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Run Zohran?

This article was originally published in the MUG-NYC organ The Socialist Tribune, as can be found here.

Table of Contents

  1. Introduction
  2. The Role of the Executive in New York City: The Cop-in-chief problem.
  3. We need to assert our strategic goals.
  4. We need to be bold in our platform.
  5. We should endorse a “Don’t Rank Adams” canvassing plan.
  6. We need to ensure political independence and programmatic control.
  7. We should be wary of drawing organizing capacity away from our other duties as socialists.
  8. Conclusion

1. Introduction

In July  2024, sources across New York reported that Assemblymember Zohran K.  Mamdani of AD36 in Astoria was considering running for Mayor of New York  City. Mamdani, being a DSA-endorsed Socialist in Office, would likely  seek another endorsement from our organization before running this race.  Endorsing here would essentially be uncharted territory for us. While  it is technically true that NYC-DSA has endorsed in executive races in  the past, this would be our first time doing so for what is essentially a  homegrown DSA candidate. This race presents a wide range of  opportunities and challenges for our organization. The endorsement  process, should the candidate seek to go through it, will test the  strength of our democracy as we navigate a deeply contentious decision  together. It is my hope that we can discuss, debate, and indeed disagree  joyfully and in the open.

In service of  this, I want to summarize some of the main points of contention that  will arise around this race. These include the role of the executive in  American governance, the role of electoral campaigns in DSA, the  possible strategies and tactics to be employed should we decide to run  this race, and its potential impacts on our organization. I write this  as a member of New York City DSA who supports the  endorsement of Assemblymember Mamdani for Mayor, provided the conditions  outlined below are met. These are by no means exhaustive, but rather  seek to begin some of these important  conversations that will impact DSA both in New York and throughout the  country. I hope it will help ground our discussions as our electoral  work advances into a new era.

2. The Role of the Executive in New York City: The Cop-in-chief problem.

Before  I begin to discuss the campaign itself, it is necessary to be clear  about the role of the Mayor in New York City, and what it means to hold  this office under the present state of affairs. The office of the Mayor  controls, or at least supposedly controls, the 36,000 officers of the  New York Police Department. For almost two centuries, this private army  has waged class war against working New Yorkers, primarily people of  color, with little democratic oversight. The NYPD has used its political  influence to control urban affairs for decades as mayors of various  political stripes have passed through Gracie Mansion. Governing the city  under its present political system would require the Mayor to engage,  negotiate, and compromise with a police department that has used its  deep embeddedness within our city’s so-called democracy to demand more  funding and resources as schools and libraries go without.

We  cannot attribute the power of the NYPD merely to the relative size of  its budget. Rather, we should treat the police as a political force  capable of using its institutional authority (especially around issues  of crime and “quality of life”) and its various advocacy organizations  (the police “union,” the Republican Party, local news media stoking  crime panic) to exert control over city politics.

This dynamic  cannot be explained by Eric Adams alone. While he was produced by the  NYPD’s patronage systems and has richly rewarded the police, the power  of the city police and their “unions” go beyond the rot of any one  mayor. To enact change within how the NYPD functions—and to even point  the city in the general direction of abolition—will require a mass  movement the scope of which has never truly been seen in the United  States, with the mandate from a majority of society to fundamentally  alter the relations of political power. To take executive power in the  absence of the structure for that movement, in my view, is a mistake.

Doing  so would make DSA responsible, at least in part, for the abuses of the  NYPD, and this will be reflected in our organizing work with communities  who have suffered under its tyranny.

Our inability to  corral the police in any meaningful way will affect Mamdani’s ability to  govern as well, which impacts DSA. Our organization will metaphorically  foot the bill for any misgovernance resulting from the difficulty of  leading as a socialist in the absence of either a legislative or popular  coalition to provide political support. Victory would thrust DSA into a governing coalition without a mandate to govern. The  organization would be thrown into chaos, our work would be disrupted as  we are forced to tail mayoral politics, and Zohran Mamdani would more  than likely go down as one of the “least effective” (to use bourgeois  political terms) mayors in city history as the forces of capital muster  against him. At best, he would be able to govern as a progressive while  critics punch left and accuse us of attempting to sabotage his  administration if our democratic processes put us into disagreement with  his actions.

This does not mean that a victory would not result in gains for New York’s working-class—it very well could. After  all, the Mayor has vast amounts of control over the budget of New York  City, and improvements can be made in many aspects of life here. But our  ability to do that will always be restrained by power brokers in the  city, which include police interests. Despite the fact that the cops  only comprise five percent of the municipal budget, “functional  governance” at the present juncture will always hinge upon appeasing  police interests. As such, it is imperative that Zohran Mamdani does NOT run to win.

As  members across NYC-DSA largely agree that chances of victory are far  from likely, I will not belabor this point at great length. But it needs  to be understood that once we have abandoned illusions about winning,  we can likewise abandon many of the unpleasant compromises that go into  an executive electoral campaign. This does not mean we can eschew  developing an actual platform for governance as we talk to voters and  other stakeholders. Outwardly, we will need to run a serious campaign  and present a vision of a socialist executive, even as we inwardly  express doubts about its present possibility.

3. We need to assert our strategic goals.

Even after abandoning the goal of electoral victory, there will be robust debate about what this campaign is actually for. Is  it about gathering data on which areas of the city might be receptive  to having a DSA candidate? Is it about gathering data about political  issues more generally? Is it about using the campaign as a vehicle to  put DSA messaging on the airwaves? Is it about growing our cadre of  electoral organizers as our political terrain becomes less favorable? Is  it about creating a political coalition that will indirectly unseat  Eric Adams? Is it something else? I’m not quite sure. All of these ideas  are important, and we need to sort them out as a separate question from our platform.

Either  way, we should make an effort to make the purpose of this campaign  understood among cadre members who are working to organize volunteers. Though  our goals are manifold and diverse, we need to campaign with a unity of  purpose as we enter uncharted political territory.  Without being able to clearly articulate our goals, we will not be able  to create the groundswell of personnel (and campaign contributions)  needed to make for a successful agitational operation.

NYC-DSA  will need to proactively respond to a new reality. Previously, when a  campaign’s primary goal is to win at all costs, political and strategic  discussions within the campaign space have often been pushed to the  wayside or held among small groups of stakeholders and cadre. This has  even extended to removing socialist messaging from campaign literature.  While I am skeptical of this methodology even in a typical campaign, it  will be wholly inimical to our operation here. We need to use our  democracy to build space to deliberate our goals, both within the formal  structure of the campaign and outside of it.

We cannot forget  that we are trying to build a socialist party that is capable of making  interventions at all levels of political, economic, and social life. An  agitational electoral campaign is a unique tool for doing so, and  left-wing parties have employed them since at least 1848. However,  unlike a third party that seeks to run a dead-end candidate every four  years while lighting money on fire to sue for ballot access, we will be  using the space of this campaign to build the scaffolding for future  organizing efforts. It is up to us to ensure that they are  democratically decided and targeted for maximum effectiveness.

4. We need to be bold in our platform.

We  have already discussed how winning a mayoral election in any major  American city requires the appeasement of the police, and capital itself  (which in present-day New York often means caving to the demands of the  real estate lobby by lowering taxes on developers and unraveling tenant  protections). Because victory is unlikely,  Assemblymember Mamdani does not need to risk alienating political and  economic elites as he builds his campaign message alongside DSA. An agitational campaign such as this one needs to be bold in the construction of a platform.

Despite  the low risks, it is still likely that the Assemblymember will draw  inspiration for his platform from a wide range of sources as he builds  his campaign. DSA needs to be proactive about articulating which planks  we want to see in the platform should we give him our endorsement. These  will be the issues that will shape our organizing activity in 2025 (and  likely well into the 2026 electoral cycle), so we should choose wisely  and do so in the open. It is my view that we should urge Assemblymember  Mamdani to campaign on four key issues, listed in order of those he is  more likely to agree to. They are: expanding tenant  protections, showing solidarity with the people of Palestine, fighting  for a democratic city, and reallocating funding and political power from  the NYPD.

a. Expanding tenant protections.

The  2024 electoral cycle demonstrated the power of tenant issues at the  state level. At the city level, the political players are different, but  no less relevant to the millions of New Yorkers living in fear of rent  hikes and displacement. In New York City, the Mayor almost dictatorially  controls the Rent Guidelines Board, the body that sets rent increases  (or theoretically, decreases) in the city’s ~1 million or so  rent-stabilized apartments. Under recent administrations, the board has  generally sided with landlords, pushing through rent increases despite  public opposition.

Assemblymember Mamdani has already shown  his support for protecting and expanding rent stabilization during his  tenure in Albany, and DSA should have no trouble in urging him to center  tenant protections in his platform. Specifically, he  should run on using his control over the RGB to demand a rent freeze for  the duration of his tenure in office, and then work to bring the board  under democratic (read: tenant) control before he leaves it.

b. Showing solidarity with the people of Palestine.

Socialists  must continue to resist Israel’s ongoing genocide in Palestine through  all means available to us. Assemblymember Mamdani has long stood in  solidarity with Palestinians, both in New York and around the world.  Many DSA members have suggested that his electoral base will be  disaffected Muslim voters in the outer boroughs who are frustrated with  U.S. apathy towards mass death abroad. Assemblymember Mamdani should use this campaign to build public support for the statewide Not On Our Dime Act (which strips tax-exempt status from charitable organizations materially supporting Israeli settlements) while  looking to pass a similar law at the local level. He should also offer  his public support to the BDS (Boycott, Divest, and Sanction) movement  while removing legal and civic barriers to its operation in New York  City. Finally, he should support a law protecting workers from  discrimination, harassment, and intimidation due to their activity or  beliefs in support of Palestinian liberation.

Ultimately,  the onus will be on the Assemblymember to show that city-level  electoral politics are an effective arena in which Palestinians and  their allies can continue the fight for liberation.

Thankfully,  an agitational campaign like this one will be able to engage with the  movement in a diverse array of ways without having to compromise  politically with institutional Zionism, especially if the university  encampments resume at the beginning of the school year.

c. Fighting for a democratic city.

New  York City is run by an elected monarch. The doctrine of “Mayoral  Control” gives the Mayor broad authority over rent stabilization, the  school system, and a wide range of other city agencies, all with minimal  oversight from City Council. Assemblymember Mamdani should use this  campaign as a space to highlight the profoundly undemocratic nature of  our city. In addition to the reforms to the Rent Guidelines Board  mentioned above, Mamdani should run on a platform of  bringing other city agencies under the authority of City Council, the  most democratic body in the city. Additionally, Mamdani should push for  other democratic reforms, including the re-implementation of  proportional representation for City Council.

The  necessity of these reforms will be debated at length at NYC-DSA’s  convention in October. It is important to note that this convention will  be key for deciding which issues are important for our local political  program. Should we pass a “fight for a democratic city” resolution,  making sure of Assemblymember Mamdani’s adherence to the resolution and  other aspects of our political program will be key to ensuring this  campaign is capable of bringing people into DSA.

d. Reallocating funding and political power from the NYPD.

Over  four years on from the murder of George Floyd at the hands of the  Minneapolis Police Department, issues surrounding abolition appear to  have receded from the political work of the Left. Given the outsized  control police forces have over city politics, I regard this as a  mistake. Running a high-profile mayoral campaign without the need to  appease police and their unions offers us an incredible space for  political intervention, but only if we properly seize the moment.

It  is important that socialists do not conflate the political power of the  cops with the raw amount of money they are given. A brief search  reveals that the NYPD commands about five percent of the city’s annual  budget. While it is true that other (and more useful) agencies draw a  greater proportion of the city’s cash flow, we should not assume that  actually reallocating funds from the police budget will not have both  positive economic and political consequences. As such, DSA should use  this campaign to challenge the authority of the police in New York. Assemblymember  Mamdani should use his campaign to take an agitational and oppositional  stance to the power of the police in New York. While I  am hopeful that Mamdani will take a public stance in favor of  reallocating funds from the NYPD budget, I am presently skeptical that  he will do so.

For many Black and brown New Yorkers,  negative (and quite frequently, deadly) interactions with New York’s  uncontrollable private army are the primary engagements they have with  the State as adults. Money being used to harass immigrant workers,  further dispossess unhoused people, and brutalize fare evaders can  instead be used to fund necessary city agencies struggling under  austerity conditions. But threatening to reallocate money away from the  police budget will also show that Assemblymember Mamdani is deeply  concerned with the political state of affairs in New York and wants to  check the power of this rogue agency. His decisions in this race may  compel other politicians to do the same.

If Assemblymember  Mamdani does not commit to this, there are other key things his campaign  will need to do in order to demonstrate to voters that the  out-of-control NYPD is a top concern. He needs to publicly oppose the $225 million Cop City project,  currently scheduled to open in Queens in 2026. Additionally, he must  demand investigations into police conduct at protests over the previous  four years, and work to disband the NYPD’s Strategic Response Group  (SRG), which has been responsible for the brutalization of protestors  and activists at pro-Palestine marches this year. He needs to commit to  closing Rikers Island, which previous administrations have promised but  failed to do. Finally, he should  use campaign media platforms to highlight the current issues with the  status quo, from Eric Adams’ obsession with racist surveillance  boondoggles to bloated spending on police settlements and overtime pay. In  doing so, Mamdani will provide a space for New Yorkers of all races and  backgrounds to question the role of police in a moment when challenges  to their authority have reached a low point.

Between  the time that you are reading this and the primary election in 2025,  many Black people in New York will be killed by the police. Some of  these incidents will go unheralded by the media, while others will be a  cause for mass mobilization. When this happens, people will look to  Assemblymember Mamdani’s campaign for an affirmation that DSA is  fighting for a better world. DSA needs to be able to show working-class  people of color in New York that someone is going to fight back against  the political and economic power of the NYPD without reservation or fear  of intimidation. Both DSA and the candidate need to be  ready and not be blindsided into statements that condemn police  brutality but not the existence of the police themselves.

e. Other issues

These  aren’t the only issues that make our city run. As the campaign  develops, there will be plenty of things to talk about and plenty of  things we need to fight for as we lay the groundwork for our socialist  future. But these four issues are the ones that will set Asemblymember Mamdani apart from the other candidates in this race. These  are the issues that will push the DSA difference, and these are the  issues that will help build our base as we go out into our city and  rally support for our candidate. There would be no point in running in  this election if our candidate was not willing to establish himself as  the furthest-left option in a crowded field. “Sewer  socialism” issues may be our bread and butter, but they will only get us  so far on the doors and in the hearts and minds of working people.

We need to use convention to ensure that these major issues become a part of Assemblymember Mamdani’s platform. If his vision for the city is insufficiently bold, we should withhold our endorsement for  this election cycle and redirect our energy toward other necessary  political projects. There would be no point in gathering working-class  New Yorkers’ hard-earned money for the sake of running a campaign that  will not try its utmost to shake the foundations of power in our city.

5. We should endorse a “Don’t Rank Adams” canvassing plan.

Now  that we have discussed broader campaign strategy and platform, we will  now turn to some of the finer points of running a mayoral race in New  York City. Municipal elections in New York, primaries included, use  ranked-choice voting. This means, with some rare exceptions, every voter  who votes for our candidate will also be voting for others in this  race. There are pieces of this issue that require our consideration: the  spoiler effect and coalitions with other candidates.

For  many Leftists, a primary goal in the 2025 mayoral election is defeating  Eric Adams. Fortunately, the ranked-choice system significantly reduces  the effect of an agitational campaign creating a spoiler effect—that is,  taking votes away from other non-Eric-Adams candidates in the race.  Even so, some DSA members have expressed concern that genuine electoral  activity in this campaign will contribute to the possibility of Adams  being re-elected. I find this unlikely, and DSA members should not be  concerned about a spoiler effect. The most  likely outcome, in my view, is that an army of DSA canvassers putting  our thumbs on the scale will have the effect of raising the  consciousness of an electorate whose turnout has plummeted in the  previous three years, even if we do not recommend a specific candidate  to rank second or third. We should just be honest about our politics: We hate Eric Adams and want people to rank anyone else.

This  kills two birds with one stone: It allows DSA to focus fully on running  Assemblymember Mamdani’s campaign without having to make what is  essentially a full-throated endorsement of whatever non-socialist  candidates we recommend ranking second or third. DSA members will be  active in campaigning against Eric Adams while not being forced to tail  whichever faux progressive earns the favor of local center-left power  brokers.

The potential wrinkle here is the possibility of  coalitions forming (or Zohran’s campaign apparatus forming them) over  the course of the race. DSA should recommend against  this, as coalitions will not increase our chance of victory, and will  prevent us from using our political capital to attempt to hold other  candidates accountable for bad positions. As we have  learned in this month’s discourse surrounding the Presidential election,  attempting to demand better from a liberal lesser evil is much more  difficult when you are already promising to vote for them anyway!

6. We need to ensure political independence and programmatic control.

A  mayoral campaign is a lot of work. It also has a lot of capacity to  generate positive press and visibility for DSA and our vision. This  campaign can put DSA in TV ads, bring our message to constituencies we  haven’t yet reached, and clarify our political program. It  will also be a massive undertaking that will bring us into coalitions  with a wide range of groups that will, like us, attempt to exert  pressure on the campaign to further their political goals. DSA must  ensure that we will not be reduced to the status of junior partner to  any other individual or group.

In order to maintain our political independence, DSA  should require Assemblymember Mamdani and his campaign staff to  facilitate regular general meetings with rank-and-file members. These  spaces will allow us to discuss the goings-on in the campaign, provide a  space for members to deliver feedback, and build hype for our electoral  work as we enter uncharted territory. These spaces will allow Mamdani  to get more buy-in from the rank and file, especially those who are  skeptical of running an agitational campaign. Furthermore, conversations  like these can serve as a blueprint for future DSA electoral campaigns,  especially as we consider how we are growing our body of campaign  volunteers and other cadres in the future.

7. We should be wary of drawing organizing capacity away from our other duties as socialists.

Less  than two months (yes! It was only two months ago!) after the end of the  2024 primary election cycle, NYC-DSA is now considering another major  electoral venture. While it is true that the Mamdani candidacy offers a  wide range of incredible opportunities for our organization, it is  important that we take a step back and consider this election in the  broader context of our political work. In DSA, there is a tendency to believe that organizing capacity is not a finite resource. Priority  campaigns, electoral work, and membership work are almost unilaterally  framed as purely additive to DSA’s resources—often with little evidence  or analysis.

In a sense, this is true. Electoral, IWCO,  labor, and all the other aspects of life within DSA draw in organizers  who might not participate in our movement without individual areas in  which to participate. Having a massive, citywide electoral operation is a  thrilling way to grow our base of organizers on this particular  front—one of the many reasons why I support running Assemblymember  Mamdani for Mayor of New York. But we need to consider how this will  reorient our political work in some key areas.

Right now, DSA is  trying to establish a firm institutional foothold in Bedford-Stuyvesant,  where we recently lost a State Assembly race by around five points. By  opening an office and focusing on local outreach, we are working to  develop the infrastructure to run again in 2026, this time with more  support from various stakeholders. This is important work, in no small  part because it (ideally) will bring a lot of electoral-oriented  members, such as myself, into the other forms of organizing that  building socialism requires.

Running an agitational campaign like  this in 2025 could hinder this work, especially if Assemblymember  Mamdani’s message does not resonate in the areas in which we canvass. We  need to think about what it means to take money and time from  working-class New Yorkers to invest in a campaign that will have limited  immediate results, especially in a moment in which we are trying to  develop our political work in new directions.

NYC-DSA is  particularly well-developed in terms of its electoral organizing  capacity. We have a robust SIO bureaucracy, and many of our members have  deep and extensive electoral experience. I worry that a desire to  endorse Assemblymember Mamdani is partially borne out of the idea that  this race is a “path of least resistance” for members to continue to  have a project to plug into without doing the deep organizing work that  building socialism requires. This is, in my view, a genuine risk. But I  think it is one we can bear.

First, I think bringing a bold  platform to the table has the power to mobilize members who otherwise  would not be involved in DSA work at all into a new project that can  have a profound impact on our local politics. Our electoral movement is  at an inflection point right now, and building a campaign space where  questions about the future are debated freely will invigorate the work  we do and the movement-builders who do it. It is an  opportunity to test out new tactics and skills that can grow DSA as we  continue to orient ourselves to a shifting, post-2020 political reality.  It will give us a chance to revise our electoral strategy document,  which is almost seven years old, and provide us with new direction as  we take on the Democratic establishment in Albany (or perhaps even  Washington) in 2026.

Secondly, I think this campaign  represents an opportunity for DSA to better clarify our political  program as we approach city-level politics in 2025. Right now, I think  we are struggling to find a unity of purpose as we search for the  “correct” interventions. The types of mandates provided by our  convention and the power of running a truly citywide campaign will give  NYC-DSA a chance to clarify what its program for the second half of the  decade will be. By working with Assemblymember Mamdani to center issues  such as Palestine, police power, and undemocratic city governance, we  will be able to find new ways to make targeted interventions on all of  these issues long after the campaign is over. Again, this is only possible if Mamdani and DSA are able to lead with a bold platform for New York City.

Ultimately, I do not know what the consequences of this campaign on the rest of our organizing work will be. I do think  members who are not chiefly involved in electoral work, or who have  bristled at the dominance of electoral work in our chapter, have a right  to be concerned. The outsized role of campaigns, electoral and  otherwise, have been a source of spirited debate, which I recommend members study  as we consider this race. Members must think long and hard about why we  want to run this campaign. We need to be sure that Assemblymember  Mamdani is ready to take bold steps, both in platform and strategy, that  will guarantee that DSA continues to lead on the most important issues  affecting the working people of America and the world. To  run this campaign is a tremendous leap of faith that will require input  from all corners of DSA about how it will affect our organizing work.

8. Conclusion.

In  an era of deep frustration with local mayoral politics, there is  perhaps no better time for DSA to make a new foray into the executive  arena. This is not, however, a free play. The clock is still running,  the ball is live, and the stakes are higher than ever. DSA needs to make  clear and concise demands of Assemblymember Mamdani if we are to devote  months of blood, sweat, and tears to running his race. He has much to  gain from this campaign, and little to lose: it will raise his public  profile, demonstrate his acumen as a politician on a bigger stage than  ever before, and prepare him organizationally for future, more winnable  races.

The same cannot be said for DSA. Running this campaign is a  choice that we will make, possibly at the expense of our other  organizing work. It will test the strength of our democracy as we debate  the merits of this endorsement. The issues addressed here will take  center stage at our convention, which is only two months away. While I  am hopeful Assemblymember Mamdani will rise to the challenge of building  a radical vision for our city’s future, preserving and transmitting our  message will require long hours and hard work from everyone involved.  This conversation is just beginning. I hope everyone will join me in  giving these important debates the light and air they deserve.

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