Mamdani’s defenders insist he is naming a hunger that markets never fed: the ache to feel held by something larger than a paycheck, a landlord, or a private security guard. To them, “warmth” is not a prelude to tyranny but a rebuke to the cold arithmetic that has governed New York for decades, where survival is individual and failure is personal. They argue that collectivism, rightly bounded, is simply what democracy looks like when it finally takes everyone seriously.
His critics, though, hear an old seduction in new cadence. They see how language about shared destiny can become a velvet rope, then a cage, as dissenters are recast as traitors to the common good. In that clash lies the real question: not whether we need each other, but who gets to define “we.” The fight over that pronoun will shape every policy that follows.





