this post was submitted on 24 Nov 2025
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You've eloquently captured why I, a random chick who is on the other side of the world, is super excited by Mamdani's win. It might not end up amounting to much, but there's real cause for hope.
In my country (the UK), Labour (the largest party by far) keep pandering to the right in a manner that is just yielding more of the discursive battleground to the right wing bigotry of the Reform party, and it drives me mad to see them shoot themselves in the foot like this. It reminds me of how in the 2010 election, Labour presented themselves as pro-austerity, but not as severely as the Tories. By accepting the Tories' premise that austerity was good and necessary for reducing the deficit (and that eliminating the deficit was necessary for the UK's economic wellness), Labour simultaneously disappointed people who wanted an alternative to austerity, and weren't appealing to people who were pro austerity (why vote for Tory-lite, when you can just vote Tory instead?). Now they're doing the same with immigration rhetoric instead of investing in our systems. Most people aren't actually pissed off at immigrants, but at the fact that it's increasingly difficult for normal people to afford basic living costs. The best antidote to fascism are policies that speak to the way that people are suffering.
Mamdani's campaign (and his subsequent victory) showed that he understands this, and it could set a precedent for places far beyond the US. I'm tentatively hopeful.