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Hello, OddLots listeners. We are re-releasing an episode that we recorded on May 23rd with
Zoran Mamdani. That's right. Just last night, Zoran won the Democratic nomination to be the new mayor of New York City. He is the massive favorite going into the general election, although, of course, Cuomo is the favorite going into the nomination. So anything could still happen. But probably a lot of people are tuning into this race now for the first time and want to know what the Democratic nominee is all about. Yep. And we asked him a lot of questions about exactly that. So take a listen.
Bloomberg Audio Studios. Podcasts. Radio. News. Hello and welcome to another episode of the Odd Lots podcast. I'm Joe Weisenthal. And I'm Tracy Alloway. Tracy, we might get a socialist mayor here in New York City.
Can I tell you something? Please. It's slightly weird. Last night, the night before we're recording this episode, I had a dream that I was in a shared Uber with Adrienne Adams and she was the driver. Really? She's another mayoral candidate. She was driving and I told her we were going to interview this particular candidate and
This is amazing. I was asking her for good questions. This is an amazing dream. You're not making this up. No. My dreams are very literal. And everyone in the Uber was giving me ideas for questions and had opinions and stuff like that. But now I can't remember any of it. Ugh.
That's really disappointing. Anyway, you know, we don't really cover a lot of New York City politics. We don't cover a lot of politics in general. We hardly ever talk about New York City politics. Who really cares about New York and the broad audience? We don't like to be too navel-gazing. But, you know, this is a city with a lot of people who, needless to say, work in finance, business.
potentially if there are major changes to tax rates here, et cetera, then that could have an impact on the industry that we cover a lot. There are a lot of economic stories that are sort of New York centric, particularly relating to housing that are very universal, et cetera. So it's not a crime to every once in a while do a New York City focused episode.
No. And this also relates directly to a previous All Vaults episode we did all about how New York gets its groceries. That's right. That's the that's the connection. Let's jump right into it. I'm very excited to say we have a state assemblyman and candidate for the Democratic nomination for Mayor Zoran Mamdani coming on the show. Zoran, thank you so much for coming on. Thank you so much for having me. It's a pleasure.
I mentioned you're a socialist. What specific strand of socialism are you and are the other socialists revisionists and deviations of various flavors? We need to know your exact – the exact category here. I will leave that to the internet. I will tell you that I am a democratic socialist, yes. And I started to call myself that after Bernie Sanders' 2016 run for president when –
I finally had a language describe the way that I saw the world and the way that I believe the world should be, which is one where every person has the dignity they need to live a decent life. - By the way, now that I am a journalist at a mainstream news organization, I do not personally have political opinions.
But I can say that I didn't, wasn't always the case. And I went to high school in Vermont and I was a volunteer on Bernie's 1996 house campaign. And there's a picture of me with Bernie. So I was a very early. You too. I was a Bernard brother before it became cool. Yes.
You got in early. Yeah. All right. So how would you describe your platform? Is it the New York version of Sanders? It's heavily inspired by that same focus on income inequality and a recognition of the fact that one in four New Yorkers are currently living in poverty in what has now been described as the most expensive city in the country.
And it is a platform at its core to make this city affordable and to use every tool at city government's disposal to do so. Because for too long, we've had politicians pretend that we were just bystanders to a suffocating cost of living crisis when in fact we have two choices, whether to exacerbate it or put an end to it. And we've seen Eric Adams do the former. We're running to do the latter. What did Eric Adams do when you said he did the former? What did he do in your view to exacerbate it?
You know, the first issue that you hear from most New Yorkers when it comes to cost of living is housing. And the mayor sets the rent increases for more than 2 million New Yorkers who live in rent-stabilized housing. And he came in as a self-described real estate. That's how he described himself coming into the office.
And he's raised rents accordingly. He's raised them more than 9%. And this year, when the Rent Guidelines Board, which is entirely composed of his appointees, found that the landlords of those million or so units that have close to 2.5 million tenants had seen an increase in their revenues by 12%, he wanted to raise the rent once again to close to 8%. And that is one example. Another, I would say, is his relationship to Con Edison.
Con Edison can only raise the rates of gas and electric with the permission of the state, and they do so through something called a rate case. The city of New York, under Eric Adams' administration, sided with Walmart in support of Con Edison's request to raise those rates by $65 a month on average. And I know that because I was also a part of that rate case, one of the few elected officials who signed in opposition to it. And I think that you can see this again and again and again in the way that he has intervened in the major costs that are driving New Yorkers out of the city.
So since you mentioned housing and the rent freeze, you support rent freeze, lower rents. What do you say to people who think that you need to incentivize landlords to maintain their buildings, to build new ones? There are also people out there who think that regulatory reform is the key to the supply problem in New York. Why rent freezes particularly versus, you know, maybe loosening some of the regulations?
I think that many of these things can actually be achieved in tandem. I am both a candidate who believes we need to freeze the rent for rent-stabilized tenants and one who believes that we need to end the requirement to build parking lots and reconstruct housing, who believes we need to increase density around mass transit hubs, that we need to upzone wealthier neighborhoods that have historically not contributed to affordable housing production. And we need to interrogate why Tokyo is building 10 homes for every 1,000 people, Jersey City is at seven, and New York is barely at four.
And some of that also has to do with what is often described as the mundane details of housing law, but can have massive impacts on whether or not it's
affordable or expensive to construct that housing, be it single staircase versus dual staircase, or the regulations that have effectively made it illegal to build SROs in this city, and the need for us to have a true diversity of housing stock. And I think the reason for the focus on a rent freeze is that that is the clearest and most direct way that you start your housing platform as the mayor of the city, given your appointing of all nine members of that rent guidelines board. But it cannot be the extent of it.
because a city of 8.48 million people deserves a mayor with a housing platform for 8.48 million people, not just the close to two and a half million that live in those units. And the other point I would make is that I
I have served in Albany. I'm now in my third term. And I've seen in Albany, while I have opposed it, we have passed legislation that allowed landlords to double the amount of money they can receive for IAIs, which are otherwise known as individual apartment improvements. So to your concern around incentivizing repairs and things of that nature, landlords have already just won the right to double the amount of money they can receive for those improvements. And I was in opposition to that doubling because of
immense amount of fraud that we've seen in that kind of program where expenses are not actually what they are represented to be. And the final thing I would say is, you know, the rent guidelines had that findings of the 12% increase in revenue for those landlords. If there are landlords for whom that picture is not an accurate representation, there is a program where they can apply a hardship program for relief when they show that their income from rents is not matching up to their costs at a ratio that is
allowing them to continue to operate that building. And that is a program that I will intend to continue to support because I believe it is important to ensure that we can keep all of these buildings in operation. I've heard that about Jersey City, that they've actually done a fairly good job of expanding housing supply. What is the role in your vision for more affordable housing for the private sector?
developers and the for-profit developers and so forth. And, you know, in your view, how can we actually move the dial in terms of housing production of, and we'll get into some of the stuff about, I want to talk about the public housing too, or quote affordable housing, but for the private landlords, what can actually, in your view, move the dial on that?
I think some of it has to do with the regulations I was speaking of, the fact that we continue to have this requirement to build parking when you build housing. That's not a requirement we should have any longer. The need for us to take advantage of our unique place in this country and that we have mass transit hubs across the city, and that should be a site of more housing density. And the fact that housing production has not been evenly distributed across the city, especially in wealthier neighborhoods.
But I think even beyond that question of zoning, which is what a lot of this comes back to, there's also the question of process. We need to make it faster to build this housing and ensure that we don't see delay after delay after delay. And so one of the points of our housing plan is also to move away from the piecemeal process that is the one you can describe today as being where you have something known as member deference, where every city council member has the ultimate vote on whether or not
a development goes up or down, we need to have a citywide approach, one that also fast tracks developments that are in line with the very priorities we've laid out with regards to housing production, labor standards, affordability, because it's been too long where we've seen proposals to build affordable housing for low-income seniors languish
for years in delays, and those delays all cost money. And that's also what drives up the cost of this production. And I think we need to streamline those processes. Actually, let's talk about that a little bit further, because public housing, which you want to expand significantly, is very costly to build. And, you know, there are certain standards of public housing. We expect it to last a very long time. There's
priorities that it be carbon friendly, et cetera. But like public housing production in New York City has been on par cost wise with even some very high end private construction. Hudson Yards on a per unit basis came in pretty similarly.
This would be important regardless of how it's financed. How do you actually get the cost down in your view of public housing production? So the first thing I would do is just distinguish between what kind of housing we're speaking of. When we say public housing, a lot of times we're referring to NYCHA developments across the five. When I said it, I was thinking NYCHA. OK, just just to be clear. And I think that, you know, what we've seen in NYCHA is in many ways, you know,
emblematic of a larger betrayal of working class New Yorkers. NYCHA is technically underneath the auspices of the federal government, but the city and the state have an immense role to play. And we've seen over time, while the federal government has refused to fund the plan to put at least $40 billion towards NYCHA to deal with an ever-expanding amount of capital needs, the city, since the time of Bloomberg, has started to
the amount of funding that it provides and the state is not stepping up in the way that it should. Now, in our housing plan, we propose doubling the amount of money we spend on preserving NYCHA housing because what we've seen is that oftentimes it's easy to describe this housing crisis in New York City as solely one of affordability. It's also a crisis of having a safe and habitable place to call your home. And as someone who represents the largest public housing development in North America, Queensbridge Houses, as well as Astoria Houses and Ravenswood Houses,
I have seen so many of my constituents, seniors who are forced to walk up many flights of stairs because their elevator isn't working, who are waiting for months to have repairs be conducted, and who in a moment of a housing crisis under Eric Adams, we've actually seen the time it takes to fill a vacant unit in NYCHA now exceed more than a year, which should be the easiest thing for city government to do. ♪
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I want to talk about another plank of your platform that is of particular interest to us, and that is groceries, of course. So a while ago, Joe and I recorded an episode on how New York actually gets its produce, and we learned about the importance of the Hunts distribution terminal and all of that.
Why grocery stores?
are a non-negotiable part of being a New Yorker and living in any city in the world. You need to be able to afford it to build any kind of a life. And yet what we're seeing is that people are being priced out of produce. And when something is critically important to that dignity, I believe that there should be a public option for it.
And what we have proposed is a reasonable policy experimentation in our city of a pilot program of a network of five municipal-owned grocery stores, one in each borough, that would respond to twin crises, one of affordability and two of food deserts. Because as I was saying earlier, as the representative of Queensbridge Houses, I will speak to constituents who live in the largest public housing development in North America, and they will ask me questions for which I don't have the answer, questions like,
Why are there five fast food restaurants in a five block radius, but I cannot find a place where I can get fresh produce that I can afford? And I hear that time and time again. And so what this proposal does is it not only guarantees cheaper groceries, but it also guarantees that those groceries can be in the very neighborhoods of New Yorkers that are being denied that service today. So some commentators have described this proposal as somewhat unethical.
unusual in America. I actually don't think it's that unusual. I'm a former military brat and I vividly remember commissaries and BXs on military bases and those were subsidized.
Anyway, how do you, I guess, address the fears of critics who worry that this is going to devolve into some sort of Soviet style market where, you know, maybe I can only buy one specific brand of tuna fish versus like the five that are currently on offer? Well,
Well, the beauty of a pilot program is that it only expands if it's successful. Now, I'm confident that it will be successful, and yet we will have to see those results themselves. And the reason we even came up with this is because of the successes of this model in Kansas, as well as what you said in the context of military bases across the country. And what we've also found is there was a feasibility study done in Chicago to see the applicability of this kind of a model in an urban setting. And it found it not only possible, but urgent and necessary.
And that is the exact kind of approach we have to take here. And I think what's been quite interesting to me is state government, in the time that I've been there, has had a similar recognition but on a different topic where it said that gas prices are something that we can only allow to get up to a certain point. And when they go beyond that, we need to subsidize it to ensure that it's affordable. In 2022, the state spent more than $600 million to suspend portions of the gas tax that
And yet we are watching as New Yorkers are being priced out of bread and milk and eggs. And we are saying that this is beyond our control. And I think that the last point I would make here is that our proposal is one that would cost $60 million for all of those five together. That is less than half of the money the city is already spending on a program called City Fresh, which will subsidize corporate supermarkets –
in the hopes that they provide affordable groceries, but with no guarantee to that, and with no requirement for them to accept SNAP or WIC, or to engage in collective bargaining, or to actually guarantee those cheaper groceries. So this is going to save the city money while piloting a program that we are confident will actually deliver the results that we have been denied in that existing program today. All right. I have two specific questions on this. One is,
I understand and I find intuitively logical the idea that people should be able to afford produce and it's
Food has gotten very expensive at the grocery store, but grocery store margins themselves are pretty thin. About 3%. Yeah. So in terms of like actually using the grocery store channel to deliver these cost savings, given that the retail stores margins are so thin, just 3%, why is that the dial rather than, I don't know, give people a voucher so that they can order a fresh direct or something like that?
You know, I am someone who has been skeptical of the efficacy of a voucher-based model. And what I am proposing with this idea of a network of municipal-owned grocery stores is not a means by which the city would make money and be able to increase that profit margin. I'm just saying these, like, the grocery-level margins seem very thin. No, I know you're not trying to make money. I'm just saying the margins seem thin. So if I think, like, what moves the dial significantly on affordability—
The actual retail level grocery does not strike me as where the big opportunity is. I think the opportunity we have with a city run model is that we can actually guarantee those cost savings, right? We have heard national chains and executives speak on earning calls about how they've been able to blame –
COVID era supply chain costs to increase profit margins even further. And what this would be is a clear mandate from the city that every single dollar we save, we pass on. But beyond that, given that the mandate is not a profit based one, that we can also pass on further savings to ensure that things like milk and eggs and bread are actually affordable.
So the other thing, and you sort of anticipated this question, which is you mentioned, for example, that in existing NYCHA housing, people are waiting for a long time to get an elevator repaired and so forth.
How do you ensure operational success? Because I think people would say, oh, I've seen how NYCHA housing works. I guess I'm going to know how a city, a New York City run grocery store is going to work. And who knows if it's going to be open and who knows if they're going to, you know, keep the refrigerators repaired or if they're going to have tomatoes one day. I'm just saying like,
You have already confirmed the idea that certain city-run things are not run particularly well. So why should we – why should the public have confidence that even setting aside price, that these would be like run well, run efficiently? Yeah.
I have to earn the public's trust, and I will do that every single day as the mayor of the city. And if you believe in public goods and public service as I do, it behooves you to believe in just as much in public excellence. And the first charges that you must have is to tackle that which has not displayed that excellence. I think NYCHA is an example of that. I also think one of the reasons why I focus so much on the MTA in my time in the state assembly has been because that's another example of that.
where we have a world-class city and we do not have world-class public transit. I love our public transit. I love our trains, our buses. I love riding a city bike. And yet I know that the way in which we are running it could be so much better. And-
What has excited me is that we've seen glimpses of what that excellence could look like. I mean, I remember when I went in to get my vaccine for COVID, I was in and out of that facility in 15 minutes. And that, to me, was an example of the public sector being able to match the efficiencies we often hear about when we describe the private sector.
I think about NYCHA, which today is a story of disinvestment and of so many New Yorkers being left behind. Could also be a story closer to the one of how they developed the mini fridge in this country because it was a direct result of an RFP that was put out or a story about –
Just one more question on the grocery stores. So I take the point about their purpose is not to make money for the government, obviously. But how would you actually judge the success of them? Hmm.
I would judge the success in their provision of affordable groceries. I would judge their success in them meeting a need that is currently being left unmet. And I think that also means in the location of those stores that they actually provide a grocery store in a place where currently it is too difficult to find any of that produce and that their prices are, as we are discussing them, significantly more affordable and more in line with where New Yorkers are actually able to spend.
I want to talk more about public excellence and the provision of public goods. My Bernard brother, let's do it. I am an avid utilizer of many of the public goods that New York City provides. My kids are in public school.
They go to the park almost every day. We ride the bus together. We ride the subway together. I don't think the subway and the bus are as bad as some people say. It's certainly not as bad as the impression I would get if I didn't live here and I were watching Fox News about New York City. Nonetheless, there has been an increase in crime over the last several years. I think it's come down recently. But there is a fair amount of disrepair. My impression is when I think about public goods in general –
which is that people on the left really like to talk about them and how important they are, and then generally do not seem as committed to sort of like product excellence as I would expect for them to say be politically sustainable.
Like I said, I feel very safe. I live in the East Village. I commute up here. I generally feel very safe. But, you know, like I see needles on the playground at Tompkins Square Park. There are bathrooms that are almost never open or functional. There's smoking on the subway from time to time. It's not the end of the world, but it's not very pleasant, especially when you have kids.
And I'm curious, like what your view is about like what seems to be a sort of tension between excellent provision of public goods and some of the law and order, as people would call it, requirements for them to be clean, friendly, excellent places.
You know, I think we on the left have to make it clear that quality of life is of immense concern to us because when we are fighting for public goods, for public service, for public excellence, at the core of it is that belief that everyone should have an excellent quality of life. And yet what has happened in the last few years is that this term has almost been made to be understood as if it
is solely a conservative concern when in fact this is at the heart of what we're fighting for. It feels to me like, to be honest, that the left has conceded that. That actually part of the reason it's become a sort of conservative coded term
is because I perceive, and tell me if I'm wrong, it's fine, but I perceive a certain discomfort about some of the hard choices or some of the, you know, more, maybe carceral is the right word, law and order, whatever, that would contribute to making some of these public goods safer and cleaner.
Well, I think what we have to make clear is that those are not the only choices on offer. And yet we do have to still respond to that same crisis. And so often, as you were describing, living in New York City, you have a different understanding than if you were to view it through the prism of social media or TV. And yet...
We can say two things at once, which is that there is an immense amount of fear mongering and that we still have to deliver world class goods, which we are far from doing today. And I say that as someone who loves our subway system and who knows that when you ask New Yorkers where they feel least safe in the city, you oftentimes hear those same words. It's the subway system.
And that's why at the heart of our campaign is a proposal to deliver that same public safety that New Yorkers have been denied under Eric Adams, a mayor who ran in 2021 telling those same New Yorkers they need not choose between safety and justice. He's shown himself unable to deliver the former, uninterested in delivering the latter. And what we've said is that we will create a Department of Community Safety, the DCS,
which understands that police have a critical role to play in public safety. And we are currently relying on them to respond to almost every single failure of the social safety net, asking them to do the work of social workers and mental health professionals, a reliance that has made it
And so what our DCS will do is tackle five key issues, homelessness, mental health crisis, gun violence, hate crimes, and victim services. And we're going to talk about five key issues.
And we'll learn from the evidence proven models that have been successful elsewhere in the country in responding to these very issues and doing so in a manner that provides public safety and frees up the police.
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Special for $1,000 off. So another part of your platform is raising the corporate tax rate, raising income tax for millionaires. And I think one of the things we are all perhaps internalizing this week as we watch Washington, D.C. and the big, beautiful bill currently going through its process is
is that raising taxes on the rich seems to be really, really difficult in America. Maybe New York is different. Maybe New Yorkers feel differently about it. But I guess my question is, A, why do you think it seems so difficult? And then B, how can you actually overcome that particular hurdle? And just to tag on, you actually need state permission to do that, right? Yeah. You do. You need to work with the state. And ultimately, the city is a creature of the state.
And any agenda you have as a mayor that seeks to match the scale of the crisis New Yorkers are living through will require Albany. When we wanted to...
create universal pre-K, we required Albany. When we wanted congestion pricing, we required Albany. And I think again and again and again, you will look at any of the most ambitious parts of any candidate's plans and it will require Albany. When I came into office in 2021, one of the first battles that I helped to lead was to raise taxes on the most profitable corporations and the wealthiest New Yorkers so that we could fully fund our public schools.
And we eventually did so over the objections of then Governor Cuomo, raising about $4 billion. And that allowed us to fulfill the legal requirement of the Campaign for Fiscal Equity, a landmark case with regards to fully funding public schools.
And I think it's difficult in Washington and it's difficult for a number of politicians to raise taxes on the rich when those politicians are also funded by the rich. Because ultimately that clash between the interests of their donors and the interests of their constituents is one that they will oftentimes pick their donors. And we've seen that with Andrew Cuomo. He speaks a big game about fighting for working people.
But he is funded by the same billionaires that fund Donald Trump. We've just seen Bill Ackman give his super PAC $250,000. And we continue to see that even with him receiving a million-dollar donation from DoorDash looking to very clearly purchase influence around labor and street safety regulations.
And I think there is a real possibility of doing so, not only because it's one of the most popular things when you poll it amongst New Yorkers and amongst Americans, but because it's needed to pay for an agenda that will transform the quality of life, not only for working class New Yorkers, not only for middle class New Yorkers, but even for the wealthy. You hear this concern about the degradation of city services.
And our proposal is one that meets the earlier conversation we were having about the necessity for a public good to be so excellent that even the wealthy use it and delivers that with regards to buses, with regards to childcare, and with so many of the city services that will keep this city running. Yeah.
If you're unable to raise the tax rate for whatever reason, how much of your policy proposal is not viable any longer? And how do you actually prioritize the different things that you are proposing?
So I'm confident in our ability to raise it because I've seen in every year that I've been in Albany since 2021 that the legislature has in its own budget proposals proposed those increases on income taxes for the wealthiest New Yorkers and on raising the top corporate tax rate. And just for one moment, if I can explain what those proposals are. Sure.
Our proposal is to raise the top state corporate tax rate to match that of the radical socialist utopia of New Jersey. It's 7.25% here in New York to match theirs of 11.5%. That's a tax that applies to the topmost level of profitable corporations. We're talking about their profits, millions of dollars, and it would raise $5 billion just in doing so.
The second part of the tax plan, which would raise $4 billion, would be to increase New York City's income tax rate on the top 1% of income earners. We're talking about people who make a million dollars or more a year by a flat 2% increase, so a $20,000 increase, which is what I would argue a rounding error when you're looking at it within that larger context.
Those two things together raise $9 billion, and then we raise an additional billion through good government reforms, whether we're talking about procurement or hiring fiscal auditors or actually collecting the fines and fees that New York City is owed. So that's our fiscal policy of how we raise $10 billion. Now, you always have to prepare for every eventuality. The city also has about $3 billion in its rainy day fund and its reserves combined. It also, in times of economic growth, as we've generally seen in the last few years, has
sees its budget increase by $2 to $3 billion. So there are a lot of different opportunities. And the final thing I will say is we have a city...
budget of $115 billion. I am not confident that Eric Adams has been spending every one of those dollars in the most productive way. And one of the first things that I will do when I get into City Hall- Doge. But no, I mean, to be honest with you, it is a regret of mine that we have allowed someone like Elon Musk to use the language of fraud and inefficiency and waste to
for his own ends of personal benefit, when really if we care about public goods and public service, we should be ensuring that it is the most efficient spending of those dollars. And I think when we look, especially at the way in which we've hollowed out public capacity to instead replace it with private consultants, there's an immense amount of money to be saved, especially if we're looking specifically at the DOE and how much of our reliance on curricula procurement has to do more with
who we've already been procuring with and not having any standardized approach when it should also be a universal approach across the department that ensures we both save money and deliver excellence. I want to ask another politics question. I didn't really like to talk policy, but I think this is actually an important dimension. After the recent general election, 2024, and it was clear that Democrats performed worse than they historically have among non-white voters all around the country. There's this big debate about why
And the left says, the centrist, you failed to talk to the working class and the centrist is like, no, it's because you made us talk about pronouns and that repelled people, etc. I'm actually not that interested in that question right now. I'm interested that intra left left candidates actually have not done particularly well. Mention Bernie among poor voters, among nonwhite voters, among polling candidates.
I'm not going to ask you about your own polling per se, but I saw a poll that said you were pulling at 8% among black voters with Andrew Cuomo having done a lot better. It seems like left politics in this country
It appeals to educated white people, many of them who probably work in newsrooms. I haven't pulled the Bloomberg newsroom, but, you know, stuff like that. Why do you think that is? Why have general left candidates, whether it's the primary level, et cetera, or even just looking at, you know, New York City mayoral polling, not had more progress?
among what is arguably the core base of the Democratic Party. You know, I think these polls that we're speaking about right now with regards to New York City continue to be polls that are more reflective of name recognition than they are of support. And what I mean by that is Andrew Cuomo is a former governor who is the son of a former governor. And when I speak to many New Yorkers who support him, I almost always hear the word Mario in their answer.
what I'm proud of is that we are the only campaign other than Cuomo to have broken double digits with every single ethnic group across the city. But, you know, like even like on say like unionization, there's a lot of excitement among unionization of grad students, for example. But, you know, that's not what we think of as like, you know, the sort of like industrial beating heart of the labor movement, et cetera. It does seem to be a phenomenon that sort of more left culture or sort of left economic policies have taken hold
more among educated whites? Well,
Well, look, I think you can look at DC 37 for an example. This is the largest municipal union in our city, and they represent the workers who actually keep the city moving. They are by and large black and brown New Yorkers, and they explicitly chose not to endorse Andrew Cuomo because he created tier six, a new category in the pension program that took more than $100,000 out from working class New Yorkers pockets and made them retire later after having served the city and state for decades.
And I was proud to receive their endorsement. And I think that it shows me the path here is one where every single day over these next 34 days, we are going to continue to increase our support where we have seen ourselves, for example, just break 20% in support with Latino voters.
And that is indicative of the fact that the very New Yorkers who know Cuomo the most are the ones who have been failed by his policies the most as well. And that is a responsibility for my campaign and every campaign to showcase his actual record of cutting Medicaid, stealing money from the MTA to fund upstate ski resorts, hounding the more than 10 women who courageously stepped forward to accuse him of sexual harassment, and in many ways echoing a Donald Trump-style record.
And that's what we will seek to do both at the doors, the more than 550,000 we've knocked so far, and on cable and broadcast and in mailers because we have now raised $8 million, the most amount of money we can legally spend in this race, faster than any campaign in history. And podcasts, I guess. Yes. This is actually our master plan. It all comes down to odd lots. Thank you. We're going to cut that. We're going to clip that.
So I just remembered something from my dream, actually. So one of the passengers said that what he wanted was basically, this is not a real passenger, but I think it's reflective of some things that you actually do here in New York. But he said what he wants is basically...
boring old competency in a mayor. So an administrator that has lots of policy experience as opposed to someone who's, you know, maybe relatively new and trying to do some new things. And I think that is important. You know, there's a big difference between coming up with policy ideas and actually executing them and executing them well.
How are you going to get things done? And what do you say to the people who just want, you know, like a boring continuation, not necessarily of Eric Adams, but, you know, maybe going back a little bit further?
I understand that desire. It's a desire for normalcy in a time when politics has become about cronyism and corruption. And as much as Andrew Cuomo markets himself as a candidate in a campaign of competence, this is a man who couldn't even follow basic paperwork requirements to receive millions of dollars in public matching funds, someone who couldn't write a housing policy without the assistance of chat GPT or even spell the names of his endorsers correctly in his own press releases.
And as much as a frenetic public-facing schedule as I've been keeping over the last seven months, I've also been keeping a private schedule where I've been meeting with deputy mayors and commissioners from a wide variety of mayoral administrations to speak about
the how of it all, because an idea is only as good as its implementation. And ultimately, it comes back from a desire to build a team of the best and the brightest, one where we have a common thread of excellence, of fluency, and a track record that binds all of those appointments and those hires, not a common thread of having served together for 20 years, which is what it seems to have been with Mayor Adams today.
And one additional point I'll say is that too often the style of leadership we've seen, whether it's from Andrew Cuomo or Eric Adams, has been to hire replicas of yourself, to hire people with whom you have 100% agreement and who are the quickest to say yes to any one of your ideas, be they good or bad.
I am not interested in that style of leadership. I'm interested in a style of leadership that understands that ultimately the buck stops with me and that I have to build a team that speaks to a wide breadth of opinion, of ideology, and of track record, that not everyone is going to look and sound and be just like me, and that if I want a DOT commissioner, all I need to agree with them on
is the vision for DOT, not HPD. And if I want to hire a deputy mayor, they need not agree with me on my thoughts on foreign policy. They need only agree with their purview that they're being hired for. Because it comes back to this notion that I think Mayor Koch put it best, which is, if you agree with me on nine out of 12 issues, vote for me. If you agree with me on 12 out of 12, see a psychiatrist. And that speaks to the need to have room for that disagreement and ultimately be bound by that pursuit of excellence.
During the 2016 presidential campaign, it was a Trump supporter I'm looking up. It was actually the founder of Latinos for Trump who said that if Trump didn't win, there would be taco trucks on every corner, which sounds really good to me. You have also proposed neoliberalism for halal carts, which I really like chicken over rice. So I'd be very happy to see more of them and be cheaper. But I'm curious how far you'd extend. So reduce the permits, make it easier to open a halal cart. Increase the permits. Yeah.
Oh, increase the number of permits. Make it easier, therefore, to get. It is true that the halal guys in Midtown, I think the original one, you go by there in the afternoon and the line stretches around the block. It's kind of insane. They used to say a chicken in every pot. I'm saying a halal in every hand. Okay. What about hotels?
Hotel prices are insanely expensive. Airbnb is no longer legal. I know someone visiting the city right now who had to get a place in Jersey City because it's just too crazy in New York. It's insanely difficult to build a new hotel, apparently due to opposition both from existing hotel owners to new hotels for reasons and the hotel worker unions.
Do you support liberalize in the same way that we need more halal carts? Would you support liberalization of hotel development in New York City? You know, I am not as interested in the concerns of existing hotel owners, but I am very interested in the concerns of hotel workers. And I think that
That is something that I would love to explore is, is there a way to expand the number of hotels while ensuring that we also retain the protections for those workers? Because so often we've seen this very fight and it's going to be one that will intensify in the next year as there's contract renegotiations coming to a head during the World Cup where hotel owners have put hotel workers on the front lines of so much of the work without giving them the pay that is requisite for that.
With Airbnb, one of my concerns has been the transformation of what would be housing into effectively small-scale hotels. And the proposal that they're pushing, I think they've currently – they're putting I think more than a million dollars into spending on local races.
has the prospect of turning a double digit number of one and two family homes, taking them off of the market and making them these vacant units. I just say, Tracy, as someone who has lived in multifamily housing my entire life in New York City, I'm not thrilled with Airbnb because I like to know who the neighbors are in my building. And sometimes you get loud, noisy, crazy people. Anyway, keep going. I think that's a concern that a lot of people share. Yeah.
I have just one more question. Please. It's the most important one. Hit it. But you have a little experience in Bollywood, I suppose. I'm a big Bollywood fan. Everything I know about cricket, I learned from Legan, which is... Great film. Yeah, great film. Okay, so here's my question. Amir Khan or Shah Rukh Khan? Wow. Choose one. Wow. Why? Why would you do this to me? Um...
Amir Khan for my head, Shah Rukh Khan for my heart. Yeah, that actually makes a lot of sense to me. I think I would say a similar thing. Well, you know, why didn't we spend the interview on these questions? I would totally do a Bollywood episode. I would love to do a Bollywood episode. Wait, for those who don't know, what is the Bollywood connection? So the Bollywood connection is that my mother, her name is Meera Nair. She is a filmmaker. She is an Indian filmmaker who's made a number of films, my favorite of which is Mississippi Masala. I actually haven't seen that.
one. I saw Monsoon Wedding and that was great. Great film. Great film. You have to see Mississippi Miss Hollywood because it's also the reason that I'm alive. She met my father while researching for that film. Zoran Mamdani, thank you so much for coming on Odd Lots. Thrilled that we could make it happen. Thank you so much. It's a pleasure to be here. Tracy, if he wins, maybe he'll come back on. We can do a Bollywood.
Well, we have a lot of other stuff to talk about. No, just Bollywood. I would definitely. I don't know much about it. I love Legan. So we should talk more about that sometime. I really love Bollywood movies. I need to catch Mississippi Masala, I guess. Yeah. I mean, it's his mom's. Yeah. Yeah. That was obviously a very interesting conversation. I do think, you know, there's this sort of knee-jerk reaction against socialism in America for, you know,
For reasons. For reasons. Yeah, sure. But, you know, examples of some of the stuff do exist. And I think the BXs and the military commissaries are a really good example of, you know, we do have subsidized groceries that exist in America. And why not have them in New York? I think a really key thing, which is there's this bad cycle with the public provision of goods in the U.S.,
which is just that people look at them and don't think they're particularly well run. And then it's like, now you want to have more. And so it's like, you know, like I said, I love the New York City subway. I take it every day. Would I want a grocery store that sort of resembles the New York City subway? Probably not. I'm not saying it would, but...
But I'm saying this is my experience interfacing with New York City public goods. Would I want a grocery store that resembles the bathrooms at Tompkins Square Park or has similar? No, not at all. I mean, so I just feel like it's fine. I love living in New York City. I think these public provisions are great. And some of them are absolutely incredible, like the libraries. But by and large, I think that the tenders of public goods
for various reasons, have not done a great job of like, no, these are actually really good services. That's fair. And obviously the government's core competency is probably not running grocery stores, right? Like they would have to learn a lot in order to get up to speed. But my point is, you know, the commissaries at military bases, they're pretty good. Like you can buy everything
And service is great. They still bag your groceries, at least the last time I was there. So examples do exist. All I'm saying is it's possible. For sure. You know, the other thing, and obviously we only had so much time, is I'm really interested in
in this tension between deregulation is good when it's small things like a halal card or Zoran recently did an ad which we didn't get around to talking about how like, you know, there should be make it easier for bodega owners and, you know, less regulations for them, which sounds great. I like all of my like thoughts
the three local bodegas within a 45 second walk from my apartment is great. But why do those sort of basic principles of sort of liberalizing the rules around X not then apply to some of the bigger things such as
which are insanely expensive in New York or other areas like real estate, etc. He did mention allowing more single family stairs. So there are all the single family stair nerds on Twitter. Well, I'm sure be very excited about that. Also, which we talked about on episode once. Yeah. Oh, yeah, we did. Yeah. All right. So this is actually a core. It is a core of lots of it.
Okay, shall we leave it there? Let's leave it there. This has been another episode of the All Thoughts Podcast. I'm Traci Allaway. You can follow me at Traci Allaway. And I'm Joe Weisenthal. You can follow me at The Stalwart. Follow our guest Zoran Mamdani. He's at Zoran K. Mamdani. Follow our producers, Carmen Rodriguez at Carmen Armin, Dashiell Bennett at Dashbot, and Kale Brooks at Dashbot.
at Cale Brooks. For more Odd Lots content, go to Bloomberg.com/oddlots where we have a daily newsletter and all of our episodes. And you can chat about all of these topics 24/7 in our Discord, discord.gg/oddlots. And if you enjoy Odd Lots, if you like it when we talk to New York City mayoral candidates, then please leave us a positive review on your favorite podcast platform. And remember, if you are a Bloomberg subscriber, you can listen to all of our episodes.
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