They tried. Oh, did the media try.
The declared victory for Zohran Mamdani, a democratic socialist, in the Democratic primary for New York City mayor highlights many things. The power of his campaign, the popularity of his ideas, the importance of grassroots get-out-the-vote mobilization, and the tepid reception for Andrew Cuomo, who resigned as the stateās governor due to a myriad of sexual harassment allegations, all contributed to the surprisingāto corporate media, anywayāresult.
Earlier this month, FAIRās Raina Lipsitz (6/13/25) responded to a New York profile (5/20/25) that attempted to undermine Mamdaniās record. In the home stretch of the primary race in the latter half of June, the pressure against Mamdani increased, featuring thoughtless dismissals of his ideas, selective memory and factual inaccuracy in the service of lowering Mamdaniās electoral chances.
That Mamdani emerged from this mess victorious exposes the out-of-touchness of establishment media outlets that twisted like pretzels to scare voters away from the 33-year-old phenomenon. (Readers should know that I ranked Mamdani first in the primary and contributed to his campaign. Iām not unbiased when it comes to who I want to see as mayor, but the analysis of the media that follows, I believe, will withstand scrutiny.)
āUniquely unsuited to the cityās challengesā

The New York Times editorial board (6/16/25) argued that āMr. Mamdani is running on an agenda uniquely unsuited to the cityās challenges.ā They explained:
He is a democratic socialist who too often ignores the unavoidable trade-offs of governance. He favors rent freezes that could restrict housing supply and make it harder for younger New Yorkers and new arrivals to afford housing. He wants the government to operate grocery stores, as if customer service and retail sales were strengths of the public sector. He minimizes the importance of policing.
At least one poll shows that a rent freeze is overwhelmingly popular (City and State, 4/15/25), and theyāre far from unheard of: Rent freezes were a key policy victory under Mayor Bill de Blasio (City Limits, 6/28/16; Politico, 3/15/17; WNBC, 6/17/20), a mayor whose candidacy the board (9/5/17, 11/2/17) had enthusiastically supported.
The landlord class, which has organized against Mamdaniās campaign (Jacobin, 6/23/25), no doubt agrees with the Timesā argument that if we donāt let rents go up, housing will be unaffordableāthough 12 years of steady increases on regulated rentals under the tenure of Mayor Michael Bloomberg didnāt seem to make it easier to get an apartment here.
And is the grocery store pitch such a crazy idea? The rising cost of food, despite the Timesā framing, is a very real problem for New Yorkers (Daily News, 5/1/25). The city operates public housing, homeless shelters and hospitalsāand a public education system that delivers daily meals to more than 900,000 students.
The Times (12/12/24) positively explored the idea of city-owned stores in its news pages, citing how cities like Chicago and Atlanta were exploring similar missions. But when Mamdani proposes it, the editors present it as a sign of kookiness.
āThe disorder of the past decadeā

The paper continued:
Most worrisome, he shows little concern about the disorder of the past decade, even though its costs have fallen hardest on the cityās working-class and poor residents. Mr. Mamdani, who has called Mr. de Blasio the best New York mayor of his lifetime, offers an agenda that remains alluring among elite progressives but has proved damaging to city life.
What disorder is the board talking about? We can guess they mean crime, but the homicide rate in New York City for the past ten years is the lowest itās been since the 1950s. Itās true that Mamdani believes in police reform. The Times editorial board used to champion this cause (7/13/20, 9/13/20), even endorsing a reform-minded democratic socialist defense attorney for Queens district attorney five years ago (6/18/25).
Alex Vitale, professor of sociology at Brooklyn College and coordinator of the Policing and Social Justice Project, suggested thatāāgiven that crime rates are at or near historic lowāāthe Timesā ādisorderā is likely āthe presence of homeless mentally ill people on the subway and other public spaces.ā But, he argues:
Ironically, Mamdani and to some extent [Comptroller Brad] Lander are the candidates who have actual plans to address the kind of disorder that pearl-clutching Times readers are worried about. They understand that the solution to this decades old problem is not endlessly using police to cycle people through jails and hospitals, but instead to develop actual supportive housing and other essential social services.
The Times has capitulated to neoliberal austerity, which accepts that cities have no choice but to cut services and turn the real estate market over to billionaires, and then use policing to manage the chaos that ensues.
As for the idea that Mamdani is somehow just a candidate for āelite progressivesā but not the āworking-class and poor,ā the Timesā own interactive map shows a more nuanced story. While itās true that Cuomo did well in, for example, the impoverished South Bronx, in Manhattan he won the monied districts like Tribeca and the Upper East and West Side, while Mamdani carried lower-income neighborhoods like Harlem, Washington Heights and the Lower East Side. Mamdaniās funding came mostly from small contributionsāhe had seven times as many donors as Cuomo (New York Times, 5/6/25)āwhereas Cuomo was heavily funded by billionaires and the real-estate industry (City, 6/26/25).
āA quality of magical realismā

The Atlantic published two anti-Mamdani articles, with two of them warning that Mamdani is too inexperienced to earn the peopleās vote and that his ambitious proposals canāt be achieved. (A third went after his support for the phrase āglobalize the intifadaā6/24/25.) Former Times writer Michael Powell (6/18/25), like the Times editorial board, scoffed at the grocery store idea, saying, āHow would he pay for his most ambitious plans? Tax the rich and major corporations.ā His colleague Annie Lowery (6/12/25) joined in:
He is a leftist in the Bernie Sanders mold, with a raft of great-sounding policies. Free buses! Free childcare! Cheap groceries! Frozen rents! But a lot of these are impractical at best. Free buses would deprive the MTA of needed revenue. Free childcare would require a mammoth tax hike that Albany would need to approve, which it has shown no interest in doing.
Similarly, Powell pompously asserts that āMamdaniās candidacy also has a quality of magic realism, a campaign exuberantly disconnected from actual government budgets and organizational charts.ā
Progressives are often annoyed by the retort āhow are you going to pay for it?ā because this question only gets deployed against the expansion of healthcare, education and social services, and not jails, policing and subsidies for business. But it also exposes the superficialities of reportersā knowledge of city affairs.
Many years ago, when I was a reporter at the Chief-Leader, a fellow reporter asked then-Mayor Michael Bloomberg why his budget proposal rested so much on the outcome of the cityās negotiations with its unions. His answer was simple: Thatās what government isāitās services for people, staffed by people. Any administration, in short, has to grapple with how to pay for its priorities, whether those priorities are left-wing or right-wing, and that often involves cutting bloat, consolidating functions and increasing revenue.
Mamdaniās spending plan offends the Atlantic, not because it costs moneyāthe magazine (8/8/21, 3/8/23) has argued against efforts to cut police budgetsābut because Atlantic writers and editors donāt like his budget priorities, which validate the New Deal concept of government services for the 99 Percent.
āUndeniably youngā

New Yorker coverage has been fairer to Mamdani than the Atlantic was, but Eric Lachās interview (6/23/25) with the candidate honed in on a swipe favored by the assembly memberās critics, including the New York article FAIR already responded to: his youth. Lach said:
Mamdani has been stymied for several reasons that were apparent before primary day. For one thing, he is undeniably young, and he never found a way to reassure voters that he was truly up for the job of managing the cityās agencies, its $100 billion budget, and its 300,000-person workforce.
Democratic socialist upstarts have often been tagged as unruly whippersnappers who need to stop bothering party elders with competitive primaries. But in a moment where one of the biggest problems of the Democratic Party is its gerontocracy (Newsweek, 12/19/24; The Nation, 5/23/25; Atlantic, 6/19/25), perhaps Mamdaniās ineligibility for AARP membership is a strength.
Lach continued:
The new program of public spending he has proposed is predicated on increasing taxes on the wealthy and corporations, taxes that would have to be approved in Albany. If the big shots in Albanyānever a good bet for anything, politicallyārefuse him, what would become of Mayor Mamdani? No one can say.
Warning that Mamdaniās agenda might cause friction with Albany suggests it might be Lach, not Mamdani, who is too new to the subject matter. The tension between state and city government is age-old, and consistent with every administration.
Once again, Mamdani gets extra scrutiny because of the substance of his agenda. Would Cuomo deal better with the state government he was forced to resign from, with a governor who is the deputy who replaced him? Thatās a rhetorical question.
Right-wing rage

It is not surprising that Rupert Murdochās editorial boards savaged Mamdani. The New York Post (6/23/25) called him a ācheap influencerā and āa babyfaced socialist antisemite whoās never accomplished anything except this so-buzzy campaign.ā Likewise, Murdochās pro-business Wall Street Journal (6/22/25) claimed that āManhattanites are warning that Mr. Mamdaniās ruinous utopianism could prompt a flight of talent and capital.ā
But the onslaught from the more centrist outlets is telling: Like the business establishment, they fear progressive economic policies when it comes to housing, education, transit and public safety, despite all overtures to the contrary.
The good news is that this press assault failed. Perhaps that is because the political advice of the New York Times and Atlantic only still sways opinion in a few enclaves of the upper crust. The rage from the Post, Daily News and Journal probably only reached conservative audiences, who wouldnāt have ranked Mamdani anyway. And perhaps it also is testament to the degree that a grassroots messaging campaign can overcome an onslaught from the corporate media.
The bad news is that this was only the primary: incumbent Mayor Eric Adams will be running in the general election as an independent, and Andrew Cuomo has left that option open. Monied interests will likely double down, hoping to spread enough fear of a Mamdani-run New York City to help sink his meteoric riseāand elite media are rarely far behind them.
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