Jacobin magazine denounces left-wing criticism of New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani


President Donald Trump shakes hands with New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani in the Oval Office of the White House, Friday, Nov. 21, 2025, in Washington. [AP Photo/Evan Vucci]

Jacobin magazine, the unofficial publication of the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA), published an article last week condemning “constant and relentless denunciations” from the political left, in particular, socialist criticism of Democratic New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani.

The article, titled “Critique Is Easy. What’s Your Plan for Power?”, is the most recent in a growing series of Jacobin pieces defending Mamdani from left-wing criticism of his evermore naked embrace of the corporate and financial elite.

For months, Mamdani, first as the Democratic Party mayoral candidate and now as mayor-elect, has been cozying up to the Wall Street oligarchs, including their fascist in the White House, Trump. It is significant that even before Mamdani has taken office Jacobin and Mamdani’s other pseudo-left backers have been forced to go on the defensive for the Democratic mayor-elect.

Jacobin’s most recent article, written by longtime pseudo-left activist and labor studies academic Eric Blanc, argues, fundamentally, that left-moving workers and young people must cease serious political criticism and suppress discontent to preserve the credibility of Mamdani and the DSA to maintain the political stranglehold of the Democratic Party.

Blanc writes, “The intensity of our criticism of left elected leaders on a given issue should correlate with our degree of power.” He adds, “It would be unjustified to denounce Zohran for not taking steps to abolish capitalism … given that neither he nor we have … the institutional mechanisms, popular mandate, or organized force to do so.”

Blanc assures his readers that criticism of “leftist” Democrats is “important.” However, the “left” is too weak to allow for exposures of political charlatans and, above all, the building of a mass independent movement of the working class for socialism. Therefore, workers, young people and students must engage in “low-intensity criticism” while unquestioningly supporting Mamdani’s administration and the “left wing” of the political establishment more broadly.

This central argument of Blanc’s article, repeated ad nauseum, is an apology for the most naked forms of political adaptation. Mamdani, he claims, is constrained by the reality of the political system. The task of genuine socialists, however, is to fight to mobilize the working class against this political system.

In the article, Blanc focuses on criticizing opposition to Mamdani’s decision to retain billionaire heiress Jessica Tisch as New York City Police Commissioner, a key demand of the capitalist elite. Tisch has played a central role in establishing the New York Police Department’s (NYPD) pervasive surveillance apparatus, overseen the city-wide violent crackdown on opponents of the Gaza genocide and facilitated the ICE Gestapo’s illegal detention of immigrants under the outgoing mayoral administration of Eric Adams.

According to Blanc, “Whether we like it or not, firing Tisch at this moment risks sinking Zohran’s new administration in a losing battle before he’s even taken office—and before he’s cemented popular goodwill by delivering tangible improvements in their daily lives.” He adds, “Leftists should dial back the intensity of our criticisms of Zohran’s reappointment decision and avoid misleading ‘betrayal’ claims.”

Blanc admits that Tisch is a mouthpiece for racist and reactionary policing. But his argument is that firing her would “prompt a police (and potential capital) strike to force Zohran to rehire her” and jeopardize Mamdani’s administration.

In other words, the capitalist class and its shock troops are too powerful. They will oppose measures against them, and therefore such measures must not be taken. This is not a political strategy for building socialism but for stifling the development of an independent movement of workers against capitalism.

If all the power lies with the billionaires and their police, then the job of socialists is to organize workers against this power—not to rationalize it, as Blanc does so easily. That Mamdani has capitulated at the first sign of confrontation with the ruling class shows what his administration will do when faced with far greater pressures from Wall Street.

In an attempt to provide cover for the overt prostration before the demands of the ruling class, Blanc seeks to foist blame on the workers. The main push for Mamdani to keep Tisch as police commissioner “came from billionaires and establishment politicians,” he said. But, according to Blanc, “public support for police and concerns about crime facilitated these elite efforts and constrained Zohran’s room for maneuver.”

Mamdani, who ran as a “democratic socialist,” won the New York City mayoral election with well over 1 million votes, the highest number of votes in a New York City mayoral election in over 50 years. Workers and young people who voted for him were motivated by opposition to war, genocide, inequality, exploitation and poverty. In New York City and countless cities and towns across the US, millions of people marched in the “No Kings” protests to oppose the Trump administration’s assault on democratic rights.

According to Blanc, however, the supposed “public support” for reactionary policies requires that Mamdani maintain the status quo.

Having outright rejected the role of the working class as an independent political force, Blanc insists that “The fate of all our bottom-up movements and organizations is tied to this administration.”

What should workers and young people do to oppose capitalism dragging humanity into the pits of barbarism? Blanc declares, “Our [DSA’s] electoral reach has rocketed far past our on-the-ground organized power. … The way to help Zohran overcome establishment and billionaire opposition will mostly be ‘organize bigger and deeper’ rather than ‘criticize harder.’”

In short, Blanc’s message is: Stop demanding change! Get back to door knocking for the Democrats!

As is the case with most Jacobin articles, more significant than what is said is what is not said. While Blanc goes on at length explaining why Mamdani cannot be held accountable for aligning with the NYPD and Wall Street, he says virtually nothing about what Mamdani plans to do in office.

The incoming administration’s “affordability agenda” is not clearly defined by Blanc or for that matter anyone. Mamdani’s policies, as the World Socialist Web Site has noted, amount to modest rent freezes and pilot programs for vouchers—measures that do not touch the power of the corporate elite and, in any case, Mamdani is systematically repudiating them.

Most significantly, Blanc’s article makes no reference whatsoever to Mamdani’s meeting with Donald Trump at the White House nor to Mamdani’s public declaration of a “partnership” with the fascist would-be Führer overseeing mass immigration raids, political repression and war crimes abroad.

Blanc’s entire argument is that criticism must be determined by what is “realistically possible” within existing power relations. Yet Mamdani’s meeting with Trump was an initiative taken voluntarily by the mayor-elect, who requested the rendezvous in order to make crystal clear the incoming administration’s reliability to the ruling class.

Blanc avoids the issue entirely because acknowledging it would shatter the central fiction he seeks to maintain: that the DSA represents an oppositional force constrained by circumstances, rather than a faction of the political establishment actively integrating itself into the machinery of bourgeois rule.

Jacobin, the DSA and the pseudo-left more broadly speak fundamentally for privileged sections of the upper middle class. These forces work consciously to block workers and youth from drawing the necessary political conclusions from an analysis of present-day political, social and economic developments, sowing political confusion, disorientation and, ultimately, demoralization.

This social layer opposes the development of an independent movement of the working class in opposition to capitalist barbarism, the critical factor in the fight for socialism. Everything outside of the capitalist Democratic Party, its pseudo-left political appendages and the pro-corporate trade union bureaucracy is deemed not “feasible” or “desirable.”

What is lacking in the political landscape is not mass opposition to conditions that exist in the US and internationally but, rather, a political program and perspective to guide and organize the struggles of the working class against austerity, exploitation, war, assaults on democratic rights and the development of dictatorship.

The raising of workers’ political and social consciousness through education in the history and politics of socialism, the exposure of political charlatans and scoundrels, and the building of a revolutionary socialist vanguard party of the working class to lead the developing mass struggles to expropriate the oligarchs and seize power are the central tasks of socialists.

In the WSWS’s announcement of the launching of Socialism AI on December 12, the WSWS Editorial Board wrote:

Workers and youth confront a sprawling apparatus of misinformation, historical falsification and ideological diversion. They face a media whose function is not to inform but to conceal the class roots of war, inequality and political reaction. They contend with capitalist governments that have lost all legitimacy, parties that represent only rival factions of an embattled ruling class, and union bureaucracies that openly police the working class on behalf of the corporations and the state. They must see through the fraudulent claims of pseudo-left political charlatans that capitalism can be reformed and made to serve the working class.

The statement emphasizes that the role of the socialist movement, now aided by the powerful tool of Socialism AI, is to

help workers cut through the lies of capitalist ideology, understand the causes of the crisis, and act consciously within it. It will illuminate the essential strategic lessons of past struggles and clarify their bearing on present tasks. Above all, it will help establish a new and dynamic relationship between the revolutionary heritage of Marxism and the living movement of the working class.

This is precisely what Jacobin and the DSA work to preempt by laboring to channel workers and young people back into the stranglehold of the Democratic Party, the 200-year-old political party of Wall Street and war.


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