Excellent analysis!

"The instinct to treat Zohran Mamdani as a local New York City phenomenon
ignores the reality of the American voters behind his historic win. Most of
the people who voted for Mr. Mamdani for mayor are at the heart of the
Democratic Party coalition, not at its fringes.

Black voters in particular swung hard toward Mr. Mamdani in the general
election. In precincts where Black residents make up a majority of the
population, Mr. Mamdani outperformed Mr. Cuomo by 26 points. In
Hispanic-majority areas of the city, Mr. Mamdani beat Mr. Cuomo by 20
points. Mr. Mamdani also won every single precinct in the Brooklyn
neighborhood of Canarsie, which is majority Black and working and middle
class.

In last year’s presidential election, some voters in these areas shifted
toward President Trump, igniting a debate about whether the Democratic
Party had veered too far to the left. The willingness of many of the same
Americans to vote for Mr. Mamdani, a democratic socialist, on Tuesday
raises the possibility that many Black and Hispanic voters — and plenty of
other Americans — simply no longer see their interests and aspirations in
what much of the political establishment and its gatekeepers are offering.

Mr. Mamdani’s political talent helped enormously. Some of his promises may
be difficult to achieve and to pay for, especially with a hostile president
vowing to thwart them at every chance. And in a large, polarized and
complex country, this kind of campaign might look and sound different in
different places.

But dismissing the political earthquake in New York City as an exception to
America’s political rules would be a mistake. Mr. Mamdani won by bringing
together working-, middle- and upper-middle-class people across racial and
ethnic backgrounds. Years ago, Barack Obama united a similar group of
Americans. Democrats who follow Mr. Mamdani’s example and lead with the
politics of basic human dignity have a chance to win over strapped
Americans in communities that bear no resemblance to Manhattan or Queens.
In the first elections of the second Trump administration, voters were
hungry for a dramatically different vision of what America should be.

In New York, these Americans found a vehicle in Mr. Mamdani, 34, whose
candidacy came to represent many of the people and ideas under attack in
Mr. Trump’s America. Mr. Mamdani will be the city’s first Muslim mayor, the
first immigrant to lead New York in decades and the youngest in more than a
century. But the real power of the campaign came from voters who rallied
around a set of simple beliefs: that every person deserves a home; that
child care should be free; that elections shouldn’t be bought; that racial
diversity is a strength worth defending; that working people matter; that
the time for generational change in politics has come. What began as a race
about affordability became a campaign for human dignity.

Instead of apology, Mr. Mamdani championed these values and beliefs, deeply
held by millions of Americans, with confidence and often with joy. It was a
bracing contrast not only with the politics of destruction and cruelty of
Mr. Trump, but also with the hemming and hawing of a Democratic leadership
in Washington that seemed paralyzed by inaction. This is why videos on
Instagram show Democrats in cities far away celebrating Mr. Mamdani’s win.

I saw the phenomenon firsthand when Mr. Mamdani canvassed taxi drivers
outside LaGuardia Airport in Queens in the final days of the race. Drivers
left their yellow cabs idling in the street and raced to shake his hand. A
taxi dispatcher helping tourists abandoned his post, hugging Mr. Mamdani,
then called his wife so the candidate could introduce himself to her over
FaceTime.

At a campaign stop outside a public hospital in Queens, health care workers
on the night shift huddled around Mr. Mamdani, who patiently answered their
questions. Dr. Heather Irobunda, an OB-GYN, said the candidate shocked her
with his knowledge of the racial disparity for Black women in the city, who
are nine times more likely to die from pregnancy and childbirth-related
causes than white women are. Steps away, Rodney Estiverne, a 25-year-old
tech at Elmhurst Hospital, said Mr. Mamdani had inspired him to vote for
the first time. “He speaks for me,” Mr. Estiverne told me. Mr. Estiverne,
who was born in Haiti, said he believed Mr. Mamdani had faced attacks by
Mr. Trump and others for standing firmly with Black Americans and other
marginalized people. “They’re after him. That means he’s doing something
right.”

Central to Mr. Mamdani’s success was championing housing and child care,
among the most intimate experiences for Americans and people everywhere.
Mr. Mamdani’s declaration that they are basic needs that should not be out
of reach for working people or anyone was a powerful and tangible contrast
to milquetoast calls for “affordability” among so many Democrats and
Republicans.

Mr. Mamdani’s campaign promises were in tune with voters’ practical,
everyday needs. Importantly, they are also concrete enough for voters to be
able to hold Mr. Mamdani accountable to deliver them.

Using government to help working people and the middle class is something
Democrats (and some Republicans) have championed since Franklin D.
Roosevelt was president. Robert Dole, the longtime Republican senator, was
a champion of anti-hunger programs like the Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program. Ernest Hollings, a conservative Democrat who served as
governor of South Carolina in the early 1960s, wrote a kind of manifesto in
1970 calling for federal action to end hunger.

New Yorkers voted for this vision despite threats by Mr. Trump to send
National Guardsmen to “clean up the crime” in the city if Mr. Mamdani won.
Voters chose this vision over the meddling of billionaires. They embraced
it despite the fear tactics of Mr. Cuomo, who resorted to Islamophobia in a
sad, 11th-hour bid to save his visionless campaign. “He was a citizen of
Uganda,” Mr. Cuomo said of Mr. Mamdani shortly before the election. “He
just doesn’t understand the New York culture, the New York values.” In the
end, the threats from Mr. Trump and attacks by Mr. Cuomo only made both men
look small and weak, and heightened Mr. Mamdani’s appeal.

The owner of my local bodega, an immigrant from Yemen, told me recently
that he “didn’t do politics.” When I stopped into the store on Tuesday, he
was wearing an “I voted” sticker and a grin. “I changed my mind,” he told
me. Then he asked if Mr. Mamdani had a chance.

Around one in three people who live in the country’s largest city are
immigrants. Others are the descendants of Americans who arrived from the
South, seeking refuge from Jim Crow, or the grandchildren of people who
fled persecution in Europe, or people rejected elsewhere who found the city
a place to call home. What could possibly be more American?

This time in New York City, the race-baiting didn’t work. The fear tactics
failed. The hope of those who believe in better ideas lives on."

*https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/07/opinion/zohran-mamdani-coalition-voters.html
<https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/07/opinion/zohran-mamdani-coalition-voters.html>*


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