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AOC endorses Zohran Mamdani for New York City mayor, throwing her support behind yet another radical socialist. Because, naturally, the city that gave us bail reform disasters and budget-busting policies clearly hasn’t suffered enough.
At this point, New York voters are stuck between a disgraced former governor and a full-blown authoritarian leftist. Andrew Cuomo may be no prize, but Mamdani wants to take what’s left of NYC and finish the job by taxing more, spending more, and replacing law and order with progressive slogans and government handouts.
AOC isn’t just casually backing Zohran Mamdani—she’s fully embracing his campaign as the future of the far left, despite growing backlash from Jewish leaders, parents, and older, fed-up New Yorkers.
And good grief, when have we failed the young people so much?
Mamdani checks every box on the far-left agenda: wealth redistribution, entitlement expansion, and a government so bloated it collapses under its own weight. His idea of “justice” punishes the people who work, invest, and obey the law, while rewarding activism over accountability.
The former bartender turned reality star politician also whined about Andrew Cuomo’s other ulterior motives about using it as a springboard to run for President. Well, duh, Sandy, they all do.
Lefty New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez warns that if former Gov. Andrew Cuomo wins the city’s mayoral race, he will use it as a stepping stone for a presidential bid.
“This is not just about New York City, but this is about the United States,” the far-left Dem told an enthusiastic crowd she stumped for fellow socialist and mayoral wannabe Zohran Mamdani at Terminal 5 in Manhattan on Saturday.
“I mean that literally, because Andrew Cuomo has made clear that if he wins this race, he wants to run for president of the United States of America,” AOC said. – New York Post
And AOC? She didn’t just endorse Mamdani. She took the opportunity to swipe at Cuomo’s age, insisting it’s time for younger, more radical voices to take the reins. Which is hilarious, considering her political idol is Bernie Sanders, who is older than Cuomo and still shouting about socialism from the Senate floor. But that’s AOC in a nutshell—rules for others, exceptions for her friends. She will more than likely still be playing politician when she’s in her late sixties, too, because the girlboss outsider act has turned into a full-blown political career. What was never meant to be a lifetime job has become a launchpad for vanity, power, and far-left crusades. And New York, once again, is footing the bill.
Amid mounting concern over her judgment, AOC’s endorsement of Mamdani isn’t confined to policy alignment—it’s displayed front and center on social media. In a recent tweet from Gays Against Groomers, shared widely across the right‑leaning sphere, critics warn that Mamdani will “pour MILLIONS of tax dollars into ‘community gender clinics’ to inject kids.” The language is provocative, but the concern isn’t unfounded. Mamdani’s political circle has pushed hard for taxpayer-funded gender services, even for minors, raising red flags for parents, educators, and anyone watching where the money’s actually going.
AOC is endorsing @ZohranKMamdani for NYC Mayor.
Zohran will pour MILLIONS of tax dollars into “community gender clinics” to inject kids with puberty blockers. No parental knowledge.@AOC endorsed a $65 million plan to sterilize confused kids & punish anyone who says no.
— Gays Against Groomers (@againstgrmrs) June 6, 2025
Mamdani’s stance on Israel has sparked backlash from over 60 Jewish leaders in Queens, who’ve labeled him one of the most anti-Israel candidates in the race.
He’s echoed Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) rhetoric—the kind that calls for isolating, punishing, and delegitimizing Israel while questioning its right to exist as a Jewish state. Supporters frame it as activism. But in practice, it’s become a breeding ground for antisemitism, targeting the world’s only Jewish nation with double standards no other country is subjected to. And Mamdani doesn’t seem the least bit concerned about that distinction.
In a city with a sizeable Jewish population, that’s not just tone-deaf. It’s reckless. And this is what the younger generation is rallying behind. AOC isn’t just endorsing it, she’s embracing it. They’re not even pretending to hide their agenda anymore. Call me whatever you want, but I’m not the one ignoring reality.
AOC loves to play kingmaker, but her track record is more that of a court jester. For all the media hype and influencer clout, many of the candidates she’s endorsed have flamed out spectacularly. Let’s hope that’s the case here with Mamdani, too. And while Andrew Cuomo has plenty of blood on his hands—especially from the thousands of seniors who died under his disastrous nursing home policies—at least he understands how government functions. Mamdani, on the other hand, seems eager to tear it all down and rebuild it in the image of a socialist fever dream.
There’s a trail of flops that AOC has endorsed in the past, like Alex Morse in Massachusetts, Jessica Cisneros in Texas, and Jamaal Bowman in New York. All candidates who embraced the AOC brand of Democratic socialism still got rejected by voters. Even in solidly blue areas, her picks often go down in flames once the public gets a whiff of the agenda: radical tax hikes, weakened law enforcement, and performative politics dressed up as “justice.” If history is any guide, Zohran Mamdani might want to keep his résumé updated. AOC’s backing is starting to look more like a curse than a blessing.
New York doesn’t need another activist posing as a leader. Mamdani’s platform isn’t progressive—it’s communist. It’s reckless, expensive, and built on the idea that the government should control everything while taxpayers foot the bill. And AOC is out there being his fangirl cheerleader, selling his slogans. This mayoral race may be local, but the agenda behind it is national in scope. If voters don’t shut it down here, expect to see it crop up everywhere else. What they’re pushing isn’t progress. It’s a warning.
Feature Image: Karamccurdy, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons/nrkbeta, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons/edited in Canva Pro
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