Mamdani's mayoral win shows Democrats path beyond woke culture war politics
- Threads
- Comments
- Add Fox News on Google
Ex-Washington Post fact-checker hits 'absentee owner' Jeff Bezos
Former Washington Post fact-checker Glenn Kessler spoke with Fox News Digital about the paper's "absentee owner" Jeff Bezos and the challenges the news outlet faces.
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!A Washington Post opinion columnist is acknowledging that the Democratic Party pushed "woke" politics too far and paid the price at the ballot box. The piece argued that New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani may represent the kind of shift away from culture war politics Democrats need to win back voters.
Columnist Shadi Hamid argued that from 2014 through about 2023, peaking in 2020, Democrats embraced "woke" ideas that prioritized divisive cultural issues, including transgender rights and calls to defund the police.
"A growing number of Democrats and liberals have acknowledged that things may have gone too far," Hamid said.
WASHINGTON POST TAKES HEAT FOR PUTTING SPOTLIGHT ON ERIKA KIRK’S WARDROBE IN WAKE OF HUSBAND’S ASSASSINATION

New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani attends a news conference at the headquarters of the New York Police Department in New York City on Jan. 6. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
"Alienating too many Americans who might have otherwise been sympathetic to [the] Democratic Party’s economic message but couldn’t get on board with an expansive and aggressive cultural agenda," he added.
2025 SHOCKERS: THE BIGGEST MOMENTS THAT ROCKED THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL
Hamid wrote in "How Mamdani shows Democrats the way beyond wokeness" that the party’s fixation on identity politics and DEI peaked around 2020 and eventually triggered a voter backlash that, he said, benefited President Donald Trump.
He points to Mamdani’s mayoral victory as a potential blueprint for how Democrats can win back voters alienated by cultural politics. While Mamdani once supported the party’s more activist-based policies, he later backed away from that rhetoric during his mayoral bid.

New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani speaks after being ceremonially sworn in as the city’s 112th mayor at City Hall in New York City on Jan. 1. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
"During his campaign for mayor, Mamdani apologized for his comments," Hamid wrote, referring to Mamdani’s past description of the New York Police Department as "racist, anti-queer and a major threat to public safety."
JONATHAN TURLEY: EVEN THE WASHINGTON POST ADMITS JACK SMITH WAS WRONG ON FREE SPEECH
The piece noted that while Mamdani shifted away from some activist rhetoric, he continued to publicly support transgender rights, including in a video released weeks before the November election.

New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani speaks at a press conference during moving day at Gracie Mansion in New York City on Jan. 12. (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)
CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP
Instead, the piece argued, Mamdani centered his campaign on everyday issues affecting New Yorkers, particularly affordability. Hamid wrote that Mamdani’s success reflects a broader shift within the Democratic Party, as culture war issues lose their appeal with voters.
(责任编辑:休闲)
- ·植物大战僵尸杂交版小程序兑换码是多少 pvz杂交版小程序兑换码大全
- ·2025 look back: ABC’s Jimmy Kimmel briefly suspended by Disney
- ·永暮幻想2024兑换码大全 永暮幻想兑换码一览
- ·丁真携中国甘孜马助力第六个中国爱马日,爱马“珍珠”登上热搜
- ·绝区零色彩斑斓的决斗任务完成攻略 绝区零色彩斑斓的决斗任务怎么触发
- ·“沪家保”向“追光小屋”项目青少年事务社工捐赠城市普惠型家庭综合保险
- ·报告称中国科研人员对AI在科研中的作用持积极务实态度
- ·คาดช่วงเทศกาลปีใหม่ 2569 มีผู้ใช้บริการสนามบินดอนเมืองมากกว่า 1 แสนคน/วัน
- ·女演员自曝曾遭受校园暴力!留下心理阴影,放弃演戏
- ·รทสช.เปิดรายชื่อ













