logo
U Ganda know about Mamdani's trip

U Ganda know about Mamdani's trip

Politico19 hours ago
Presented by Resorts World New York City
With help from Amira McKee
Zohran Mamdani suggested he wouldn't travel abroad as mayor of New York City — but he's doing it now.
The Democratic nominee is vacationing with his family to Uganda, where he was born and lived for five years. He'll take a break from the campaign trail to celebrate his February wedding to Rama Duwaji, he said in a video posted Sunday morning.
Mamdani wears his Ugandan roots proudly, and while he leases a rent stabilized apartment in Astoria, he actually owns four acres of land in Jinja, Uganda at the source of the Nile River, a patch of terra firma valued between $150,000 to $250,000 according to his annual financial disclosure report.
Trips to the homeland are becoming commonplace for New York pols. Bill de Blasio went to Italy with his family and government staffers his first summer as mayor. Gov. Kathy Hochul visited Ireland last summer. And Mayor Eric Adams flew to Ghana after winning the general election in 2021 — getting a free upgrade to business class from Turkish Airlines and gratis, luxurious accommodations during his layover in Istanbul, federal prosecutors alleged.
(Adams also said he went on a family vacation to 'Europe' after winning the primary, but refused to tell reporters which country.)
Mamdani left Saturday and the trip 'is entirely personal, in nature and in funding,' with no campaign funds being used, campaign spokesperson Jeffrey Lerner said. 'And before you ask, he flew economy.'
Mamdani also tried to preempt any criticism by joking in the video he was going back to Africa like his social media trolls wanted. He even had headline suggestions for the New York Post: 'M.I.A.? Mamdani in Africa,' 'Uganda Miss Me' and 'He's Kampala-etely Crazy.'
While Mamdani has loudly and consistently criticized the Israeli government, he's also opposed Uganda's leadership for more than a decade, tweeting about long-serving President Yoweri Museveni's homophobia in 2014, comparing him to Donald Trump and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in 2020 and backing opposition candidate Bobi Wine in 2021. (We have more on Mamdani's social media later in Playbook.)
While Mamdani headed to East Africa, Cuomo headed to the East End where he worked to close his massive campaign cash gap with Adams and Mamdani. He 'joked' at a Hamptons event with billionaire John Catsimatidis on Saturday that he'd move to Florida if Mamdani won, the Post reported.
And to the Hampton Synagogue crowd, Cuomo said he 'played it safe' in the primary and 'didn't debunk (Mamdani) enough' — 'which was really ironic because all my life I'm 'too aggressive,' I'm 'too combative,' I'm 'too tough.''
The ex-governor reiterated that if he's not in the best position to beat Mamdani by September, he'd 'defer' to Adams, Curtis Sliwa or Jim Walden — though he took a dig at the mayor's paltry poll numbers and coziness with Trump, saying 'you can't win without Democratic support.'
Adams, meanwhile, made the most of his top opponents being out of town and hit the campaign trail hard — dancing at Bronx church, marching in the Peruvian parade in Queens and bouncing a baby in Brooklyn.
'I got to win the race based on what I do best, and that's campaign,' Adams told the Post — days before doing street corner pull-ups on a pedestrian signal.
Adams said he hasn't asked Trump for an endorsement 'and he has not interfered with this race at all.' — Jeff Coltin
HAPPY MONDAY: Got news? Send it our way: Jeff Coltin, Emily Ngo and Nick Reisman.
WHERE'S KATHY? In Albany and New York City holding a roundtable on implementing distraction-free schools.
WHERE'S ERIC? Public schedule not available as of 10 p.m. Sunday.
QUOTE OF THE DAY: 'The organizing that's necessary to win a campaign, you have to remain committed to that organizing … Sometimes the movement doesn't always show up after the win.' — Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson, on his advice for Mamdani to WBEZ radio.
ABOVE THE FOLD
MILLENNIAL MAYBE MAYOR: Mamdani's social media savvy helped catapult him to a historic win. But that same online oeuvre has been a target for critics looking to tarnish his luster ahead of the November general election.
The democratic socialist has faced scrutiny for lyrics to a rap song posted online praising an organization convicted of aiding Hamas. He has come under attack for social media posts questioning FBI tactics in the leadup to the Obama-era killing of Anwar al-Awlaki, who was affiliated with al Qaeda. And his previous support for defunding the police — all laid out through statements on X — has also raised considerable hackles.
At 33 years old, Mamdani is part of a generation of elected officials who grew up on the internet, a rearing that fosters fluency in the semiotics of TikTok and Instagram. It also often comes at a price: an extensive digital footprint that can, years later, be tracked all the way back to adolescence. And because Mamdani is unique in both his youth and the scale of the job he's seeking, traces of his online persona — and his salad days by extension — have been subjected to a level of scrutiny his older opponents can avoid.
'Every candidate should scrub their social media,' said New York City Council Member Chi Ossé, who was just 23 when he was elected. 'But I think that's very difficult to do. Once something is on the internet, it kind of lasts forever.'
Read more on whether the hits against Mamdani will stick — and his post's national impact — from POLITICO's Joe Anuta, Amira McKee and Jason Beeferman.
CITY HALL: THE LATEST
NEW PORT CITY: It's a make or break week for ambitious plans to turn a deteriorating port in Brooklyn into a new neighborhood with some 6,000 homes.
A 28-member task force convened to evaluate the proposal from the Economic Development Corporation is slated to finally vote this Thursday on the future of the Brooklyn Marine Terminal.
And a $164 million grant that's essential to the financing of the plan is adding to the urgency of the decision, which has been postponed multiple times. Building support has proven difficult among some task force members, who have voiced objections that the proposal is too rushed, uncertain and would hinder the area's manufacturing potential.
EDC needs to show progress towards its plan for the site in order to retain the federal money — and delays could jeopardize the grant amidst significant uncertainty around federal funding.
'If the Task Force does not approve this Vision Plan there is a real possibility — as we have seen with other federal grants — the current federal administration revokes this essential funding, plummeting the terminal into deeper disrepair,' EDC spokesperson Jeff Holmes said in a statement. — Janaki Chadha
WHAT ZOHRAN IS READING: Kansas City poured millions into a grocery store. It still may close. (Washington Post)
NOEM COMING: Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem is holding a press conference in New York City this morning, after an off-duty customs officer was shot Saturday night in an attempted robbery.
The alleged robber — who was also shot by the federal officer, the Times reports — entered the country illegally and had a long rap sheet, so the case is perfect fodder for Noem and allies who want stricter measures at the border and fewer people released from jail.
'Assailant is a criminal illegal alien that was released into the country under the Biden Administration,' DHS said in a Sunday press release. — Jeff Coltin
More from the city:
— Scams and a rent spike followed the city's new law banning most broker fees. (The New York Times)
— Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg's conviction rate has dropped every year, and his office quietly yanked the data dashboard showing that. (New York Post)
— Adams says he wants the city to become a 'cannabis capital' where it's easier to open and do business. (am New York)
NEW FROM PLANET ALBANY
MASKING TIMES: An effort in Albany to prevent federal immigration enforcement officers from wearing masks is colliding with Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman's MAGA friendly directive.
Gov. Kathy Hochul on Friday decried mask wearing by ICE officers and did not rule out supporting a measure that would block them from concealing their faces when carrying out their jobs.
'You don't create this climate of intimidation by donning a mask, not identifying yourself and literally terrorizing people,' she said.
Blakeman, a potential Republican candidate for governor next year, is taking the opposite approach. He signed an executive order this month that exempts law enforcement from a local measure that bans mask wearing in public.
'This administration believes that one effective tool to lessen the risks to these law enforcement officers and their families is to allow the officers to wear masks or other face coverings to avoid being identified' by dangerous people, Blakeman wrote in the order.
Blakeman, who is running for a second term this year, is yet to weigh in on the state-level ban.
The debate is an inversion of the polarizing faultline over mask wearing that emerged during Covid as immigration enforcement takes centerstage in national politics. It also underscores the unease Democrats have with aggressive deportation efforts by the Trump administration and fears of Republicans over law enforcement being 'doxxed' online.
Whether state lawmakers pass a version of the bill banning law enforcement from wearing masks is not yet clear; the Legislature won't reconvene in Albany until January. — Nick Reisman
BULLISH ON CURTIS: Count Republican former Gov. George Pataki among those who think Curtis Sliwa's longshot bid for New York City mayor has a chance.
Pataki, the last Republican who won statewide office, told John Catsimatidis on his WABC radio show Sunday the Guardian Angels founder is doing better than polling suggests.
'I still think Curtis Sliwa can win this race,' Pataki said. 'No one knows this city better than him.'
He expects Sliwa will get access to public matching funds, while Cuomo and Adams are hamstrung by running on independent ballot lines.
'Cuomo and Adams don't have a party line,' he said. 'No one has won without having a major party line.'
Running with an 'R' next to your name in deep blue New York is also a challenge, though. Some New York Republicans have privately lamented that Sliwa — a media savvy, but eccentric figure — is their nominee. Sliwa, for his part, has insisted he's not leaving the race. — Nick Reisman
More from Albany:
— Hochul's nuclear goals are being praised, but questions remain over whether it's enough to meet New York's energy needs. (Times Union)
— New York state reached a settlement with Brittany Commisso, who accused Cuomo of sexual harassment. (NY1)
— Opioid deaths have dropped overall in New York, but not for all demographics. (Times Union)
KEEPING UP WITH THE DELEGATION
AOC UPSTATE: Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Paul Tonko were on Rep. Elise Stefanik's turf Sunday to hear New Yorkers' stories of how Medicaid rollbacks would impact them. Their town hall was part of Democrats' effort to draw attention to Trump's megalaw in GOP districts.
The two New York Democrats, hosting a full house in Plattsburgh, argued that Stefanik hasn't been there for her constituents.
'Every corner matters, no one deserves to be ignored, no one deserves to have their voice taken out and everyone, every community deserves to have folks showing up for them,' Ocasio-Cortez told a crowd outside before the event.
The Bronx and Queens House member also said Democrats should be running against GOP elected officials.
Stefanik, who is weighing a bid for governor, represents a deep red seat. Republicans defending Stefanik and the party said Ocasio-Cortez's visit would only help them.
'Thank you for the political gift of a radical Far Left Socialist's visit to the North Country,' a Stefanik representative told the New York Post. — Emily Ngo
More from Congress:
— How the 2017 Trump tax cuts ballooned the 'one big, beautiful bill.' (POLITICO)
— Congressional Democrats from New York blast $1 billion in cuts to public media. (Spectrum News)
— GOP wants to cut waste. Critics say SNAP exemption could do the opposite. (Washington Post)
NEW YORK STATE OF MIND
— Cuts to public broadcasting stations will hit rural North Country stations hardest. (Times Union)
— The Writers Guild of America asked Attorney General Letitia James to investigate The Late Show's cancellation. (The Hill)
— Hochul's office decried the impact of the show's cancellation on the city's economy. (Gothamist)
SOCIAL DATA
MAKING MOVES: Seamus Lyman is now a spokesperson for Hochul's budget office. He was previously executive producer of 'Capital Tonight.' … Saye Joseph has joined Paragon Strategies as chief of staff. She was previously chief of staff to NYC Council Member Mercedes Narcisse and is a Citizen Action alum.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Former Rep. Ed Towns … Board of Parole Chair Darryl Towns … Phil Boyle, president & CEO of Suffolk Regional Off Track Betting … Robyn Enes, chief of staff to Assemblymember Catalina Cruz … Board of Elections Co-Executive Director Kristen Zebrowski Stavisky … NYC Council General Counsel Jason Otaño … DDC spox Ian Michaels … Lori Knipel … Yoswein's Jamie Van Bramer … (WAS SUNDAY:) Fordham's Travis Proulx … NYC Council Finance Director Richard Lee.
Missed Friday's New York Playbook PM? We forgive you. Read it here.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Read: Senators raise alarm over Delta's AI pricing plan
Read: Senators raise alarm over Delta's AI pricing plan

Axios

time11 minutes ago

  • Axios

Read: Senators raise alarm over Delta's AI pricing plan

Three Democratic senators wrote to Delta Air Lines CEO Ed Bastian Monday to raise concerns about company plans to use AI to set individualized fares, which the airline maintains won't target customers with offers based on personal details. Why it matters: Sens. Ruben Gallego (D-Ariz.), Mark Warner (D-Va.) and Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) wrote that Delta's personalized "current and planned individualized pricing practices" would present data privacy concerns and "likely mean" fare price rises "up to each individual consumer's personal 'pain point'" at a time when many families were struggling. Zoom in: "Consumers have no way of knowing what data and personal information your company and Fetcherr plan to collect or how the AI algorithm will be trained," wrote the senators, in reference to the Israeli company that developed a Generative Pricing Engine tool. "Prices could be dictated not by supply and demand, but by individual need," they added. "While Delta has stated that the airline will 'maintain strict safeguards to ensure compliance with federal law,' your company has not shared what those safeguards are or how you plan to protect American families against pricing discrimination in the evolving AI landscape." What they're saying:"There is no fare product Delta has ever used, is testing, or plans to use that targets customers with individualized offers based on personal information or otherwise," a Delta spokesperson said in an emailed statement late Monday. "A variety of market forces drive the dynamic pricing model that's been used in the global industry for decades, with new tech simply streamlining this process. Delta always complies with regulations around pricing and disclosures."

Los Angeles Times owner plans to take paper public
Los Angeles Times owner plans to take paper public

Axios

time41 minutes ago

  • Axios

Los Angeles Times owner plans to take paper public

Los Angeles Times owner Patrick Soon-Shiong said he wants to take the newspaper public in a Monday appearance on "The Daily Show." Why it matters: The announcement comes after years of newsroom turmoil as the biotech billionaire tries to reshape the legacy paper. What they're saying: "Whether you're right, left, Democratic, Republican, you're an American, so the opportunity for us to provide a paper that is the voices of the people, truly the voices of the people, so I'm going to announce something with you tonight," Soon-Shiong told host Jon Stewart. "We're going to take the LA Times public and allow it to be democratized and allow the public to be the ownership of this paper," he said. Soon-Shiong said the timeline was over the next year and that he was working with an organization to put the deal together. Between the lines: Soon-Shiong's remarks came after Stewart gave an impassioned speech about the media needing to stand up to President Trump in the wake of CBS' decision to cancel " The Late Show with Stephen Colbert." Before Soon-Shiong's announcement, Stewart had asked about the owner's ethical leadership given he could be incentivized to appease the Food and Drug Administration and the wider Trump administration in order to get approval on his biomedical work. Soon-Shiong responded to the initial question that he would go to competitors like the New York Times or The Wall Street Journal for his stories about his work. Asked if the LA Times offends the administration, Soon-Shiong said, "It may and it probably does." Flashback: Soon-Shiong bought The LA Times and the San Diego Union-Tribune in 2018 for $500 million. He sold the latter to MediaNews Group in 2023. The owner has repeatedly faced backlash from his staff for his decisions. He blocked the paper's planned presidential endorsement for Kamala Harris, prompting its editorial editor to resign and a reported 20,000 subscription cancellations. In a December interview with the LA Times, Soon-Shiong said he planned to be more involved in the opinion section and add more moderate and conservative commentators. He also introduced an AI -powered "bias meter" to label ideological leanings. The LA Times cut 115 newsroom employees, more than 20% of its newsroom, early last year. The company laid off more than a dozen staffers in May.

There are many illegal marijuana farms, but federal agents targeted California's biggest legal one
There are many illegal marijuana farms, but federal agents targeted California's biggest legal one

Hamilton Spectator

time41 minutes ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

There are many illegal marijuana farms, but federal agents targeted California's biggest legal one

LOS ANGELES (AP) — There are thousands of illegal marijuana farms around the country. But when the federal government decided to stage one of its largest raids since President Donald Trump took office in January, it picked the biggest legal grower in California . Nearly two weeks later, the reason for the federal raid at two Glass House farm sites northwest of Los Angeles remains unclear and has prompted speculation. Some say the raid was intended to send a chilling message to immigrants in the U.S. illegally — but also to rattle the state's legal cannabis industry. Meanwhile, the Republican Trump administration has been feuding with heavily Democratic California over funding for everything from high-speed rail construction to wildfire relief, so it's also possible Glass House was pulled into a broader conflict between the White House and Sacramento. 'There are plenty of other places they can go to find illegal workers,' said political consultant Adam Spiker, who advises cannabis companies. 'A lot of people believe there is a hint of politics in this. It's federal enforcement coming into California to go after cannabis.' What happened during the raids? On July 10, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Border Patrol agents executed a search warrant for Glass House's farms in Carpinteria and Camarillo, court filings show. At the Camarillo site, armored vehicles blocked the road, which is lined with fields and greenhouses, as masked agents deployed onto the property. One farmworker who fell from a greenhouse roof while running to hide later died from his injuries. Outside the farm, officers faced off with demonstrators and fired tear gas to disperse them, a federal agent wrote in court filings. One demonstrator threw a gas canister back at Border Patrol officers, according to the agent. Another demonstrator, who is sought by the FBI, appeared to fire a gun. More than 360 people were arrested, most suspected of being in the country without legal status. Those arrested included four U.S. citizens, including U.S. Army veteran George Retes, 25, who works as a security guard and was held for three days. The operation came more than a month into an extended crackdown across Southern California that was originally centered in Los Angeles, where local officials say the federal actions are spreading fear in immigrant communities. Why Glass House? No cannabis was seized and the criminal search warrants used to enter the farm sites are under court seal. Authorities refused to share them with The Associated Press. The government said the business was being investigated for potential child labor, human trafficking and other abuses. Agents found 14 children at one site. No information has been released about the minors. The company has not been charged. Federal and state laws allow children as young as 12 to work in agriculture under certain conditions, though no one under age 21 is allowed to work in the cannabis industry. Company officials did not respond to calls or emails. In a brief statement on the social platform X, Glass House said it complied with immigration and naturalization warrants and 'has never knowingly violated applicable hiring practices and does not and has never employed minors.' Some believe the raid was aimed at the legal marijuana market After the raid, United Farm Workers — the country's biggest farm worker union — posted an urgent message to its social media accounts warning that because marijuana is illegal under federal law, workers who are not U.S. citizens should avoid jobs in the cannabis industry, including state-licensed facilities. 'We know this is unfair,' it said, 'but we encourage you to protect yourself and your family.' Industry experts point to unwelcome publicity the company received after rival Catalyst Cannabis Co. filed a 2023 lawsuit alleging that Glass House 'has become one of the largest, if not the largest, black marketers of cannabis in the state of California.' The lawsuit, formally filed by Catalyst parent 562 Discount Med Inc., was dismissed last year but the headlines might have drawn the interest of federal investigators. Who runs the Glass House farm sites? The company was co-founded by Kyle Kazan, a former Southern California police officer and special education teacher turned cannabis investor, and Graham Farrar, a Santa Barbara tech entrepreneur. Glass House started growing cannabis in a greenhouse in Carpinteria in Santa Barbara County when once-thriving cut flower operations were being reduced. It later bought property in Camarillo in neighboring Ventura County for $93 million that had six greenhouses and was being used to grow tomatoes and cucumbers. To date, two of the greenhouses have been converted to grow cannabis. Workers' relatives said tomatoes are still being grown in other greenhouses at the location. How did Glass House do it? The raids have put the spotlight on a company that is alternately admired and reviled because of its meteoric rise in the nation's largest legal market. Glass House is the state's biggest legal cultivator, dwarfing its nearest rivals. Glass House Farms is part of the broader company Glass House Brands, which has other businesses that make cannabis products. 'There is no farmer in California that can compete with them at scale,' Sacramento-based cannabis consultant Sam Rodriguez said. Many legal operators have struggled despite the passage of Proposition 64 in 2016 — which was seen as a watershed moment in the push to legitimize and tax California's multibillion-dollar marijuana industry. In 2018, when retail outlets could open, California became the world's largest legal marketplace. But operators faced heavy taxes, seven-figure start-up costs and for many consumers, the tax-free illegal market remained a better deal. But as other companies folded, Glass House took off, fueling envy and suspicion by rivals over its boom at a time when much of the state's legal market was in crisis, in large part because of competition from the robust underground market. In a recent call with investors, Kazan said company revenue in the first quarter hit $45 million — up 49% over the same period last year. He said he remained hopeful for a federal shift that would end marijuana's classification as a Schedule I drug, alongside heroin and LSD. But 'we are a company that does not require federal legalization for survival,' Kazan said. Glass House's sales grew as many others around the state declined. 'I remain steadfast in the belief that it is not if but when the cannabis industry becomes America's next massive normalized industry, and I'm excited to participate along with investors in the corresponding reward that that change will bring,' he said. Error! Sorry, there was an error processing your request. There was a problem with the recaptcha. Please try again. You may unsubscribe at any time. By signing up, you agree to our terms of use and privacy policy . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google privacy policy and terms of service apply. Want more of the latest from us? Sign up for more at our newsletter page .

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store