ideology.
Semafor pointed out that Rufo confirmed that he had been reporting out the story when the Times article dropped on Thursday, adding that he would follow up with additional details over the coming days on his Substack.
Meanwhile, in an apparent effort to further tweak progressives and spark additional backlash against the paper over the Mamdani story, Rufo applauded the Times for its report and suggested they were on the same page.
'Bummer to get scooped, but kudos to my friends at the New York Times for being first to publish the story,' the conservative provocateur tweeted on Sunday evening.
A Times spokesperson declined to comment to Semafor on whether Rufo's reporting prompted the paper to race ahead with its story, instead pointing to Healy's statement to CJR explaining his reasoning for publishing the piece.
Among journalists and writers at the Times, opinions on the story have been divided, reigniting long-standing tensions between left-leaning staffers and editorial leaders. Times columnist Jamelle Bouie, for instance, has deleted several Bluesky posts in recent days criticizing the paper, including one slamming the paper for not telling 'readers if your source is a nazi,' because he said it violated the Times' social media guidelines.
At the same time, senior editors at the paper appeared to be in agreement over the decision to publish the piece, while veteran Times journalists felt that the reaction to the story showed why it was worth pursuing in the first place.
'The fact that this story engendered all the conversation and debate that it has feels like all the evidence you need that this was a legit line of reporting,' a senior reporter told Semafor.
As for the revelation that the paper was racing against Rufo to get the story out first, several media critics took the paper to task for seemingly being manipulated by the right-wing media ecosystem.
'Anyway if you banged out this dumb f***ing story while running out the door for the holiday weekend, in league with racist criminals, because you were worried about getting 'scooped' by Chris Rufo, what you're telling the world is that you CONSIDER YOURSELVES TO BE IN THE SAME BUSINESS AS CHRIS RUFO,' Indignity editor Tom Scocca posted on Bluesky.
'Indeed. The correct story is the manipulative stylings of Chris Rufo,' tech columnist Kara Swisher – who once hosted a podcast for the New York Times – reacted to Scocca.
Hashtags

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


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Think you know Trump's new bill? Try this big, beautiful quiz
fewer than 10% have ever been charged with a serious crime, a fact that suggests there is no need for this radical expansion – unless Miller's underlying agenda is to unleash masked shock troops on the streets of America who will throw a 'whole society of really honorable, decent, family-loving people', as George W Bush described them, into a network of detention centers.


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Redrawing Texas: the Republican plan to stack the decks for the midterms
Experts, politicians and concerned Texans say their state could be a blueprint for Republican efforts to stave off losses in next year's elections, with some calling the GOP division a 'festering wound' in Texas – all while Donald Trump stacks the deck against potential Democratic inroads. Last month, nearly 150 people showed up at a Tarrant county commissioners court meeting in north Texas. The packed building wasn't used to such a high volume of visitors, but the day's key vote had been hotly contested for weeks. In an unusual move, the commissioners court initiated a redistricting process that both liberal and conservative voters widely criticized. One map, as proposed, would essentially funnel more people of color away from precinct 2 and into precinct 1, thereby creating an opening for a GOP that has historically underperformed with people of color. The map's staunchest critics called the map 'racial gerrymandering', while the county judge, Tim O'Hare, claimed it was just about politics. 'It's purely partisan,' he told a local TV station in the days before the vote. 'At the end of the day, I'm doing it to put another Republican on the commissioners court, period, the end.' At the 3 June meeting, dozens of speakers rose to voice their concerns, and several were kicked out of the meeting by O'Hare. 'Your constituents are telling you that they do not want these maps,' one woman said during the public comment section. She was then removed from the building. The controversial map was approved by a 3-2 vote. Shortly afterward, the Trump administration said it wanted more maps to be redrawn in Texas ahead of the 2026 midterms – and a special legislative session called for later this month could pick up that cause. Amid a heated Senate primary race and Trump's slipping approval rating, Brandon Rottinghaus, a political scientist at the University of Houston who has extensively researched the Texas GOP, said 'partisan leaders are always looking for an edge'. 'Redistricting gives them the clearest opportunity to increase their strength and numbers. Tarrant county is the last big urban purple county and Republicans definitely want to plant their flag deeply there,' he continued. Bob Stein, a gerrymandering expert at Rice University in Houston, echoed Rottinghaus's comments. 'Republicans are afraid they're going to lose upwards of three to four seats in Louisiana, California and New York and probably New Jersey,' he said. 'In fact, some of the privileged stuff I get to see says it could be a complete sweep. So what they want to do is get going now, and what you're seeing in Tarrant county is the effect of that.' Multiple experts and politicians interviewed for this story pointed out how Texas isn't as conservative as one might think. Rather, Texans just don't vote enough. A little over 60% of eligible Texas voters cast ballots in the 2024 election, which was six percentage points lower than the total in 2020. Most recently, less than 8% of Tarrant county voters cast ballots in May's local elections. Beto O'Rourke, a Democrat, received more votes in Tarrant county in 2018 than the Republican senator Ted Cruz, and both Joe Biden and recent Cruz challenger Colin Allred also won Tarrant county in their respective races. All of this spells trouble for the GOP as it prepares for 2026, especially in light of a GOP primary race that has already gotten personal. Senator John Cornyn, who has been in office since 2002, is being challenged by the state attorney general, Ken Paxton, whose controversies includes an attempt to overturn the 2020 presidential election and an impeachment on charges of bribery, obstruction of justice, harassment and abuse of office. Cornyn, who is typically seen as a more traditional Republican, has attacked Paxton's character, using terms such as 'conman' and 'fraud' to describe his opponent. Paxton, for his part, has cast Cornyn as an establishment figure out of touch with Texas. 'The split in the Republican party will definitely be on full display in this election,' Rottinghaus said. 'The establishment Republicans are very worried about losing the seat. You can see that in all the polling. You can see that in their attitudes and actions in how they're giving money and which staff are supporting which candidate. I mean, this is a wound that's been festering for a long time. It has not been sutured closed, and it may never be.' The worry from the GOP, Rottinghaus added, is that a Paxton primary win could pave the way for a Democrat to mount a successful challenge in 2026. Ken Shimamoto, a Fort Worth resident who opposed his county's recent redistricting, is following the Cornyn-Paxton primary race and displeased by what he sees. But he was not surprised. 'Everybody hates Ted Cruz, but Cornyn seemed the more reasonable senator until Paxton mounted his challenge,' he said. 'And ever since then, it seems like Cornyn has been bending over backwards to appease Donald Trump.' Some of Cornyn's bending has been overt, such as posting a photo of himself reading Trump's book The Art of the Deal with a one-word caption: 'Recommended.' Other efforts have been less obvious but far more insidious. Three days after Paxton announced his challenge, Cornyn asked the Department of Justice to investigate the East Plano Islamic Center's plans to build a community around a mosque. Without evidence, the senator claimed such a project could constitute religious discrimination. Despite widespread criticism (the Council on American-Islamic Relations called Cornyn's complaint 'factually baseless') the justice department opened an investigation – only to close it roughly a month later. To Texans like Shimamoto, as well as the political scientists interviewed for this story, there's a clear tie between gerrymandering and races like the Cornyn-Paxton fight. Only the most extreme candidates win in a primary, which means conservatives must run further right if they hope to triumph or keep the seat they already have. 'We've been gerrymandered to death,' said Allison Campolo, who lives in Fort Worth and is running to be chair of the Tarrant county Democratic party. 'That really drives down engagement, it prevents people from knowing what their elected representatives are doing and how it affects them.' At the same time, politicians like Cornyn, Paxton and even Trump are unpopular in Texas. Recent polls show a majority of Texans disapprove of Trump, while only 29% of the state's residents currently approve of Paxton's performance. For Cornyn, that number is 24%. Theoretically, this is good news for people upset about redistricting efforts or unhappy with their current leadership – but only if they vote. 'Texans have to continue to vote and make their voices heard,' said Democratic House representative Marc Veasey, whose district includes part of Fort Worth. On redistricting, Veasey said that it was already being challenged in court on the basis that it violates both the constitution and the Voting Rights Act. To defend against the lawsuit, the commissioners court once again voted 3-2 to hire a law firm called the Public Interest Legal Foundation – the same firm that led the redistricting process. As disheartening as this may be, Veasey urged Texans to 'not give up'. 'Texans can continue to tune in, not out. Continue to fight, vote, and make your voices heard.'


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Secret Service suspended staff for failings over Trump assassination attempt
The US Secret Service issued suspensions for six personnel over failings at one of Donald Trump's rallies last year, during which a gunman attempted to assassinate the Republican, an official has Quinn, the service's deputy director, told the BBC's US partner CBS News that the gathering in Butler, Pennsylvania, when Matthew Crooks fired at Trump and killed another attendee, was an "operational failure".One of Crooks's bullets grazed the ear of Trump, who was then rushed to safety. The attacker was shot is not clear when the staff suspensions were formally issued, and US media reports differ on whether or not they have already been served. Speaking to CBS, Quinn said the staff were given penalties ranging from 10 to 42 days of leave without pay or benefits."Secret Service is totally accountable for Butler," he explained. "Butler was an operational failure and we are focused today on ensuring that it never happens again."Quinn, who was appointed to his role in May this year, added that he was "laser-focused on fixing the root cause of the problem", but his organisation would not "fire our way out of this".Quinn told CBS a number of improvements had already been made, involving military-grade drones and improved mobile command posts that could now be used by agents in the identities of the suspended staff and their roles on the day of the attack have not been disclosed. Gary O'Donoghue: What I witnessed at Trump rallyReport identifies 'litany' of failures by Secret ServiceWife of man killed at Trump rally struggles with loss The news comes just days before the anniversary of the attack on 13 July 2024. Rally attendee Corey Comperatore was killed and two other people incident prompted the resignation of the service's then-director, Kimberly Secret Service has been under intense scrutiny for the last 12 months, and has faced sharp criticism from US Congress September, a 94-page Senate report found that security failures and lack of communication within the US Secret Service "directly contributed" to the incident, and that many issues remained unaddressed two months attack was also described as preventable in another report, published in December, by a House of Representatives taskforce. That paper identified the main lapse as being a failure to secure the rooftop from which Crooks opened who was successfully re-elected in November, was provided with heightened security in the aftermath of the attack - ensuring that he received protection at a level above what is typical for a presidential September, he was again rushed to safety by Secret Service agents after a second would-be gunman lurked in bushes at Trump's golf course in Florida. The FBI described this, too, as an apparent assassination attempt. The suspect in that second incident was detained.