The facts are straightforward: New York City, America’s largest metropolis and the crown jewel of the free world, stands on the precipice of electing an avowed socialist as mayor. This is not hyperbole. This is reality.
Gene Hamilton, co-founder and president of America First Legal and former White House deputy counsel under President Trump, minced no words when discussing what a Zohran Mamdani victory would mean for the city. “I could never fathom the thought of having a Marxist leading my city, the crown jewel city of the United States, of the world, of the free world,” Hamilton stated.
The mayoral race has captured national attention as Mamdani faces off against former Governor Andrew Cuomo, running as an independent, and Republican Curtis Sliwa. But the most revealing aspect of this election may not be the candidates themselves, but rather what the polling data reveals about New York’s electorate.
Hamilton pointed to polling that shows a significant divide between native-born Americans and foreign-born voters, with the latter demographic leaning heavily toward the socialist candidate. This is not about xenophobia or prejudice. This is about the observable consequences of decades of misguided immigration policy.
Here is the core issue: America has systematically abandoned the principle of assimilation in favor of what Hamilton calls “integration.” The distinction matters enormously.
“One of the things we’ve seen over the last several decades is an emphasis amongst many social organizations, nonprofits, the government itself, on this concept of pushing integration and not assimilation. ‘Assimilation’ was treated as a dirty word,” Hamilton explained.
The difference is critical. Assimilation means newcomers adopt American values, learn American history, and embrace the principles that made this country exceptional. Integration, as currently practiced, means importing foreign political ideologies wholesale and expecting American society to simply accommodate them.
“We’re integrating you from whatever background you have, whatever political ideology you have, and we’re just integrating you into society and everyone else has to deal with it,” Hamilton said, describing the current approach.
This does not mean rejecting cultural diversity or the contributions immigrants make to American life. Hamilton acknowledges that immigration can foster appreciation for different cultures. But appreciation for diverse foods, traditions, and customs is fundamentally different from importing political systems that have failed catastrophically everywhere they have been implemented.
The solution requires returning to first principles, starting with enforcing existing immigration law. Hamilton emphasized that these laws exist for substantive reasons, not arbitrary ones.
“There are prohibitions, there are restrictions from the admission of individuals for many, many reasons,” he noted. “You cannot admit somebody to the United States who has been a member of a totalitarian party or communist party.”
These restrictions were implemented precisely to prevent the scenario now unfolding in New York City, where a self-described socialist with Marxist sympathies stands a realistic chance of governing America’s largest city.
The New York mayoral race represents more than local politics. It is a symptom of what Hamilton calls “decades of ideological suicide,” a systematic abandonment of the assimilationist principles that historically transformed immigrants into Americans.
If New York elects a socialist mayor, it will not be because socialism suddenly works or because Marxist economics have proven viable. It will be because America stopped insisting that newcomers embrace American values and instead allowed the importation of failed ideologies that Americans themselves had long rejected.
The question facing New York voters is simple: Will they choose American exceptionalism or ideological suicide? The answer will reverberate far beyond the five boroughs.
Related: Rep. Lawler Sounds Alarm on Socialist Assemblyman’s Bid for New York City Leadership
