New York City’s political landscape just to
The leaked files sketch out a coordinated strategy, not a loose wish list. DSA organizers talk about “testing” boycotts and divestment at every level of city life, then exporting the model nationwide. That means weaponizing municipal contracts, public pensions, and nonprofit regulations to punish any perceived link to Israel, while daring opponents to call it discrimination. Mamdani’s past rhetoric, including his comparison of the NYPD’s “boot” to the IDF, now looks less like a stray line and more like a warning.
Whether he fully embraces the plan or merely drifts in its direction, the stakes are enormous. New York is not a campus or a niche city council; it is the cultural and financial capital of the country, home to the largest Jewish population outside Israel. If City Hall becomes a staging ground for an aggressive anti-Israel experiment, the aftershocks won’t stop at the Hudson. They will ripple through national politics, philanthropy, and even foreign policy, forcing Americans to decide where activism ends and extremism begins.