.-') _ .-') _ | |
( OO ) ) ( OO ) ) | |
.-----. ,--./ ,--,' ,--./ ,--,' | |
' .--./ | \ | |\ | \ | |\ | |
| |('-. | \| | )| \| | ) | |
/_) |OO )| . |/ | . |/ | |
|| |`-'| | |\ | | |\ | | |
(_' '--'\ | | \ | | | \ | | |
`-----' `--' `--' `--' `--' | |
lite.cnn.com - on gopher - inofficial | |
ARTICLE VIEW: | |
Obama’s advice, socialists’ demands, meetings with skeptics: Inside | |
Mamdani’s prep to run New York City | |
By Edward-Isaac Dovere, CNN | |
Updated: | |
5:00 AM EDT, Thu September 18, 2025 | |
Source: CNN | |
Barack Obama pivoted from praise to a warning. | |
You’ve got the inspiration part down, the former president told , but | |
there’s a lot riding on governing. According to three people familiar | |
with the call, Obama reminded the Democratic nominee for New York City | |
mayor how many would be watching to see if a democratic socialist could | |
pull off running the nation’s largest city, and how many critics | |
would be waiting to pounce if it went wrong. | |
Values are important, Obama told him, but prioritizing good hires more | |
so. | |
Obama isn’t the only one concerned. Even friends and advisers working | |
with Mamdani’s campaign and like-minded allies on the city council, | |
among the three dozen New York leaders who spoke with CNN, say | |
privately that they fear Mamdani is behind in preparing for what’s | |
ahead if he wins November’s election, as reliable public polls show | |
he is in strong position to do. | |
The call with Obama, one person who spoken with Mamdani about it told | |
CNN, was helpful in giving the candidate a clearer sense of the | |
difference between running and governing. | |
There’s a moment at the end of a where Vermont Sen. tells him he has | |
“an enormous responsibility to show the world that our value system | |
can govern well and efficiently.” | |
Mamdani has reached beyond his circle of advisers and Democratic | |
Socialist of America allies as he’s thinking about how he will make | |
his big campaign promises happen and prove that a 33-year-old state | |
assemblyman can run a city with 8 million people, a $115 billion annual | |
budget and the nation’s largest metropolitan police force. | |
“Being mayor is just as much about your ability to inspire as it is | |
to govern a big, sprawling, 300,000-person bureaucracy and all that | |
that requires,” said Lincoln Restler, a city councilman from Brooklyn | |
who worked on the transition team for Bill de Blasio, the mayor Mamdani | |
has called the best in his lifetime, after his first election in 2013. | |
Allies and advisers say Mamdani has continued to demonstrate how | |
stunned he himself was by a primary win. While he, his campaign manager | |
and counsel all took extended vacations over the summer to celebrate | |
their weddings, they have been rushing since mid-August to prepare even | |
as they also work to win in November. | |
For Mamdani, who’s never worked in city government, the job of being | |
mayor of New York poses deeper challenges. Add President Donald | |
Trump’s , and those who feel he should be doing more to get ready are | |
growing nervous, even as Mamdani can’t legally start a formal | |
transition process unless he wins in November. | |
“There’s a general feeling of excitement for what he’s done for | |
the electorate. He’s talking about real things that people care | |
about. There’s a buzz about standing up to Trump,” said a | |
Democratic city council member who spoke on condition of anonymity to | |
discuss internal dynamics. “On the flip side, I think people have a | |
healthy skepticism of the governing piece. Is he going to put good | |
people around him, and can we rely on that happening? Is it going to be | |
a bunch of DSA kids who don’t know what they’re doing running the | |
city? I don’t think that’s what’ll happen, but we need to know | |
more.” | |
Mamdani’s relationship with Brad Lander, the essentially turned his | |
own mayoral campaign into another leg of Mamdani support, is still | |
recovering from a rocky patch over the summer, according to four people | |
familiar with the matter. | |
Lander told a variety of leaders that he was interested in a top | |
position like first deputy mayor in the administration, in what a range | |
of anxious New York leaders saw as an implicit promise that an | |
experienced hand would help professionalize Mamdani’s City Hall. That | |
did not go over well when word got back to Mamdani’s orbit. | |
After nearly a month when they did not speak, by Labor Day, Lander was | |
telling people maybe he would not be joining the administration after | |
all. | |
The two have talked through this recently, and while no job offer was | |
made, Lander has renewed his help for Mamdani in the campaign. | |
Morris Katz, a 26-year-old who has become a close Mamdani political | |
adviser, said the doubts are coming from the same place as the belief | |
that Andrew Cuomo could not be beaten in a Democratic primary . | |
“Our victory was the direct repudiation of a consultant and political | |
class that have failed this city for decades. It was a culture of | |
excellence that led a campaign dismissed by every pundit to a historic | |
victory and it will be that same culture of excellence that delivers | |
the change this city deserves,” Katz told CNN. | |
For those questioning them on youth and inexperience, Katz said, “the | |
fundamental crisis in our city isn’t just, there isn’t enough that | |
the government is doing, but that the government is doing a bad job. | |
Not everyone who’s been in the halls of power for 20 years is | |
entitled to stay there.” | |
A charm offensive | |
Sitting with the business leaders on the steering committee of the | |
Association for a Better New York in August, Mamdani made a previously | |
unreported pledge: “I don’t think my emergency management | |
commissioner has to agree with me about Israel and Palestine,” he | |
said. | |
That prompted audible relief in the room, according to two people | |
present, not just because of those upset by , but because they felt it | |
demonstrated that he would not be an ideologue. | |
Gone are the days of the primary when Mamdani was a constant presence | |
on the streets. He spends most days in individual and group meetings, | |
in person and on Zoom, that are partly study sessions and partly | |
efforts to reassure antagonists and skeptics, whether that’s the | |
group of Jewish leaders who believed he would cancel police protection | |
for the or the developers who started out by suggesting that he was | |
going to cancel all rent everywhere in the city. (Mamdani has proposed | |
freezing increases on rent-stabilized apartments.) | |
Much of this is working. Several people far from the DSA base tell CNN | |
that they have been struck by Mamdani’s personal charm, attentiveness | |
and sense of pragmatism. Some have found overlapping interests, like | |
the transit union officials who hadn’t prioritized the Mamdani | |
promised but did share with him data that shows drivers are attacked | |
less often when riders aren’t asked to pay. | |
Mamdani met last week with former Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who spent | |
millions backing Cuomo in the Democratic primary. Sitting together for | |
an hour at the Bloomberg LP offices shortly after this year’s 9/11 | |
commemoration, they talked about everything from organizing deputy | |
mayors and agency heads to the open bullpen office plan Bloomberg | |
brought to City Hall and talk that Trump might try to seize control of | |
the Twin Towers memorial ahead of next year’s 25th anniversary. | |
Bradley Tusk, a former Bloomberg aide and campaign manager, told CNN he | |
calls Mamdani a “technocratic socialist,” a term which some of the | |
candidate’s advisers say they like. | |
“He’s engaging and he has big, transformative ideas that I think | |
need a lot of work to make them actionable, but you can’t debate | |
affordability or how to help on food insecurity or how to help afford | |
rent, or mobility in New York City,” said Robert Wolf, a former | |
president of UBS Investment Bank and CEO of 32 Advisors who had a long | |
Zoom with Mamdani. “If elected, the business community can either | |
help him succeed or root for his failure — and in my view, a vibrant | |
New York City is the right answer.” | |
Richard Buery, the chair of this year’s Charter Revision Commission | |
convened by the current mayor and CEO of the nonprofit group Robin Hood | |
that works with many business leaders, agreed. | |
“At a moment where there’s so much division, probably the most | |
important job of a mayor is to be able to listen carefully, and then | |
when you make decisions, have respect with those you wind up | |
disagreeing with,” Buery told CNN. “It’s critical for any mayor, | |
but especially now.” | |
Bringing in new advisers | |
De Blasio and top aides to Sanders are in Mamdani’s ear as informal | |
advisers. But quietly, Patrick Gaspard – a behind-the-scenes | |
powerbroker in New York before and after his turn as political director | |
in the Obama White House – has been accompanying Mamdani to meetings. | |
“His arrival is a disruption of a long line of a particular kind of | |
access that has to be recognized in the comments, the anxiety, the | |
critiques that could surface in the process around his transition,” | |
Gaspard said of Mamdani. | |
Mamdani has also talked with Dan Garodnick, a former city councilman | |
from Manhattan’s East Side who’s currently the chair of the City | |
Planning Commission for Eric Adams, now being eyed for a top spot in an | |
administration. And he’s been leaning on Maria Torres-Springer, the | |
former first deputy mayor under Adams who quit earlier this year, as | |
well as de Blasio’s two picks for that role, Tony Shorris and Dean | |
Fuleihan, and former top Bloomberg aides Janette Sadik-Khan and Dan | |
Doctoroff. | |
New York Attorney General Tish James has been trying to guide | |
operations. | |
“There are a number of individuals who’ll be in his administration | |
who are seasoned employees who know government,” James told CNN. | |
But some calls and emails offering to help or passing along experienced | |
résumés have gone unanswered, according to five different people who | |
sent them. Several have been explicitly turned away, left with the | |
sense that Mamdani’s young and similarly inexperienced inner circle | |
is suspicious of outsiders or uninterested in those who didn’t back | |
his campaign. | |
Half a dozen people who’ve met with Mamdani and top advisers tell CNN | |
they were dismayed by the responses they received when pressing on how | |
quickly after being elected he’d have to turn around the package of | |
requests for the state legislature they hope will yield as much as $10 | |
billion in new revenue, and how soon after being inaugurated he’d | |
have to finish a preliminary executive budget. | |
And Buery, as chair of the charter commission appointed by the current | |
mayor, fielded a phone call in early August from Mamdani urging against | |
including a question for this year’s ballot that would have | |
eliminated partisan primaries — a change advisers for weeks had been | |
panicking could complicate winning a second term and future DSA gains. | |
Socialists still have high expectations | |
Mamdani has not tamped down talk of democratic socialists challenging | |
establishment Democrats in primaries. Several state senators and | |
assembly members, who emboldened DSA members are talking about | |
targeting, have votes Mamdani would need for the new revenue from an | |
already wary state legislature. Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie’s | |
endorsement this week is an example of the ongoing bridge-building. | |
Meanwhile, US Rep. Laura Gillen, a freshman Democrat from a swing | |
district in the Long Island suburbs, has told people in frustration | |
that she’s heard that Mamdani has said he’d go campaign against her | |
if she continued to criticize him, as she has done from the day after | |
he won the primary through Gov. Kathy Hochul’s endorsement of him | |
this week. Whatever strength Mamdani has shown in the city, Gillen | |
backers note, her electorate is notably different. A Gillen | |
spokesperson did not comment. | |
Any moderation Mamdani might attempt would face its own pushback from a | |
base so demanding that at his town hall at Brooklyn College two weeks | |
ago with Sanders, questions from the crowd included a demand for him to | |
intervene for the adjunct faculty members who had been fired for | |
participating in anti-Israel encampments. Another asked him to support | |
repatriating the Lenape tribe to New York City: “We talk about the | |
kids here, what about the kids from here?” | |
Mamdani answered in favor of both. | |
Tiffany Cabán, a DSA member of the city council from Queens, initially | |
opposed Mamdani’s candidacy, worried that he would flop and that | |
would set the democratic socialist cause back. Now, Cabán told CNN, | |
she believes there will be a “magic” of outsiders eager to join the | |
administration fusing into a city government and working together with | |
likeminded existing employees. | |
“You run on a pared-down thing that you’re going to focus on, | |
because you can’t overwhelm people with things, and you’re going to | |
move towards and accomplish a lot more than that,” she said. | |
She also acknowledged how many people, from the DSA to the Trump White | |
House, will be watching closely. | |
“We’ve obviously got a target on our back, not just because of who | |
our next mayor’s going to be, but because it’s New York City, and | |
the power we hold in the world,” Cabán said. | |
Hunting for a November mandate | |
Those close to Mamdani say that long before he was at 1% in the polls, | |
he was talking about how to make his ideas reality. | |
According to Katz, Mamdani made that clear in their first meeting a | |
year-and-a-half ago. “I’m not going to do this if I don’t think I | |
can deliver on what we lay out,” he told Katz then. | |
His studious ambiguity now about what exactly he is proposing or where | |
he diverges from the DSA platform hasn’t dented his support so far. | |
Nor have the attacks from his opponents about his lack of experience, | |
like Adams dismissing him with a reference to his brief music career as | |
“a rapper, assemblyman, only was there for 50% of his votes,” or | |
Cuomo saying of Mamdani’s platform, “it’s madness, it’s | |
fantasy, it’s utopian theory — and this is New York City, it’s | |
not utopia.” | |
Mamdani says his only demand is for a process that “is rigorous, and | |
one that is actually focused on outcomes,” as he put it at an event | |
focused on public safety last week in New York where he quoted a lot of | |
statistics from other cities but was short on details for how many | |
people he’d plan to hire for his proposed Department of Community | |
Safety or how exactly he’d get the $1 billion he wants to put behind | |
it. | |
He dodged one of the most common administration questions he gets — | |
will he keep the current police commissioner? — and sidestepped | |
anything about a replacement if the answer turns out to be no. | |
These days, a solid lead in hand, Mamdani is quietly building lists of | |
possible hires in New York and beyond – including internationally – | |
that he’s expecting to reach out to after Election Day, even as he | |
stays focused on the campaign. | |
“The best way to prepare for January,” he said at the town hall | |
with Sanders, “is by winning a mandate in November.” | |
<- back to index |