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Some Democrats Panicked Over Mamdani. Obama Called Him.

August 13, 2025
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Some Democrats Panicked Over Mamdani. Obama Called Him.
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In the days after it became clear Zohran Mamdani had won New York City’s June mayoral primary, much of the Democratic establishment began to panic.

Former President Barack Obama, the last Democrat to captivate the party’s base, got on the phone. In a lengthy call in June, Mr. Obama congratulated Mr. Mamdani, offered him advice about governing and discussed the importance of giving people hope in a dark time, according to people with knowledge of the conversation.

Others in Mr. Obama’s orbit have also shown a keen interest in Mr. Mamdani and his campaign. Jon Favreau, who served as Mr. Obama’s speechwriter, and Dan Pfeiffer, a former senior adviser, have been in communication with the Democratic strategist Morris Katz, among Mr. Mamdani’s closest aides.

David Axelrod, who served as Mr. Obama’s chief campaign strategist and senior adviser, was also curious. Last month, he stopped by Mr. Mamdani’s campaign headquarters, then in the Flatiron neighborhood of Manhattan, to meet the candidate and his staff, and see things for himself.

“What I found when I went over to that office was a familiar spirit that I hadn’t seen in a while of just determined, upbeat idealism,” Mr. Axelrod told me. “You may not agree with every answer he’s giving, or every idea he has, but he’s certainly asking the right questions, which is how do we make the country work for working people?” He said Mr. Mamdani’s ability to inspire young Americans, who feel economic uncertainty acutely, was critical and something the party at large needed to reckon with.

Mr. Axelrod was introduced to Mr. Mamdani by Patrick Gaspard, another Obama insider. Mr. Gaspard — Mr. Obama’s 2008 national political director, and later the U.S. ambassador to South Africa — has been serving as an informal adviser to Mr. Mamdani.

The interest from the closely guarded world of Mr. Obama and those around him is the clearest sign yet that Mr. Mamdani is likely to be embraced by the Democratic mainstream, whether the party’s leaders and donors like it or not. It comes at a time of dueling visions among voters, Democratic politicians and donors over the future of the party.

Some key figures within the Democratic establishment have reacted — at least publicly — to Mr. Mamdani with a sense of suspicion or even alarm. Hakeem Jeffries, the House minority leader, has yet to endorse the Democratic nominee, even though Brooklyn, which he represents, voted for Mr. Mamdani over former Gov. Andrew Cuomo by a nearly 20-point margin. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, also of New York, said falsely in a radio interview with WNYC in June that Mr. Mamdani had made “references to global jihad.” Ms. Gillibrand later apologized for those remarks. As The Times reported, the pollster Mark Penn even met with President Trump to brief him on polls showing that Mr. Cuomo could be competitive in a one-on-one race with Mr. Mamdani; one of Mr. Penn’s firms has worked for a pro-Cuomo super PAC.

It seems very possible that Obamaworld views Mr. Mamdani differently: not as a threat or a liability, but as a promising figure in a Democratic Party with a pressing need for fresh blood.

A spokeswoman for Mr. Obama declined to comment.

Mr. Obama governed as a liberal-centrist, and the party’s left flank has grown increasingly progressive since he left office. So too has frustration among some voters with Mr. Obama’s post-presidency, in which he has in general kept public statements on politics to a minimum even as the Democratic Party struggles to organize opposition to Mr. Trump.

Despite this, Mr. Obama remains among the most popular figures within the Democratic Party in a generation. If Mr. Mamdani does ultimately receive public support from the former president, it is likely to help him, especially with some older voters and Black voters. It may also ease the path for other Democrats to accept, if not celebrate, his emerging role in the party.

Mr. Obama, if he chooses to do so, could also play an important role by making clear that the intense focus on affordability Mr. Mamdani has championed is not only the purview of the party’s left but should animate the party’s politics at a moment in which inequality is destabilizing people’s lives and their belief in American democracy.

Reached for comment about the call, Mr. Mamdani’s communications director, Jeffrey Lerner, who worked in the Obama White House, drew a comparison between the two men. “Much like my former boss, Zohran embodies thoughtful leadership, moral courage and a unique ability to inspire hope in those who’ve been left behind by politics as usual.”

Though it has been nearly two decades since Mr. Obama’s 2008 victory, the parallels between the two charismatic Democrats are unmistakable. Both are political outsiders with unconventional biographies. Mr. Obama was the country’s first Black president. Mr. Mamdani, if elected in November, would be the first Muslim to govern New York City. Both built campaigns around grass-roots organizing and formed diverse multiracial coalitions that galvanized younger Americans and attracted voters far beyond the party’s traditional base.

Mr. Axelrod said he found the reaction of much of New York’s political establishment dispiriting and outdated. “‘Scare the hell out of people and maybe we can get them to vote for our deficient politics,’” he said, describing the approach with brutal efficiency. “That’s not a politics I want to be associated with. That’s not a politics I think prevails.”

Mara Gay is a staff writer at New York Times Opinion who writes about politics.

The Times is committed to publishing a diversity of letters to the editor. We’d like to hear what you think about this or any of our articles. Here are some tips. And here’s our email: [email protected].

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Mara Gay is a staff writer at New York Times Opinion who writes about politics. @MaraGay

The post Some Democrats Panicked Over Mamdani. Obama Called Him. appeared first on New York Times.

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