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Can Mamdani's Message Play Outside New York? It Already Has.
Can Mamdani's Message Play Outside New York? It Already Has.

New York Times

time3 days ago

  • Politics
  • New York Times

Can Mamdani's Message Play Outside New York? It Already Has.

In the glow of Zohran Mamdani's convincing win in the Democratic mayoral primary in New York City, a common narrative has emerged to explain his ascendence. He was a master of social media; he was charming, attractive and well spoken; he and his team simply outworked everyone. But the emphasis on Mr. Mamdani's style overlooks the substance of his progressive message and how the city's voters came to embrace it, much as voters did in Boston in 2021 and in Chicago two years later. Those elections, along with recent polling on issues like rent control, wealth taxes and the burden of child care, suggest that many voters, particularly those in large Democratic-leaning cities, have become more receptive to progressive agendas. Mr. Mamdani, a state assemblyman and democratic socialist, adhered to a simple message in his primary campaign. New York, he said, was in the throes of an affordability crisis, and he had three main proposals to help: make city buses free, expand free child care and freeze the rent for stabilized apartments. The financial burden of paying for these policies, he suggested, would largely fall on wealthy taxpayers and businesses — a stance that has put Mr. Mamdani at odds with many mainstream Democrats, including Gov. Kathy Hochul. But the size of his victory has forced some in his party to grapple with his ascension and whether to adopt some of his messaging in next year's critical midterm elections. 'People are hungry for government to work and to get things done that matter and that will make a difference in their lives,' said Mayor Michelle Wu of Boston, who in 2021 became the city's youngest mayor in a century by pushing a similar slate of proposals. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Democrats Choose Mamdani II
Democrats Choose Mamdani II

Wall Street Journal

time4 days ago

  • Politics
  • Wall Street Journal

Democrats Choose Mamdani II

Many elected Democrats want to distance themselves from the party's New York mayoral nominee, Zohran Mamdani. Minnesota progressives want to send Mr. Mamdani some socialist backup. Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey is up for re-election, but he was snubbed at last weekend's Democratic convention, whose delegates instead endorsed Omar Fateh, a 35-year-old socialist state Senator. Mr. Fateh is proposing rent control and more public housing, including with funding from 'a dedicated levy.' He says Minneapolis shouldn't be a 'playground for developers.' His stance on the homeless is to promise 'a compassionate approach to encampments,' including saying he'll work to 'ensure that residents have access to life-saving infrastructure like hand-washing stations, portable bathrooms, running water, safe needle disposal programs, and storage for personal belongings.' He says voters want a bold mayor who 'will end the cycle of the Minneapolis Police Department's (MPD) violence and brutality that has held our city captive for so many years.' In Mr. Fateh's view, 'over 47% of calls to MPD can be diverted to non-police responders.' He wants to reduce crime by investing in 'upstream solutions' on poverty and mental health. No surprise, Mr. Fateh is 'passionately pro-labor,' and he pledges to 'work collaboratively with the unions representing City employees to ensure workers get fair contracts.' But if Mr. Fateh joins the public unions on their side of the bargaining table, who will represent residents and taxpayers?

Ex-Giants player attacks Democrat Minneapolis mayor candidate compared to Zohran Mamdani
Ex-Giants player attacks Democrat Minneapolis mayor candidate compared to Zohran Mamdani

Daily Mail​

time21-07-2025

  • Politics
  • Daily Mail​

Ex-Giants player attacks Democrat Minneapolis mayor candidate compared to Zohran Mamdani

Former New York Giants player Carter Coughlin has launched a savage attack on the Democratic party 's Omar Fateh, who is running for mayor in Minneapolis. Coughlin grew up in Minnesota and played for the Golden Gophers, based in Minneapolis, during his college football years. Coughlin said Fateh's policies of rent control and raising minimum wage would set Minneapolis back years in an impassioned message on Sunday. He also debated Fateh's credibility to become mayor with his followers. 'In a city that has endured unimaginable destruction and racial tension, these policies would set Minneapolis back another 10 steps,' Coughlin wrote. 'MPLS (Minneapolis) needs rebuilding, and this will do the opposite. Pray for wisdom.' In his replies, the 28-year-old Coughlin clashed mostly with people who supported Fateh's rent control policy. 'I'd encourage you to take time to look into what rent control does to city development years down the road,' he wrote back to one follower. 'No one wants to build, to grow, to improve because the economics don't work. Subsidize low income housing and provide tax funding for those specific developments.' In a different response, Coughlin said: 'Designated low income housing by definition is rent controlled, which is great. 'Applying rent control to the entire city gridlocks all development. The city deteriorates. These policies only 'fix' the symptoms, not the actual problems.' His comments come after Fateh received an endorsement from the Democratic Farmer-Labor party. The Somali-born Fateh, 35, became the first Somali-American to be voted into the Minnesota Senate in 2020 and his policies have seen him draw comparisons to Zohran Mamdani, the 2025 Democratic nominee for the mayor of New York. After his college days with the Gophers, Coughlin was picked in the seventh round of the 2020 NFL Draft by the Giants. In his first season, he recorded his career sack on none other than Tom Brady. He went on to play 55 regular season games from the Giants from 2020 until 2023 but last year, was on the practice squad.

Mexico City Pledges to Fight Gentrification In Protest Aftermath
Mexico City Pledges to Fight Gentrification In Protest Aftermath

Bloomberg

time16-07-2025

  • Business
  • Bloomberg

Mexico City Pledges to Fight Gentrification In Protest Aftermath

Mexico City's government presented a plan to fight gentrification following a recent protest from citizens that accused foreigners moving into the capital of making it more expensive and displacing longtime residents and merchants. The plan's main goal will be to control rent increases, which will not be allowed to exceed inflation in Latin America's second largest economy, said Mexico City's Mayor Clara Brugada during a press conference on Wednesday. She also promised to protect local merchants with government incentives.

Zohran Mamdani has big housing plans. Here's what stands in the way
Zohran Mamdani has big housing plans. Here's what stands in the way

CNN

time04-07-2025

  • Business
  • CNN

Zohran Mamdani has big housing plans. Here's what stands in the way

New York City frontrunner for mayor Zohran Mamdani has an ambitious agenda to tackle the city's housing crisis. But the spiraling costs to develop affordable housing, President Donald Trump's efforts to gut federal housing aid and other obstacles may derail his goals. New York City is in the grips of its worst housing shortage in more than 50 years. Only 1.4% of apartment rentals are available, and the typical New York City household pays more than half of its $70,000 income on rent. The city's leaders for decades have promised new affordable housing. Mamdani, who won New York City's Democratic mayoral primary, has pledged to freeze rents on rent-stabilized units if elected; build 200,000 permanently affordable apartments over the next decade; and double the amount of money the city spends to preserve public housing. Mamdani's campaign did not respond to CNN's request for more details on his plans. 'We need significantly more affordable housing,' the campaign says on its website. 'Housing that does get built is often out of reach for working families who need it the most.' But affordable housing development is devilishly complicated and requires deep government subsidies to make units affordable to low-income tenants. And many affordable housing owners and the New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA) are already behind on their bills. 'The rubber is going to meet the road' on Mamdani's housing policies, said Howard Slatkin, the executive director of the Citizens Housing & Planning Council, a non-profit research organization. 'It's hard to talk about these plans without talking about the simmering distress within New York City's affordable housing.' Since 2020, expenses for rent-regulated apartments have increased 22% per unit, according to data from the Community Preservation Corporation, a non-profit affordable housing lender. Rising costs for utilities, insurance and construction make it harder to keep the current stock of affordable housing in good condition or build new units. Plus, the Trump administration has proposed cutting federal rental assistance by 40%. This would devastate housing affordability in New York City, said Barika Williams, the executive director of ANHD, an organization of New York non-profit housing providers. 'What's happening at the federal level is our greatest threat to putting together a robust housing development plan for New York,' she said. If elected, Mamdani can likely fulfill his pledge to freeze rents for roughly 1 million rent-stabilized units — almost half of New York City's rentals. But there may be unintended consequences from the plan. The mayor appoints members to the Rent Guidelines Board that sets annual rent increases on stabilized units. The board froze rents three times over the last decade. The board on Monday approved rent increases on new leases beginning in October, a move Mamdani criticized as a 'blow to struggling rent-stabilized tenants.' But like tenants, affordable housing owners are also dealing with higher costs. Expenses for rent-regulated units are rising twice as fast as owners' revenues, according to the Community Preservation Corporation. Nearly one-third of the loans in its portfolio are buildings that don't have sufficient net operating income — income minus operating expenses — to fully cover mortgage payments. Eight percent of loans were delinquent. So experts warn that any rent freeze without financial support for smaller owners will lead to apartments falling into disrepair — especially fully rent-stabilized buildings in New York City's outer boroughs. Buildings built before 1974 outside of central Manhattan, a crucial part of the city's affordable supply, saw net operating incomes fall 13.1% from 2021 to 2023. 'There is a real need to freeze or minimize rent increases, and we also need to invest in the preservation and stability of our existing affordable housing stock,' said Williams. 'It can't be an either-or conversation.' Mamdani's rent freeze plan could undermine his goal of building 200,000 publicly subsidized, rent-stabilized, permanently affordable homes over the next decade for low-income households and seniors. That's because the private sector may be dissuaded from participating if these buildings don't include market-rate housing. The private sector has a 'very important role' to play in building housing, Mamdani has said. 'A rent freeze will change how a conversion might pay off for the developer,' said David Reiss, a law professor at Cornell University who served on the Rent Guidelines Board under Mayor Bill de Blasio. And to be permanently affordable for extremely low-income renters, it will require deeper government subsidies than Mamdani has pledged, experts say. Previous New York City mayors have attempted to produce housing for a wide range of incomes to help offset higher subsidies for deeply-affordable units. 'It's in the right direction to focus on people with the greatest affordability challenges,' said Alex Schwartz, an urban policy professor at The New School and a current member of the Rent Guidelines Board. 'It's important to recognize that the capital dollars won't go as far in terms of total numbers of units if they only go toward people with extremely low incomes.' Mamdani wants the city to borrow $70 billion to build affordable housing over the next decade, on top of the roughly $25 billion it already plans to invest. That's no easy task – he will need state approval since the plan would exceed the city's debt limit by around $30 billion, as well as the New York City Council's approval of zoning reforms that would make it easier to build. 'This would be a significant increase in city capital to produce deeply affordable housing,' said Rachel Fee, the executive director of the New York City Housing Conference, a non-profit affordable housing policy and advocacy organization. 'It's not something he can just implement on his own. It will take a political coalition to make this happen.' NYCHA, the largest and oldest public housing agency in the United States, has more than 177,000 apartments. But for decades, a decline in federal funding for public housing has caused living conditions to deteriorate. Mamdani plans to double the city's capital investment in NYCHA for long-term repairs. New York City plans to spend $1.27 billion in its next fiscal year on improvements, but that's nowhere near the roughly $80 billion NYCHA has estimated it needs to fully rehabilitate all of its buildings. The city has made progress renovating thousands of public housing developments through a program that converts units into a more stable federal funding source. But federal funding may soon dry up. New York City relies heavily on federal assistance for housing. But Trump's budget for next year calls for slashing Housing and Urban Development funding by nearly 44%, including cuts to grants for homelessness and community development programs and other rental assistance. New York would lose more than $4.4 billion in funding if Congress enacts the budget, according to New York Housing Conference projections. That would be on top of HUD staffing cuts and resignations that have depleted the agency under Trump. Mamdani has not said how his housing plan would reckon with the possibility of huge federal cuts to public housing. 'Public housing is area where we'd like to see more details from Mamdani's campaign,' said New York Housing Conference executive director Fee. 'Trump's plan would be a huge threat to achieving any of these goals.'

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