Building “Mass Governance” in Zohran Mamdani’s New York City
Zohran Mamdani is now mayor of New York City, and the Left’s old ways of relating to elected officials won’t cut it. We need a “mass governance” approach.

With a socialist in New York City’s mayoral office, the Left needs to think differently about how it relates to elected officials. Socialists have come to occupy a different, more central place in the political process, with new levers of power open to us. (David Dee Delgado / Getty Images)
In late May, hundreds of volunteers flooded Herbert Von King Park in Brooklyn’s Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood on a sunny Saturday not just for a rally with then-mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani, but to knock on doors and talk to strangers about voting for him. We filled the park and spread out into satellite groups across the lawn, where dozens of field leads coached new and regular volunteers on how to canvass, reviewing the three core campaign promises we had all started to memorize by then.
This scene played out over and over throughout New York City over the past year. In all, over one hundred thousand people volunteered for the Mamdani campaign, knocking on doors, making phone calls, talking to their friends, neighbors, and to strangers. The victory that has shocked the country and the world, culminating in Zohran’s swearing in as mayor yesterday, is because of their labor, and is proof that sustained, mass organizing around clear class politics produces results.
Now comes the test that matters. Will those same people and others energized by the Zohran campaign walk into power with the new administration and feel part of the political project, or watch from the sidelines?