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everyonematters

(4,308 posts)
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 08:16 AM 6 hrs ago

on the Mamdani movement in New York

I don't know what the political effect of this is going to be on the rest of the country or the Democratic Party. I am just going to say this: If you can't win presidential elections, you can't help anyone. You can't reverse income inequality. You can't expand affordable healthcare. You can't help the poor. The general population doesn't like politicians who call themselves socialists.

54 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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on the Mamdani movement in New York (Original Post) everyonematters 6 hrs ago OP
FDR/The New Deal reversed income inequality. no_hypocrisy 5 hrs ago #1
I support Democrats gab13by13 5 hrs ago #2
Sanders has never been a democrat. Interesting. SocialDemocrat61 4 hrs ago #31
There have been attacks on Democrats on DU since the site began mcar 2 hrs ago #44
"There's an OP here this week pitting Jeffries against Mamdani." MorbidButterflyTat 1 hr ago #48
I noticed too. Curious, no? QueerDuck 54 min ago #50
I noticed that, too. Nixie 38 min ago #51
So don't say that word. Scrivener7 5 hrs ago #3
It's Bash Democrats time. Emile 5 hrs ago #4
The three candidates that Mayor Mamdani endorsed won their primaries and are now our Democratic nominees for House seats Quiet Em 5 hrs ago #5
Sounds serious Torchlight 5 hrs ago #6
Socialists TVguyCards 5 hrs ago #7
You are completely correct. Pointing out hard electoral realities about the electorate is not "bashing Democrats" ... QueerDuck 5 hrs ago #8
wanting to win means supporting our Democratic nominees for office. Quiet Em 5 hrs ago #10
I agree that the goal right now is flipping the House and supporting our nominees... QueerDuck 5 hrs ago #14
None of these three candidates are running nationally. Quiet Em 4 hrs ago #16
No one is confused about how House ballots work, QuietEm. QueerDuck 4 hrs ago #19
Republicans will always find ridiculous and foolish ways to negatively brand Democrats Quiet Em 4 hrs ago #24
I think your Texas example actually proves exactly what the OP and I are talking about! QueerDuck 4 hrs ago #27
House Democratic candidates tailor their message to apply locally, not nationally Quiet Em 2 hrs ago #42
Well said! I think you just summed up the best path forward perfectly. QueerDuck 2 hrs ago #43
Yes, nationalizing politics is how Republicans win, ignoring policy and making it all about culture wars/identity, betsuni 2 hrs ago #45
I support democratic nominees! Emile 5 hrs ago #11
Of course you do. Thank you. QueerDuck 5 hrs ago #13
They'll start w/'this can only work in NYC Emile 5 hrs ago #15
I think you might be misreading my posts, Emile... QueerDuck 4 hrs ago #17
So what is the answer? Nominate more centrists Emile 4 hrs ago #20
Give me a break! John Fetterman didn't run as a centrist... QueerDuck 4 hrs ago #23
Exactly, Fetterman won because he ran as a progressive. Emile 4 hrs ago #26
No, the key is not to run people who hate Democrats. You don't know what Fetterman really was because he lied. Nixie 1 hr ago #47
You can't change history. He won because he ran as a left wing progressive. Emile 19 min ago #52
You also can't change the history of the socialists. Nixie 4 min ago #54
How about instead of talking about CivicGrief 4 hrs ago #22
Oh brother! That is a massive leap to make. --- I am absolutely in favor of robust Democratic policies. QueerDuck 4 hrs ago #25
I used to think now is not the time to be CivicGrief 4 hrs ago #30
I will absolutely keep it serious... let's both do that, okay? QueerDuck 3 hrs ago #34
I don't believe running on progressive policies can't CivicGrief 3 hrs ago #36
Actually, throughout, I've explicitly said "purple swing districts"... QueerDuck 3 hrs ago #41
So, you don't know the effect, but aocommunalpunch 5 hrs ago #9
I advocate the term "FDR/Democrats" 'Most Everyone has good vibes about FDR.... Ars Longa 5 hrs ago #12
New Deal Democrats murielm99 4 hrs ago #21
Yeah, New Deal would also work! Ars Longa 4 hrs ago #29
FDR has a mixed legacy SocialDemocrat61 4 hrs ago #28
The Republicans Mossfern 4 hrs ago #18
Screw personality politics. We win by attacking oligarchs, their insane concentration of wealth and power. usonian 4 hrs ago #32
There are 13 congressional districts in NYC SocialDemocrat61 3 hrs ago #33
Do movements start at the end? CivicGrief 3 hrs ago #37
No but SocialDemocrat61 3 hrs ago #40
Exactly, I also did the math on this, and it's just a little over 29,000 voters in 3 districts. Nixie 54 min ago #49
Talarico makes the same criticism of the economy that Mamdani does. everyonematters 3 hrs ago #35
For a second I thought this was a message CivicGrief 3 hrs ago #38
If Mamdani were a natural born citizen EnergizedLib 3 hrs ago #39
Mamdani's effect can be judged in the midterms gulliver 2 hrs ago #46
Hell Republicans called Joe Biden a communist. They're going to make Emile 12 min ago #53

gab13by13

(33,065 posts)
2. I support Democrats
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 08:29 AM
5 hrs ago

and I love Bernie Sanders, he is the voice of the Democratic party for me. It's fine to like some other Democrat as the voice but bashing any Democrat is counter-productive.

I tried in vain to point out how dangerous it is to start fights between progressive and moderate Democrats but my voice was silenced.

Now I see every day on DU attacks by Democrats against other Democrats.

I support Democrats, stop putting labels on them that's what Republicans do.

It is fine to bash bad things that a Democrat does that is opposed to our values, talking about Fetterman now. I voted for him, gave him money, but his stroke changed him into someone I do not recognize.

SocialDemocrat61

(8,323 posts)
31. Sanders has never been a democrat. Interesting.
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 10:12 AM
4 hrs ago

He has also supported some questionable people.

mcar

(46,541 posts)
44. There have been attacks on Democrats on DU since the site began
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 11:50 AM
2 hrs ago

I don't like it either, but for years Democrats have been bashed here as being "spineless, corporatists, blah, blah." And then there's the "strongly worded letter" nonsense.

When people are challenged about it, they claim they are offering "constructive criticism." Disingenuous, to say the least.

There's an OP here this week pitting Jeffries against Mamdani. This is not helpful. I appreciate what Mamdani is doing in NYC; I'm sorry Goldman lost his primary but Lander seems good. That said, NYC is NYC. It's not Florida, for example, where I live.

I agree with you - there's no point in encouraging intra-party warfare. We need to elect Democrats up and down the ballot.

MorbidButterflyTat

(4,954 posts)
48. "There's an OP here this week pitting Jeffries against Mamdani."
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 01:18 PM
1 hr ago

That OP is completely inaccurate and the whole purpose is to divide Dems.

Posting anything about Jeffries or Schumer (or Garland) is like ringing the bell for drooling Pavlov dogs.

The Dem bashing here has definitely picked up lately. I wonder why.

Quiet Em

(3,233 posts)
5. The three candidates that Mayor Mamdani endorsed won their primaries and are now our Democratic nominees for House seats
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 08:38 AM
5 hrs ago

All three will win the general election.

The Democratic Party goal right now is to flip the House and flip and retain as many seats as possible in the Senate. After that is accomplished we will start the process of finding our Presidential nominee. If you don't live in the districts of these three candidates than they don't impact you at all. The DSA is an organization, not a party. All three of these nominees are Democrats. They ran as Democrats and they won on the Democratic Party line.

TVguyCards

(78 posts)
7. Socialists
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 08:46 AM
5 hrs ago
"The general population doesn't like politicians who call themselves socialists."

I'm not so sure of that these days. If you were talking 20 years ago I'd be more inclined to agree with you but times have drastically changed and the ones who don't like the word "Socialism" are those who are older and were alive during the era of "The Red Scare". Those people, boomers and greatest generation are literally dying out (not to be morbid, just stating a fact). They lived in an age which is very different than today and they benefited from it. That age is long in the rear view mirror behind us.

Bernie is the person who brought Socialism into the limelight. He's also incredibly popular. I think that's quite a tell when you have someone who's a Socialist and also very popular. It seems what you said how "people dislike politicians who call themselves Socialists" doesn't actually apply when it comes to the world today. The ones who do think like that are older and likely would never even vote for a Democrat to begin with. Remember, the right called Obama a "Commie Socialist Marxist" for years. Of course we all know he certainly isn't but the hype train for calling people Socialists who are Democrats left the station long ago and is now seen as a "Boy Who Cried Wolf" scenario.

Millennial voters to Gen Z voters are now the majority & they see Socialism more positive than Capitalism.
The times aren't just changing. The times have changed. And that IMHO is a good thing.

QueerDuck

(2,129 posts)
8. You are completely correct. Pointing out hard electoral realities about the electorate is not "bashing Democrats" ...
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 08:49 AM
5 hrs ago

... it's called wanting to win.

The DSA operates under a very different strategic playbook, and the reality is that the "socialist" label carries immense baggage with the general public in a national election. Pointing out that branding matters if we want to win presidential elections and help people is just common sense.

I appreciate you having the courage to state the obvious here, even if some choose to mischaracterize an honest conversation about winning strategy as an "attack."

Quiet Em

(3,233 posts)
10. wanting to win means supporting our Democratic nominees for office.
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 09:02 AM
5 hrs ago

When the primaries are over we support our nominees.

QueerDuck

(2,129 posts)
14. I agree that the goal right now is flipping the House and supporting our nominees...
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 09:15 AM
5 hrs ago

... no one is arguing otherwise, especially since those NYC seats are practically guaranteed to stay blue in November.

The real issue the OP raised is how this plays out on the national stage. Winning deep-blue congressional primaries is one thing, but expanding that exact branding nationwide is a completely different calculation.

To help the poor and expand healthcare, a Democrat has to win the White House. We cannot do that without winning moderates and independents in purple states, where the "socialist" label carries immense baggage. Acknowledging that geographic reality is vital if we want to actually govern.

Quiet Em

(3,233 posts)
16. None of these three candidates are running nationally.
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 09:24 AM
4 hrs ago

They will all serve their own districts. Every House district in our country will choose who they want to represent them. These three candidates will not be on their ballot.

And yes, we have to win the White House. But winning the White House will be much more impactful if we give the Democratic occupant of the White House a cooperative Democratic House and a Democratic Senate. Right now the Republicans control all three. They goal right now is to take back that control.

QueerDuck

(2,129 posts)
19. No one is confused about how House ballots work, QuietEm.
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 09:32 AM
4 hrs ago
The point is that the opposition party does not care about district boundaries. They aggressively use the rhetoric of deep-blue urban winners to define the entire national Democratic brand in swing states.

To give a Democratic president a cooperative House and Senate, we have to win competitive purple seats, not just safe D+30 seats in New York. If the branding coming out of our safest strongholds makes it harder for our front-line candidates to win in swing territory, then it hurts our chances of taking back total control.

I think we are ultimately pulling for the same team here. We both want a unified Democratic government.

My point is simply that national branding matters. While these candidates won't be on the ballot in swing states, in the real world, their political labels are absolutely weaponized by Republicans against our front-line Democrats in purple districts.

Having an honest conversation about how localized rhetoric creates national headwinds isn't working against the party... instead, it’s how we protect our vulnerable incumbents so we can actually secure the majority we both want.

Quiet Em

(3,233 posts)
24. Republicans will always find ridiculous and foolish ways to negatively brand Democrats
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 09:51 AM
4 hrs ago

Look at what they are doing in Texas. Should we have every Texas Democrat walk around waving a half eaten tomahawk ribeye to prove they're not vegan? Obviously there is nothing wrong with being a vegan but that's how Republicans want to negatively brand there.

Democrats are running on issues that matter to the people. Democratic voters and Independent voters are smart enough to figure that out.

QueerDuck

(2,129 posts)
27. I think your Texas example actually proves exactly what the OP and I are talking about!
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 10:03 AM
4 hrs ago

You're completely right that the GOP will look for any ridiculous label to tank a Democrat. Because the opposition is so ruthless with branding, our own national branding becomes incredibly important.

Voters are smart, but modern campaigns are won and lost on the margins in swing districts. If the branding coming out of our safest blue strongholds makes it easier for Republicans to paint our front-line candidates into a corner, it hurts our chances of building that congressional majority we both want.

Republicans are going to weaponize whatever they can, which is exactly why the labels our candidates use matter so much. A Democrat running in a deep-blue NYC district can use a label safely, but a Democrat running in a purple district is the one who has to pay the price when the GOP clips that footage and uses it against them.

I think it's perfectly reasonable to have an honest conversation that points out the importance of being strategic about our national brand so that we protect our most vulnerable candidates and give them the best chance to win.

Quiet Em

(3,233 posts)
42. House Democratic candidates tailor their message to apply locally, not nationally
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 11:32 AM
2 hrs ago

This happens whether they are in a blue, purple or red district.

No House Democratic candidate in a red or purple district should be out there talking about NYC, NYC voters, or NYC candidates. They should be talking about their own district, and their own district's needs.

QueerDuck

(2,129 posts)
43. Well said! I think you just summed up the best path forward perfectly.
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 11:37 AM
2 hrs ago

Local tailoring is exactly what wins elections on the margins, and it ensures our candidates fit the communities they want to serve. At the end of the day, we both want a strong, unified Democratic majority to protect our values, and I’m glad we can find common ground on that.

Thanks for the thoughtful back-and-forth... I appreciate the chat today. Take care, and have a wonderful rest of your week!

betsuni

(29,431 posts)
45. Yes, nationalizing politics is how Republicans win, ignoring policy and making it all about culture wars/identity,
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 12:04 PM
2 hrs ago

blaming everything on liberal elites off in Washington and New York and Hollywood. They have a one size fits all base.

QueerDuck

(2,129 posts)
13. Of course you do. Thank you.
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 09:14 AM
5 hrs ago

Of course we support our Democratic nominees, and given how heavily blue those specific New York districts are, those three candidates are locked in to win in November anyway.

But that completely sidesteps the actual point the OP and I were discussing. There is a massive strategic difference between what works in New York City and what works in a national presidential election.

The branding that wins a primary under the Mamdani movement in NYC can easily become a major liability when weaponized by Republicans in swing states like Pennsylvania, Michigan, or Wisconsin. When someone points out that a platform built for a deep-blue urban stronghold won't scale nationwide isn't a lack of support for nominees and it's not an "attack on Democrats" --- it's a realistic conversation about the national electoral map we need to win the White House.

Emile

(44,086 posts)
15. They'll start w/'this can only work in NYC
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 09:18 AM
5 hrs ago

We've heard this argument for years.

It's time to get behind the democratic nominees.

QueerDuck

(2,129 posts)
17. I think you might be misreading my posts, Emile...
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 09:26 AM
4 hrs ago

... in fact, I already said we should get behind the nominees. Nobody is disputing that.

The discussion the OP started (and that I am agreeing with) is about national branding. Acknowledging that the general electorate nationwide views political labels differently than voters in deep-blue urban strongholds isn't "anti-nominee." It's a realistic, mature, adult and honest conversation about how we build a majority capable of winning presidential elections.

The reason we have "heard this argument for years" is because it remains an unavoidable mathematical fact of the Electoral College. What works in a district with a Cook PVI of D+30 does not work in a swing district that is R+2.

We can support our local nominees while also being realistic about what it takes to win a national map. Both things can be true at the same time.

Emile

(44,086 posts)
20. So what is the answer? Nominate more centrists
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 09:32 AM
4 hrs ago

like Fetterman to win over mythical republican voters in deep red strongholds?

QueerDuck

(2,129 posts)
23. Give me a break! John Fetterman didn't run as a centrist...
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 09:43 AM
4 hrs ago

... you know that. He won his primary by running to the left of Conor Lamb as a proud progressive who championed Bernie Sanders. The fact that he pivoted after getting elected is the exact reason so many progressives (and centrists like myself) are frustrated with him today.

Furthermore, nobody is talking about "deep red strongholds" except for you. We win purple swing states like Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin by winning over moderate Independents and suburban voters, not mythical Republicans.

If your takeaway from this discussion is that we should run centrists in deep red strongholds, you are completely missing the point.

The reality of modern elections is that front-line Democrats running in highly competitive R+1 or D+1 swing districts are the ones who have to carry the weight of national party branding. However, when deep-blue strongholds use labels that alienate the national electorate, it makes the job of those front-line candidates twice as hard.

Acknowledging that geographic reality is how we build a durable national majority. I'm content to leave it at that. If we want to take back the House and protect the White House, we have to understand the actual math of the electoral map. I've made my point clearly, so the "last word" is yours if you need it.

Cheers.

Emile

(44,086 posts)
26. Exactly, Fetterman won because he ran as a progressive.
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 10:03 AM
4 hrs ago

He lied to win his seat, and we ended up with a centrist.

The key to win more seats is to run more to the left, not to the center.

Nixie

(18,264 posts)
47. No, the key is not to run people who hate Democrats. You don't know what Fetterman really was because he lied.
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 12:46 PM
1 hr ago

And the key to him getting in was to hate Democrats. All of that makes no sense, so you trying to blame his lies on the rest of the party is pure propaganda.

Nixie

(18,264 posts)
54. You also can't change the history of the socialists.
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 02:14 PM
4 min ago

Democratic socialists, Which they have called themselves from the beginning . Progressives is a fairly recent claim.

CivicGrief

(394 posts)
22. How about instead of talking about
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 09:41 AM
4 hrs ago

branding we talk about the issues and policies they advocate for. Are you against those?

QueerDuck

(2,129 posts)
25. Oh brother! That is a massive leap to make. --- I am absolutely in favor of robust Democratic policies.
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 09:53 AM
4 hrs ago

I am 100% for policies that expand healthcare, protect labor, and fight income inequality. Why would anyone believe that I felt otherwise?

But let's be honest here... having the best policy ideas in the world doesn't mean anything if we don't have 51 votes in the Senate and 218 in the House to pass them. We live in a highly polarized country where labels and branding heavily influence moderate and independent voters in swing districts.

Acknowledging that reality isn't opposing the platform --- it's recognizing that we need a winning strategy to turn those policies into real-world results.

CivicGrief

(394 posts)
30. I used to think now is not the time to be
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 10:10 AM
4 hrs ago

bold, but I now think it is. The Republicans are all in on an agenda the majority of Americans don’t like at all. If now is not the time to push progressive candidates, there never will be a time. Moving to the middle doesn’t impress anyone. Please spare the snark if you reply.

QueerDuck

(2,129 posts)
34. I will absolutely keep it serious... let's both do that, okay?
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 10:21 AM
3 hrs ago

We completely agree on one major thing: the Republican agenda is deeply unpopular with the majority of Americans, and we have to defeat it.

Where we differ is the strategy to get there. You believe a bold progressive push is the answer everywhere. I believe that while that works perfectly in safe blue strongholds, it becomes a severe liability in the purple swing districts that actually decide control of Congress.

To protect affordable healthcare and fight income inequality, we have to win the middle in those swing areas. Acknowledging that geographic reality is just practical politics. People can disagree on the strategy, but it's grossly unfair for anyone to weaponize it against me by twisting it into an accusation that I do not support liberal agenda or policies.

CivicGrief

(394 posts)
36. I don't believe running on progressive policies can't
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 10:36 AM
3 hrs ago

work in rural, red areas. I think the Democrats can win over non-voters with a united, progressive agenda. If that is a losing strategy, then what are we doing?

QueerDuck

(2,129 posts)
41. Actually, throughout, I've explicitly said "purple swing districts"...
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 10:58 AM
3 hrs ago

... which are the suburbs and competitive areas that actually decide control of Congress... but since you brought up rural red areas and non-voters, let’s look at the actual data.

Political scientists have studied the "mobilizing non-voters" theory extensively. The reality is that non-voters in rural, red areas are not "closet progressives". When they do turn out, data shows they actually trend overwhelmingly conservative.

Pushing a hard-left agenda with DSA branding in those areas doesn't flip non-voters to our side. Instead it just supercharges Republican turnout and alienates the moderate Independents we actually need to win. The independent, suburban voters who decide elections in swing states are highly attuned to branding and labels. Ignoring them to chase a mythical wave of rural non-voters is exactly how we lose majorities.

You asked "what are we doing" if that's a losing strategy? What we are doing is being smart. We run progressives where they can win, and we run pragmatists where they can win. That is how we actually build a majority. I've stated my piece and the math is clear. We've reached an impasse it seems, so I'm content to leave it there.

Have a nice day.

Ars Longa

(660 posts)
12. I advocate the term "FDR/Democrats" 'Most Everyone has good vibes about FDR....
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 09:05 AM
5 hrs ago

Make Trump/GOP argue against FDR......on OUR terrain!
'Sorry to say, the term "Socialist" has been sufficiently demonized for generations now.
It's just poor branding...
Why keep trying to push that boulder up that hill??
See post #1 above

SocialDemocrat61

(8,323 posts)
28. FDR has a mixed legacy
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 10:07 AM
4 hrs ago

He supported segregation. He ignored the Holocaust. He illegally imprisoned Japanese Americans for years. He sent the army to put down a labor union strike in California. And he created the military industrial complex.

We should be looking forward, not backwards. A leader from 80 years ago does not address the issues of today.

Mossfern

(4,863 posts)
18. The Republicans
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 09:29 AM
4 hrs ago

are already warning about the threat of "Communism."

This is what they will push during the General Election if the "Socialist" word is included in the description of any Democratic candidate. Why give our opponent ammunition? I'm old enough to remember the Commie threat of the 1950's and the rise of McCarthyism.

I plead with people to be smart and to keep idealism out of the conversation - it can easily be misconstrued.

usonian

(27,148 posts)
32. Screw personality politics. We win by attacking oligarchs, their insane concentration of wealth and power.
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 10:18 AM
4 hrs ago

Flame wars like this are why we lose.

The maga propaganda machine labels Dems as Imperial oligarchs, way more than radical Bolsheviks.

THEY PULLED THE WOOL.



ATTACK THE SCOUNDREL, RAPING, EPSTEIN CLASS.

This bickering plays into their hands.



SocialDemocrat61

(8,323 posts)
33. There are 13 congressional districts in NYC
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 10:19 AM
3 hrs ago

26 in the state over all. Endorsed candidates winning in 3 districts is hardly a movement. That's a less than 25% success rate in the city and less than 12% in the state. It's hardly a movement.

Nixie

(18,264 posts)
49. Exactly, I also did the math on this, and it's just a little over 29,000 voters in 3 districts.
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 01:24 PM
55 min ago

It's about 13,000 in 2 districts and 2,300 in the 3rd. If you try to overlay that on the rest of the country, it's not much of a movement. And most of it is hatred of Israel.

everyonematters

(4,308 posts)
35. Talarico makes the same criticism of the economy that Mamdani does.
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 10:31 AM
3 hrs ago

The economy is rigged against working people in favor of the vary wealthy. He doesn't call himself a socialist or make harsh criticisms of Israel. Harsh criticisms of Israel are being confused with antisemitism.

EnergizedLib

(3,220 posts)
39. If Mamdani were a natural born citizen
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 10:52 AM
3 hrs ago

He could be our nominee in 2028. He’s that popular, just that he’s ineligible to be president.

gulliver

(14,159 posts)
46. Mamdani's effect can be judged in the midterms
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 12:05 PM
2 hrs ago

In a way, we're lucky. We get to see an experiment carried out in real time in the midterms that will help us determine strategy for 2028.

I predict the Republicans will make a big deal out of Mamdani. The whole country is going to be peppered with ads and images from New York. That was already going to happen. But now Mamdani has chosen to explicitly flavor our entire midterm strategy by stepping into it with a tiny number of primary backings. I think it's reckless at best. Just obvious.

Emile

(44,086 posts)
53. Hell Republicans called Joe Biden a communist. They're going to make
Thu Jun 25, 2026, 02:07 PM
12 min ago

a big deal about every democrat. They're old standby ism and ist are losing it's punch.

Latest Discussions»General Discussion»on the Mamdani movement i...