Mamdani's Albany Roots May Yet Yield City Payoff
Zohran Mamdani, the Democratic socialist from Queens who won a seat in the state Assembly at 29, has spent five years honing his legislative chops on Capitol Hill. His time in Albany was marked by fierce advocacy for causes favored by the left, but also some relatively thin legislation to show for it.
Now, as he gears up to become New York City's mayor, Mamdani will have to navigate a different kind of landscape - one where billions of dollars are at stake and deals need to be made with Albany insiders. His campaign pledge to provide universal child care and eliminate the fare for city buses has sparked debate within his own party about how to get it done.
Mamdani's opponents argue that his lack of executive experience makes him unqualified to deliver on his agenda, while supporters claim he'll find ways to build consensus in Albany - a crucial distinction.
The state Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie and the Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins have all endorsed Mamdani's mayoral campaign, but Governor Kathy Hochul has shown no signs of caving to his demands for corporate tax hikes or wealth taxes.
One sign that Mamdani might be able to build some traction in Albany is a quiet confidence from an early hire - Dean Fuleihan, the first deputy mayor. In an interview on WNYC's Brian Lehrer Show, Fuleihan suggested that Mamdani's path to fulfilling his pledge of universal child care is easier than predecessor Mayor Bill de Blasio's when he took office in 2014.
Mamdani and Hochul met for nearly an hour last week to discuss child care plans, and the governor has previously signaled her support for the cause. But some of Mamdani's left-leaning supporters are pushing back against Hochul's position - using public pressure to try and get the Governor on board with their agenda.
A lesson from Hochul? "I'm the type of person where the more you push me, the less I'm going to do what you want," she warned at a post-election conference in Puerto Rico. It remains to be seen how much Mamdani can bend to her will without alienating his own base.
Zohran Mamdani, the Democratic socialist from Queens who won a seat in the state Assembly at 29, has spent five years honing his legislative chops on Capitol Hill. His time in Albany was marked by fierce advocacy for causes favored by the left, but also some relatively thin legislation to show for it.
Now, as he gears up to become New York City's mayor, Mamdani will have to navigate a different kind of landscape - one where billions of dollars are at stake and deals need to be made with Albany insiders. His campaign pledge to provide universal child care and eliminate the fare for city buses has sparked debate within his own party about how to get it done.
Mamdani's opponents argue that his lack of executive experience makes him unqualified to deliver on his agenda, while supporters claim he'll find ways to build consensus in Albany - a crucial distinction.
The state Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie and the Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins have all endorsed Mamdani's mayoral campaign, but Governor Kathy Hochul has shown no signs of caving to his demands for corporate tax hikes or wealth taxes.
One sign that Mamdani might be able to build some traction in Albany is a quiet confidence from an early hire - Dean Fuleihan, the first deputy mayor. In an interview on WNYC's Brian Lehrer Show, Fuleihan suggested that Mamdani's path to fulfilling his pledge of universal child care is easier than predecessor Mayor Bill de Blasio's when he took office in 2014.
Mamdani and Hochul met for nearly an hour last week to discuss child care plans, and the governor has previously signaled her support for the cause. But some of Mamdani's left-leaning supporters are pushing back against Hochul's position - using public pressure to try and get the Governor on board with their agenda.
A lesson from Hochul? "I'm the type of person where the more you push me, the less I'm going to do what you want," she warned at a post-election conference in Puerto Rico. It remains to be seen how much Mamdani can bend to her will without alienating his own base.