Skip to main content

Performative Politics at Its Worst

Keffiyehs Over Kilowatts: Mamdani Hijacks NYC Rent Crisis | WATCH

Mamdani is really doing horribly lately, begging for new revenue streams and new taxes. Here, he doubles down on what he knows best, pro-Palestinians and pro-Islam embedding themselves everywhere. Pray for New York.

Zohran Mamdani
Zohran Mamdani

In a tone-deaf attempt to boost turnout at upcoming Rent Guidelines Board hearings, Mayor Mamdani posted a video on Wednesday calling on New Yorkers to “get organized” - but the footage he chose prominently features audience members wearing Palestinian keffiyehs at a hearing about local rents.

In the clip, several attendees are clearly visible in the black-and-white scarves strongly associated with pro-Palestine activism, turning what should be a straightforward discussion on housing affordability into yet another platform for foreign political symbolism.

Mamdani wrote:

“In a city of over 8 million, just 400 people showed up to speak at the last Rent Guidelines Board hearing… The next hearings are this June. Visit ORGANIZE.NYC.GOV to get involved.”

Instead of focusing purely on tenants and landlords struggling with New York’s brutal housing market, the mayor’s own promotional video highlights radicals more interested in waving flags for Gaza than fixing broken elevators or sky-high rents in Brooklyn and Queens.

This is classic Mamdani: a self-proclaimed democratic socialist who rose on identity politics and anti-Israel activism now injecting the same divisive foreign cause into a local issue that affects millions of New Yorkers regardless of their views on the Middle East. Housing policy in New York has nothing to do with keffiyehs, yet here they are, front and center in the mayor’s own outreach video.

Critics quickly pointed out the absurdity: while everyday tenants worry about making rent, the crowd Mamdani is mobilizing brings the same protest aesthetics that have disrupted city council meetings, college campuses, and now basic civic hearings.

The Rent Guidelines Board is set to vote in June on whether to freeze or raise rents for over two million stabilized apartments. Mamdani’s “Organize NYC” push aims to flood the hearings with tenant voices, apparently including those who show up dressed for a different fight entirely.

Ready for more?

Join our newsletter to receive updates on new articles and exclusive content.

We respect your privacy and will never share your information.