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Nenshi's former aides see an eerily similar story in New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani

Nenshi's former aides see an eerily similar story in New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani

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OTTAWA — Two architects of Alberta NDP Leader Naheed Nenshi's surprise victory in the 2010 Calgary mayor's race say they're feeling déjà vu after seeing another thirty-something Shia Muslim — with family ties to East Africa and Gujarat, India — upend the politics of a major North American city.
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Stephen Carter, now president of Decide Campaigns, says he sees shades of his old boss in 33-year-old Zohran Mamdani, who rode an outsider campaign to victory in last week's New York City Democratic mayoral primary.
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'The similarities are hard to miss,' said Carter.
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Carter said that, on top of the biographical similarities, Mamdani followed Nenshi's playbook of using digital tools to build a strong personal brand that transcends party labels.
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'I won't pretend to be an expert on the inner workings of the Mamdani campaign but one thing I can say … is that the brand construction … was spectacularly implemented,' said Carter.
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Fifteen years ago, Carter helped then 38-year-old Nenshi leverage newfangled social media platforms Facebook, YouTube and Twitter (now X) to launch a similarly powerful digital brand.
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Nenshi's then novel grassroots digital campaign helped him become the first Muslim mayor of a major North American city.
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Carter says that the digital landscape has changed in the past 15 years but the fundamentals of building a political brand haven't.
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'Of all the things we talked about back in 2010, I think the strongest thing was actually the development of brand politics,' said Carter.
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'Both parties and individual politicians have brands. And one thing we really thought hard about was where does the (candidate's) brand lie?'
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With Carter at the helm, the Nenshi campaign poured significant resources into brand building. For instance, candidate Nenshi frequently donned the colour purple — a mixture of Liberal red and Conservative blue — to put himself above partisan politics.
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Nenshi has held onto his purple personal branding since making the jump to provincial politics last year, despite admitting on a recent podcast appearance that purple doesn't coordinate especially well with the Alberta NDP's traditional orange.
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