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The Intercept Briefing

The Struggle for the Future of the New York Democratic Party

The Intercept Briefing

The Intercept

News, Politics, News Commentary

4.76.4K Ratings

🗓️ 24 October 2025

⏱️ 44 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

New York City is on the cusp of an election in which what once looked impossible has begun to seem inevitable. Zohran Mamdani, a democratic socialist member of the New York state Assembly, is heavily favored to beat Andrew Cuomo, New York’s onetime Democratic governor and a former icon of the party establishment, in a race for mayor that has become among the most-watched in the nation.

Cuomo and Mamdani articulate two vastly different visions for New York City — and where the Democratic Party is going overall. This week on The Intercept Briefing, Akela Lacy speaks to people hoping to see each of those two visions fulfilled.

“Traditionally, we've thought about politics as left, right, and center,” says Alyssa Cass, a Democratic strategist who has worked on local and national campaigns. “Zohran offered a message that was less about ideology and more about disrupting a failed status quo that is working for almost no one.”

Cass, who worked on Andrew Yang’s mayoral campaign in 2021, isn’t working for Mamdani but says his candidacy indicates “that Democrats can win when we have ideas.”

In the view of Jim Walden, a former mayoral candidate who is now backing Cuomo, those ideas are “dangerous and radical policies.” He says Mamdani’s popularity is an indication that “there's going to be a flirtation with socialism and maybe some populist push” among Democrats. 

But “ultimately,” Walden says, “the party will come back closer to the center.”

Chi Ossé, a City Council member who endorsed Mamdani, sees Mamdani’s success as evidence of the opposite. “We could have gone back to or continued this trend of electing centrist, moderate Democrats,” Ossé says. Instead, he thinks that New Yorkers want “someone who ran as a loud and proud democratic socialist who has always fought on the left.”

While New York City is preparing for a general election, Republican candidate Curtis Sliwa is unlikely to win — turning the race almost into a second Democratic primary. “The party is now confronted with a choice,” said Lacy, “between a nominee who has become the new face of generational change in politics and a former governor fighting for his political comeback. The results could reveal where the party’s headed in next year’s midterms and beyond.”

Listen to the full conversation of The Intercept Briefing on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to The Intercept Briefing. I'm Akela Lacey.

0:08.0

There's less than two weeks left before New Yorkers elect their next mayor.

0:12.7

The races draw national attention, both from President Donald Trump and from observers who see it as a reckoning over the future of the Democratic Party.

0:21.4

Zorn Mamdani continues to hold an insurmountable lead over former governor Andrew Cuomo in the race for New York City Mayor,

0:28.5

as long as Republican candidate Curtis Lewa stays in it.

0:32.2

Even though New York Assemblyman Zoran Mamdani decisively won the Democratic primary in June,

0:39.0

the general election has pretty much boiled down to a contest between two candidates trying to claim the Democratic mantle.

0:45.1

There's Mamdani, the party's nominee, and former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, who resigned in

0:51.2

2021 amid sexual harassment allegations that he now denies and has been

0:55.7

chasing the mayoralty as his political comeback. Since he lost the primary, Cuomo's running on an

1:01.6

independent ballot line called Fight and Deliver, but he's still pitching himself as a Democrat.

1:07.0

There's also Curtis Slewa, the founder of the Guardian Angels, a Republican candidate, and a thorn in the side of those who want him out of the race to clear a lane on the right for Cuomo. That's the position of billionaires like John Castamatidis and Bill Ackman, who have been pushing to get Slewa out. Come on, Ackman, stay in your lane. Does he know anything about politics?

1:27.8

No. Does he live in New York City?

1:29.8

No.

1:30.8

He lives in Chappaca, the whitest suburb of America, where even the lawn jockeys are white.

1:35.3

It's also the position of President Trump.

1:37.8

We don't need a communist in this country, but if we have one, I'm going to be watching over and very carefully on behalf of the nation.

1:48.8

The Trump administration already got its wish when current New York City Mayor Eric Adams dropped out of the race last month.

1:51.5

And the conventional wisdom was that many Adams supporters would flock to Cuomo.

1:55.8

But after a federal corruption indictment that disappeared when Trump swept into office,

2:00.6

remember that,

2:01.8

Adams' support was already plummeting. And with Sliwa unlikely to become mayor himself,

...

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